Constitutional Contract Law

Parents play a key role in developing safe practices and are ultimately responsible for the behavior and safety of their children. In a home where guns are kept, the degree of safety a child has rests squarely on the child’s parents.Parents who accept the responsibility to learn, practice and teach gun safety rules will ensure their child’s safety to a much greater extent than those who do not. Parental responsibility does not end, however, when the child leaves the home.According to federal statistics, there are guns in approximately half of all U.S. households. Even if no one in your family owns a gun, chances are that someone you know does. Your child could come in contact with a gun at a neighbor’s house, when playing with friends, or under other circumstances outside your home.It is critical for your child to know what to do if he or she encounters a firearm anywhere, and it is the parents’ responsibility to provide that training.
Talking With Your Child About Gun Safety

There is no particular age to talk with your child about gun safety. A good time to introduce the subject is the first time he or she shows an interest in firearms, even toy pistols or rifles. Talking openly and honestly about gun safety with your child is usually more effective than just ordering him or her to “Stay out of the gun closet,” and leaving it at that. Such statements may just stimulate a child’s natural curiosity to investigate further.As with any safety lesson, explaining the rules and answering a child’s questions help remove the mystery surrounding guns. Any rules set for your own child should also apply to friends who visit the home. This will help keep your child from being pressured into showing a gun to a friend.

Children often do not know the difference between real guns and toy guns.It is also advisable, particularly with very young children, to discuss gun use on television as opposed to gun use in real life. Firearms are often handled carelessly in movies and on TV.Children see TV and movie characters shot and “killed” with well-documented frequency. When a young child sees that same actor appear in another movie or TV show, confusion between entertainment and real life may result. It may be a mistake to assume that your child knows the difference between being “killed” on TV and in reality.
If your child has toy guns, you may want to use them to demonstrate safe gun handling and to explain how they differ from genuine firearms. Even though an unsupervised child should not have access to a gun, there should be no chance that he or she could mistake a real gun for a toy.
If you have decided that your child is not ready to be trained in a gun’s handling. Then you should teach them whaat they should do if they find a gun which is:
STOP!

Don’t Touch.

Leave the Area.

Tell an Adult.

Telling and teaching a child to stop and not touch the gun is the most important things to do beacuse all children are curious and may want to play with the gun.

In todays world adult supervision is not always available. So teaching your child to leave the area is also important.

Tell an Adult” emphasizes that children should seek a trustworthy adult, neighbor, relative or teacher – if a parent or guardian is not available.

In many ways parents are responsible for the safety of their children and are responsible for what they teach their children about guns and their safety.