Our thoughts and prayers are with the families who were impacted by the tragic shooting death of a gun instructor at a shooting range in Arizona earlier this week. In an instant, two people became victims: the instructor and the poor girl who unintentionally shot him.
There’s a reason why automatic weapons like Uzis are so regulated in America — they are not child’s play. Don’t misunderstand me: I appreciate the long tradition of gun ownership in this country. Many of the moms and dads involved in Moms Demand Action are gun owners. Responsible gun owners and non-gun owners alike were horrified to hear a 9-year-old was given access to an automatic weapon.
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Even Charles C.W. Cooke, the conservative National Review columnist, said plainly, “We shouldn’t be giving nine-year-old girls automatic weapons.”
The tragedy at the shooting range in Arizona spurred plenty of headlines — and rightfully so — but the conversation shouldn’t end there. This horrifying incident should spark a national conversation about children and firearms. And, as a society that regards itself as moral and ethical, we should discuss the responsibility that adults have to prevent these shootings.
Two million American children live in homes with unsecured guns. We know how curious kids can be. It’s not surprising that very often when these kids find a gun that is unlocked and loaded, the results are deadly. Studies have shown that children will touch a loaded gun even if they’ve been trained not to.
Additionally, our research shows that nearly two children a week die of unintentional shootings. And more than two-thirds of these deaths could have been prevented had the guns been locked away where children could not find them. All it would take to save these children’s lives would be for families to store their firearms responsibly: locked, unloaded, and safe from children.
This is a topic where everyone should be able to come together and find common ground. The vast majority of gun owners are responsible with their firearms. Seventy-seven percent of gun owners, in fact, agree that parents with guns at home should be required by law to keep them locked and unloaded.
So, what can be done to prevent the next unintentional shooting tragedy?









