• @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    Not sure what op meant, but there’s a lot of angles that I can see it being true. Having a shooting range on personal property is very different in rural Arizona than places with higher population density. The risk is objectively not as large. The space makes it unlikely to hit anything you wouldn’t want to target, and it’s very ingrained in gun culture to be smart about what direction you fire.

    They may have also been referring to accepted risk vs freedoms. Gun people understand that there’s a risk to owning guns, but it’s an acceptable risk because they value guns, much like how people understand the risk of traveling by vehicle yet still choose to.

    • @[email protected]
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      -11 year ago

      it’s very ingrained in gun culture to be smart about what direction you fire.

      This is one of those things where 99% of people I see online say it, but like 10% of people I know in real life actually practice it.

      Like wearing protective gear on a motorcycle

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        That’s interesting, when I look online, most people seem to think all gun owners are totally careless. I say it because I’ve lived in that culture before, everyone where I’m from has their hunter’s safety training and I’ve never been out shooting with anybody did it carelessly.

        Is this your impression of friends/acquaintances of yours that shoot or have you taken part as well and seen it first hand?

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          When I’m in online conversations it’s responsibility and gun safes and trigger discipline.

          When my friends get drunk it’s “let’s go shoot rocks from my deck”