Staunch gun rights advocate Ted Cruz is here seen holding a shotgun while being interviewed by CNN. Can you see what he’s doing wrong? That’s right, he’s violating the first two rules of gun safety.Those four rules are good, but the first one is properly "Treat all guns as if they are loaded, until you have personally checked it right now to be sure it is unloaded." After all, you couldn't disassemble a firearm to clean it if you could never treat it as if it were unloaded. Cruz personally knows his firearm is unloaded because the breech is open and empty, as we can all plainly see in real time.
When you learn to shoot, apply for a hunting or carry license and any time you’re at a gun range, there’s four basic rules of gun safety that — and this is impressed on you very strongly — must be observed at all times:
1) Treat all guns as if they are loaded.
2) Never point a firearm at something you’re not willing to destroy.
3) Keep your finger off the trigger until you are ready to shoot.
4) Be sure of your target and what is beyond it.
Properly observed, these rules are almost entirely capable of preventing accidental shootings.
Likewise, the muzzle rule applies to firearms except when you have personally checked them right now to ensure they are unloaded. Otherwise, how could you transport one to wherever you were going to hunt? You couldn't drive your car with the thing stored in the trunk without the muzzle becoming pointed at things it shouldn't were it loaded.
Fortunately, in addition to the four rules of gun safety, there is another method that is "almost entirely capable of preventing accidental shootings," which is to ensure the firearm is not loaded. Without ammunition in it, a firearm is quite inert.
The most amusing thing about this to me is that the same story ran in 2008 about then-Governor Palin, who was photographed holding a shotgun with the breech open (in this case, not over her shoulder but under her arm). "Is that even the right way to hold a rifle?" demanded critics. "Can't you shoot your foot off like that?"
Turns out that you really can't. But hey, let's have a song.
Remember Vox's rule: SJW's always lie. This guy, looking directly at a close-up photo of Cruz, decides to lie about Cruz' safety smarts.
ReplyDeleteSince we know he's lying about gun safety, we can conclude that he's a SJW unless definitely proven otherwise.
I would have thought that having the thing open and bent in a nonfunctional position would have been a clue.
ReplyDeleteValerie
See, Grim, when the crazies come out, people will mention VoxDay without me even prompting it.
ReplyDeleteThat's how "crazies" become "normalized" when the rest of the crowd gets in on the band wagon.
That's the "world" you think was something that didn't exist.
As for rules, it's like the one they teach amateurs about when to always shoot center mass.
It's like people don't realize that higher level shooters like Doc Holliday and other trick shot or duelists, could shoot any extremity with a gun if they felt like it, and hit it. Why? Because there were tactical benefits in not killing people when you didn't have to. But that's not for amateurs to know about, including those in the police unions.
I don't remember your having cited Vox Day yourself, Ymar, but I probably wasn't paying attention.
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