"Presumably, someone in the DEA trained this guy on firearms usage. They did not do a very good job, did they?"
If he was trained by an NRA certified course, which is highly likely, then he was well trained.
"Someone in the DEA selected this guy to teach firearm safety to children. Did they do their due diligence?"
No. But that's the DEA for you. They're pretty much brain dead over there. Take my word for it.
"Someone in the school system simply assumed that the DEA agent could be trusted with guns in the classroom. First class job?"
The school screwed up. They should have hired an NRA safety trainer.
"You and the other open carry proponents justified open carry on grounds of need (which I still think is preposterous-unless you are buying drugs in SE, you can't identify one place in your life where you really need to be armed)"
If you've ever had a gun pointed at your face, you might feel differently.
"I'm sure that sometimes the training is adequate. But this incident highlights that other times it is not. While the video is actually kind of funny in a black sense, it could have been a real tragedy."
Mari, the 5th leading cause of death of older teenagers in the US is from firearms. The 2nd leading cause is traffic accidents.
Now, are teens well trained to drive automobiles? If they're not, should we force them to get better training? Would that eliminate traffic accidents? Why not just ban automobiles?
"And now let me counter your rules of firearm safety with the first rule of product design. You have to design against foreseeable misuse. Virtually no manufacturer does this aside from installing an easily forgettable safety."
Nonsense. Many firearm manufacturers make guns with multiple safeties. A Glock has 3 safeties. A Springfield XD has two manual safeties. All Taurus pistols (that I'm aware of) include lock down safeties that require a key for the user to unlock. Bersa's concealed carry 380 includes a similar type lock. I also refuse to purchase such handguns because if I have to fumble in the dark for a key to unlock the gun, put a mag in, rack the slide, and disengage the safety, then I would be about 45 seconds late in being able to defend and save my life.
Had this DEA agent not been completely retarded, he should have 1) made sure he had an empty clip in his gun, 2) rack his slide several times to discharge the round, 3) make a visual and physcial check for a round in the chamber, and 4) locked down his gun if it included such a lock. I would NOT have brought a Glock for such a safety course because Glocks do not have a manual decocker. If that was the only gun I had access to for such a demonstration, then I would have field stripped it before I ever got into the class room.
"There will always be brain dead idiots like your fellow government worker. And the fed gov thought this guy was a "teacher." Multiply him by thousands and put him on the street with open carry nationally, and you are going to see gun accidents skyrocket."
In most cases, unless you're a cop, then you shouldn't carry openly. It's legal for me to do so, but I would never do it, because the reaction of people around me might cause a dangerous situation.
But lastly, I should say that it's pretty retarded for people who don't understand firearms to suggest ways to make guns more safe, especially by federal regulation. I don't mean to disparage people with certain inabilities, but it's akin to the blind critiquing a Van Gogh.
-- Modified on 2/3/2011 7:31:35 AM