Trigger Happy wrote: » You really should visit a gun shop in the US. If you have the right permit you can pretty much buy anything.
MarkAnthony wrote: » Well I'll certainly be more careful in Walmart.
washman3 wrote: » 20 years ago you would probably have ridiculed somebody carrying a mobile phone...
forgotten password wrote: » i blame family guy
Aineoil wrote: » Strange culture. I don't understand the way Americans like to wear guns so publicly.
allthedoyles wrote: » read somewhere it was a Smith & Wesson 686
rarnes1 wrote: » 'merica
MarkAnthony wrote: » . Anyway returning to my question - no training requirements?
Highflyer13 wrote: » I remember my first time in the states. I was walking around a walmart in Fort Pierce, Florida after arriving a few hours earlier which is by no means a nice place. Anyway I was utterly shocked to see a guy beside me with a trolly out shopping with the wife and wearing a holster with a gun in it. That made me feel uneasy. Over the next few weeks I got used to seeing that kind of thing.
MarkAnthony wrote: » Really? And these are on sale to the general public?
end of the road wrote: » and rightly so, he'd deserve it. if you practice violence, then to jail you deserve to go.
Strider wrote: » Some guns don't have a safety.
MarkAnthony wrote: » Is there no mandatory training like, I dunno, engaging the safety before chucking it in with the wet wipes and purse?
whisky_galore wrote: » As a nation, they'll never learn. The more skittish they get with every gun incident, the greater their perceived need for personal firearms. Vicious circle, don't see it stopping anytime soon...or ever for that matter.
Pierce_1991 wrote: » Heading out to the supermarket, better not forget my gun! Sad set of circumstances but another example of the ludicrousness of feeling protected by bringing a gun everywhere.
Baggy Trousers wrote: » I have shot handguns before and I am surprised a 2 year old has the finger power to pull the trigger.