MAH
Well-Known Member
I guess a lot of people have reacted to the headline, without reading the full article.How anyone can justify their actions
I guess a lot of people have reacted to the headline, without reading the full article.How anyone can justify their actions
Whatever you do , don't listen to Rap music ........ or watch movies like The Boondock Saints etc , like kids do . I think the current state of affairs is more to do with the breakdown of society rather than a firearms ad . Bad optics yes , but kids , and adults for that matter , are bombarded constantly by violent imagery on social media , in video games and in movies and television . Remingtons ads were a symptom , not the cause , of societal ills IMHO .Obviously, but I still think it’s difficult to justify advertising that says to kids that you’re not a man unless you own an AR-15 (something which they’re assured will shut ‘em up real good) and direct product placement of this military rifle design in war-simulation video games.
What’s the benefit? How comfortable would you feel about your children forming their impressions of guns from this material?
If any of my kids would've been convinced that they needed a gun to be a real man , it would mean that I'd failed in my responsibilities as a parent . If you look at what's happening in a lot of places around the world , this is what's happening . My children were very responsible before they were teenagers , as were my nieces and nephews along with the children of my friends . That being said , I live in a different world than most . I have seen a lot of young people who's lives were a mess , their parents using the " they get this stuff online " get out of jail free card . It's simple really , get involved , raise your children to be polite , self sufficient and caring humans and things will improve .How much self-control, accountability and responsibility do you genuinely expect from a teenaged gamer?
Would you be OK with your kid being convinced that a gun is a great way to be a real man who can get people to shut up and bow down?
Is this really the impression we want people to have of what motivates people to own a rifle?
That would make them bad parents , and in reality , most teenagers are 100% immune to it . I have to say brother , you seem to have a very negative world view . Cheer up , life is good .OK, what about the parents who don't have the time, the means, or the ability to ensure that their children have the mental fortitude to completely resist emotionally-manipulative marketing? Seems like it would be quite the achievement to make them 100% immune to it.
Really, what's the upside to justifying Remington's behaviour here?
Did you just google those stats lol .The "litigious society" thing is a complete myth, though. Despite a few well-publicised and often-misrepresented cases, American corporations tend to have overwhelming legal advantages over those who they harm, and tort cases are a small fraction (7%) of all civil cases, and even the majority of those involve suing a private individual after an automobile collision.
Holding a US company to account in court is actually quite rare, and the vast majority of successful claims are settled for relatively small amounts.
Not much slavery wealth in Massachusetts or Connecticut. The wealth there was founded on developing precision machine tools for the firearms industry, which then enabled them to produce much better spinning and weaving machinery than the rest of the world had, which could be run by water power from the numerous small rivers there. That money built another generation of wealth insurance, first for shipping, then other commerce.A lot of it came from slavery, friend.
Are you talking about Rome and its successor state Italy, or maybe GB and its colonies, France and its empire and so forth ? Its nice when you can differentiate for your own point of view.@Southern
While that all may be true, it doesn't change the fact that the US was founded as a slave-owning society. While it wasn't as widespread as in the South, there certainly was slavery in New England, and the American project profited from the practice in many direct and indirect ways.
And without discounting the effect of hard work and industriousness, let's not forget that all those colonial land grants were only made possible by the systematic genocide of the native population.
All very true, but that doesn't mean we should romanticise some whitewashed version of the past and pretend that the wealth of the US or any other empire doesn't have some very dark origins.Are you talking about Rome and its successor state Italy, or maybe GB and its colonies, France and its empire and so forth ? Its nice when you can differentiate for your own point of view.
To their great good America fought a war to end slavery in their own country and to a lesser extent W. Wilberforce pricked a nations conscience to end the practice.
Japan is probably the worst most modern nation to enjoy enslaving others - Burma railway and comfort girls from Korea .eg.
America may have residual problems but dont we all.
We're all modern day slave owners. You and everyone else has at least a dozen slaves working on products for your consumption all created within the PRC, everyday of the week, every week of the month, every month of the year. If we're not to romanticise the past, let's not romanticise the present either.All very true, but that doesn't mean we should romanticise some whitewashed version of the past and pretend that the wealth of the US or any other empire doesn't have some very dark origins.
Very true. And if you think the PRC is bad, just wait until you hear about some of the conditions in places like the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, DRC, and India — not to mention what goes on in American prisons and Amazon warehouses.We're all modern day slave owners. You and everyone else has at least a dozen slaves working on products for your consumption all created within the PRC, everyday of the week, every week of the month, every month of the year. If we're not to romanticise the past, let's not romanticise the present either.
Of course; what better way is there to get up-to-date ones?Did you just google those stats lol .
AB
I don't want to veer off the topic of Remington's extortion by hostile state governments, because other states are suing Smith & Wesson, even without their handguns being used in any "mass shooting".@Southern
While that all may be true, it doesn't change the fact that the US was founded as a slave-owning society. While it wasn't as widespread as in the South, there certainly was slavery in New England, and the American project profited from the practice in many direct and indirect ways.
And without discounting the effect of hard work and industriousness, let's not forget that all those colonial land grants were only made possible by the systematic genocide of the native population.