I understand your point, so let's run with it. If Rittenhouse is a child, then would you agree that he should be tried as a juvenile, not as an adult? In fact, we should try everyone under 25 as juveniles rather than adults, right? And we certainly shouldn't be permitting them to vote -- children don't have the mental capacity or judgment to be choosing our leaders. In fact, parents should have the same legal responsibilities to 24 year old offspring as they have to 6 year old offspring, right?Some Schmo wrote: ↑Wed Sep 16, 2020 4:21 pmAn emotional reaction is entirely appropriate right now. I'm not sitting here making legislative suggestions. I'm reacting to what I consider the blindness and seeming indifference to what this conversation is in the first place.
Dude, I have a soon to be 20 year old daughter. As far as I'm concerned, she's still a child. It's extremely difficult for me to look at anyone under the age of 25 as anything but a child.Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed Sep 16, 2020 4:11 pmUsing the term "child" to describe Rittenhouse is an emotive argument that obscures the actual situation we are dealing with. One of the dilemmas we face is that at age 18, a "child" magically transforms into an "adult" and is entitled to a whole bundle of rights and privileges. Would Rittenhouse's judgment be any better if he'd been 18? I doubt it.
Yes, 18 is too young to have a gun. So is 88, unless you're a trained, lawful and safety conscious gun owner.
If you just want to vent, that's great. Venting is good. But if you are lumping me in with the blind and indifferent, you're way off the mark. Not being a deity, I can't bring either victim back to life. I can't fix the third's victim's arm. I can form an opinion about whether we further “F” up the rest of a 17 year old's life and try to figure out how to adjust the rules to reduce the chances of this happening again. I could fill this forum with descriptions of how shocking, horrible, unbelievable, moronic, disgusting, etc. this situation is. And at the end of the day, I haven't done crap. All I do is rest up my hands for the next wringing session.
But I do think you've touched on two changes that might improve this situation: raise the age for possessing firearms (possibly with exceptions for target shooting or hunting under adult supervision) and require licensing, training, and perhaps even periodic retraining. In my opinion, a big part of the problem with today's gun culture is that it doesn't take guns seriously enough. I've owned, handled and fired guns. And every time I've handled one, I've been acutely aware that I'm operating a device that is designed to efficiently kill. I've never pointed a gun at anyone -- not as a threat, not as a joke, not in self defense -- because I'm acutely aware that the result could easily be something I can't ever fix and would “F” up the lives of lots of people, including me. That didn't come naturally -- it was taught to me. And I don't see that respect in the gun culture that I see.