tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6314891743204395487.post6198753128798583150..comments2024-02-05T03:41:13.688+01:00Comments on Mikeb302000: Florida 2-Year-old Dead - No One ResponsibleAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09806175370305006933noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6314891743204395487.post-9440912288863968352015-02-03T18:42:26.714+01:002015-02-03T18:42:26.714+01:00I "pretended" nothing, and I certainly w...I "pretended" <i>nothing</i>, and I <i>certainly</i> will not pretend to have failed to notice your attempt to incite violence against the sheriff.Kurt '45superman' Hofmannhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14091930034162667742noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6314891743204395487.post-47927872064824642362015-02-03T14:32:10.230+01:002015-02-03T14:32:10.230+01:00What we smell is a petty, picky, whiney pain-in-th...What we smell is a petty, picky, whiney pain-in-the-ass - you. My point, which you understood perfectly well but pretended not to in your typical lying way, is that the sheriff's response was too nonchalant. The gross negligence of allowing a 2-year-old access to a gun resulting in his death, should not be referred to a "bad things happen." Doing so is to excuse the grotesque irresponsibility of the adult gun owner.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09806175370305006933noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6314891743204395487.post-79047472762534674682015-01-24T22:52:21.013+01:002015-01-24T22:52:21.013+01:00But what about that unbelievable nonchalant respon...<i>But what about that unbelievable nonchalant response - ""Sometimes bad things happen," Sheriff Gualtieri said."</i><br /><br />As it turns out, Sheriff Gualtieri is quite right--sometimes bad things <i>do</i> indeed happen. The fatal shooting of a 2-year-old would certainly qualify as a "bad thing," at least to anyone with a modicum of morality.<br /><br /><i>The sheriff should be slapped hard.</i><br /><br />Now <i>this</i> is interesting. You want physical violence to be committed against him? You <i>want</i> someone to commit assault and battery? You must know that physically attacking a law enforcement officer can be lethally dangerous--you rail against such incidents all the time.<br /><br />But, since the sheriff said "[s]ometimes bad things happen," your need for violence against the sheriff has become so great that you want someone to risk <i>death</i> to harm him?<br /><br />Does anyone else smell hypocrite?Kurt '45superman' Hofmannhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14091930034162667742noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6314891743204395487.post-40873383886695333382015-01-24T19:22:58.120+01:002015-01-24T19:22:58.120+01:00But what about that unbelievable nonchalant respon...But what about that unbelievable nonchalant response - ""Sometimes bad things happen," Sheriff Gualtieri said."<br /><br />The sheriff should be slapped hard.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09806175370305006933noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6314891743204395487.post-71468907584729773622015-01-22T17:24:37.734+01:002015-01-22T17:24:37.734+01:00I must agree Sandra. Too many people seem to equa...I must agree Sandra. Too many people seem to equate hidden or out of site with secured or safe. Kids are naturally curious and will make it their personal mission to find whatever you may be hiding. <br /> I'm also not comfortable with assertions that all that is needed is training to make kids safe around firearms. A lot of this comes from personal experience in how kids can completely blow past boundaries of what would be considered good decisions. For example, one of my now adult sons burned himself pretty good by him and his brother setting him on fire to make a YouTube video.<br /> And while it may mark me as paranoid, the potential outcome of your decision to allow access to a child, and them making a mistake is what the Army refers to in its risk management process as catastrophic.<br /> As long as you are the parent, and they are a child, you are both legally and morally on the hook for their misuse of firearms under your control.ssgmarkcrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14480230040370709682noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6314891743204395487.post-25067880581628683002015-01-22T08:21:28.619+01:002015-01-22T08:21:28.619+01:00"secured in the vehicle"
If it truly wa..."secured in the vehicle"<br /><br />If it truly was secured, the child would not be dead.Sandranoreply@blogger.com