RandyForRubio
Well-Known Member
Ignoring the blanket collective right/individual right argument, I don't believe there's any evidence that it would actually help. The 2009 Fort Hood shooter was an Army Psychiatrist. Being in the military at all infers firearm safety. That, and 40% of shooters in this link here committed suicide. Most at the scene.
I'm not sure of what a "Gun Safety" course you're imagining entails, but if you draw it up I'd entertain the concept.
It would help with a multitude of accidental deaths, and I believe it could help with suicide as well.
Teach them how to handle a gun, how to make sure people who shouldn't be around them can't access them, treat every gun like it's loaded...basic stuff.
And that's nice you want to ignore the rights issue. Maybe we can just ignore all of them. I'm gonna go get me a slave now!