Toy guns, once a staple of childhood, lose popularity as attitudes change
I am curious about your observations.
According to this headline article from the times kids do not use toy guns as much anymore.
According to every 8-12 year old boy I have ever been around (even younger in some cases) every stick that is picked up becomes a sword, or a gun in their imagination. There may be a decline in sales, but I certainly do not see a decline in young boys desire to play some form of "fight the bad guys."
Fact is so long as "the bad guys" are propertly defined as the people whom initiate force on others. I see such play and childhood development as a good thing. It instills a desire to fight bad behaviors in self and in others.
I am curious what others in the gulch think of guns, and the often turning everything a young boy picks up into some kind of weapon for a time as they develop.
What are your thoughts?
According to this headline article from the times kids do not use toy guns as much anymore.
According to every 8-12 year old boy I have ever been around (even younger in some cases) every stick that is picked up becomes a sword, or a gun in their imagination. There may be a decline in sales, but I certainly do not see a decline in young boys desire to play some form of "fight the bad guys."
Fact is so long as "the bad guys" are propertly defined as the people whom initiate force on others. I see such play and childhood development as a good thing. It instills a desire to fight bad behaviors in self and in others.
I am curious what others in the gulch think of guns, and the often turning everything a young boy picks up into some kind of weapon for a time as they develop.
What are your thoughts?
eg: There are a number of parks (all of the ones in Orange County!; some in other counties) who now forbid martial arts practices at their parks and facilities, for example. The avoidance of anything that has to do with guns is another example of this, of course.
We need liberation - men's lib; women's lib. We need to expand our option set, not limit it. Yes, that means all sorts of cross dressing mix-gender green-haired people. That is up to the individual. (And I will hire a green haired 'e for anything that does not involve public contact if 'e is competent. If 'e wants a public contact job, then 'e has to be able to 'pass' in the conservative medical community.)
Jan
I am sad to hear that there is some validity to this article. My experience is still quite different.
First the simple memories. As a kid growing up in Massachusetts suburbia in the 1960's playing with toy guns was paramount for a boy. Heavily influenced by Combat!, The Rat Patrol, Twelve O'clock High and others, and by my Dad who was in the Air Force in North Africa, Sicily, and Italy, I was raised on WWII. In the 60's the war was only 20 years ago, we were the good guys and fought to total victory over some very dark and real forces. Since that contemplation in the 60's as a kid (I have never let go of it) about how Germany - ostensibly a modern western civilization could fall into such collective barbarism so completely and so fast? Because the latent, unspoken, vaguely embraced fear lurked and was growing in the underlying tapestry of the "Cultural Revolution" of the 1960's? Could it happen again and anywhere?
That set me up for seeking answers that were found in what Ayn Rand spoke of with the collective and the individual, and finally culminating in reading Leonard Peikoffs tome on The Ominous Parallels as a young adult in the 70's. But as kids it set the tone for engaging in just that - good vs evil play in the frontyard. And it was a blast to play a Nazi - that way you could put on a display dying the most dramatic death with realistic wipe-outs on the front lawn. But it also set the tone for distinguishing reality versus fantasy because the basis of it was so damn real.
And in amazing contrast, while this was all so normal - god - I still have my grade school 3 ring binders covered with drawings of blood dripping bayonets, stukas dive bombing troop positions, bodies blasting apart - with the fact that in Massachusetts suburbia even back then, there was no gun culture to grow up into. No hunting culture, no rifle for 15th birthday, no training on the reality of guns. I didn't get all that until moving west in the late 70's and met people that had grown up with them as normal as could be.
But the breadth of it all takes in the basics of the ability to reason. Recognize that guns are tools, nothing more, used for good or bad by the behavior of the possessor. The simple statement in Shane from a gunfighter that a gun is as bad or as good as its user is so easy to compute with applied reason. And now this simple faculty so essential for human survival and civilized behavior is being obfuscated, unraveled, and thrown under the anarchy of the mind bus - it is equally astonishing as is contemplating the descendancy of Germany into total collective barbarism.
Finally, as an adult and with my Dad in later years I inherited my grandfathers 30-30 Winchester that had always been in the closet in a long box. It had to be shipped via FFL of course and when I picked it up at the local gun shop, there was a town cop present shooting the shit so to speak with the shop owner. He remarked that it is really something to inherit a grandfathers "killing tool". Yes indeed it is, and yes indeed it can be used to kill as needed and at the discretion of the user. And indeed rationality and responsibility must begin with the children.
Now to go and pull out my pearl handled (fake) six shooter cap guns and belt and holsters that I still have.
As kids my brothers, friends and I had those old fashioned cap guns with the red spools of paper caps. We would play "cops and robbers." We knew they were toys. We all had parents that had real guns in the house and when we were old enough we were trained with the real things, taken hunting and later received guns for birthday presents when old enough to go hunting with Dad. We were from an early age instructed to never touch them without adult supervision, to respect them as dangerous and shown just how dangerous they were. Accompanying a mentor on a hunting trip while young without a firearm but witnessing a harvest will provide lesson. The number one rule was never, ever point a gun at anyone even if it was believed to be unloaded. Guns were commonplace and thus not a discovered fascination hidden in the closet that no one told us about. We did not play with them. They were dangerous just like a sharp knife or a hot stove burner. As a precaution, when we were very young, my Father kept the bullets separate from the guns but he knew where he could retrieve them quickly if need be. We lived in farm country and they were a natural part of growing up. I feel today many accidents happen because of fascination of the unknown and lack of precautions and instruction from the irresponsible. The paranoid do-gooders and scolds are the problem.
My two cents...
Happy holidays,
O.A.
It actually had 6 bullets that you could take apart and put a round cap into before you loaded the revolver's cylinder through a loading gate..
I loved the smell of cap gunpowder on that Christmas morning.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nx5N-4Jv...
:)
Happy holidays,
O.A.
Merry Christmas!
Hey, I noticed the Walmart near here has the Red Ryder BB gun for sale! Tempting, very tempting.
I loved my toy guns as a kids as did my brothers. And every kid I ever met as a kid did to, unless their parents where anti-gun. These poor kids suffered by it! So the either played by themselves or with luck had a friend lend them one when their parents were not looking. None of us ever have been in trouble or committed a crime. Playing with toy guns is a great part of being a kid. I guess some people can't help trying to control what others do. A sad need to try and control!
It is also my belief that every child should be taught to respect firearms as soon as they are mature enough to understand. That includes being taught how to shoot. With toys they learn what is not real and when they destroy a 2x4 with a gun they learn the destructive power of the real tool.
While anything that represents a weapon is not permitted in Halloween costumes at school, which I have had my kids openly ignore with only one incident. Most people where I am at shoot guns and have some knowledge of how to use them. Shooting is often a regular part of some many peoples entertainment.
Thanks for sharing. This was the kind of feedback I was interested in, and while its good to see what is going on out there in other places, it saddens me.
I love watching our kids play scientist, police officer, teacher, attorney, doctor, etc. If they like guns, I think it's fine they play guns since before long they'll be men and women with a Constitutional right to guns.