Childhood Curiosity: The Deadly Consequences of Gun Play

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If you have ever picked up a handgun whether it ranges from a real gun to even a water gun, you know of how simple it is to use and or operate it within a matter of minutes. You simply enough pick it up, aim it, and squeeze the trigger. The gun does all the rest. The trigger pushes against the sear and the disconnector, this releases the hammer which hits the firing pin that expels the bullet from the cartridge. From a technical viewpoint, this process is almost child 's play. Therein lies the problem. Children have been shown to frequently handle guns, with dire results. According to the Center for Disease Control, 409 kids aged 14 or younger died in 2013 alone as a result of playing with guns (Center for Disease Control “2013, United States …show more content…

Members of congress are pressuring manufacturers to look into these what some might call “childproof guns” -- smart guns that fire only when an authorized user has shown to pull the trigger. Imagine: A criminal wrestles a gun away from a police officer. A child finds their parent’s weapon in the bedroom. Neither of these two can shoot because they do not have the specifically designed ring, bracelet, or pin that electronically or magnetically unlocks the firearm. Some smart guns go even as far as to not fire unless a microchip sensor embedded in the gun recognizes the user’s …show more content…

In an interview with Jonathan Mossberg, vice president of O. F. Mossberg & Sons, the world 's largest maker of pump-action shotguns, he described what was going through in the process of making smart guns. “We 're talking about a laptop inside of your firearm,” says Jonathan Mossberg. “If you know firearms, there 's an amazing amount of stresses that go on when you pull a trigger,” explains Mossberg, who is developing a smart shotgun. “It 's like hitting something with a sledgehammer every time you fire it.” Besides the percussion, there 's also smoke, heat, and accumulated residue of gun oil and gunpowder. Altogether, a gun is a most inhospitable home for a silicon chip (D’Agnese

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