Tuesday, June 27, 2006

A Gun in the House - Tragedy Hits East Brunswick

A 12-year old boy is dead in East Brunswick, New Jersey after he and a friend somehow discovered a gun in the house and were playing with it. I cannot imagine the grief and horror that all the families are going through, and the lasting damage this incident will cause to all.

Unfortunately, this is a scene that will continue to be repeated as long as irresponsible people have loaded guns. The only safe place for a gun is inside a locked case, with a trigger lock attached – UNLOADED. Some would argue that this renders the gun useless for self-defense – however, in my opinion, there is more of a chance of a loaded gun being used improperly than ever being needed to protect the lives of the home’s occupants.

Years ago, my daughter played a role in a video produced by the Piscataway Police department. In this video, she and a friend are playing in her home after school. In the garage, her father has left a gun on a workbench – the scene indicates that perhaps he had been intending to clean it. The two kids are fascinated with the gun, start to play with it, and, of course, it goes off. The video actually incorporates a scene of a child being shot in the head. A chilling similarity to this incident.

In another story on this video, a father hears a noise in the house, and pulls his loaded gun out of the nightstand. He creeps downstairs to the source of the noise, and in the dark, ends up shooting his own son, who had dropped a glass in the kitchen.

The video concludes with members of the Piscataway Police Department demonstrating how to use inexpensive trigger locks to secure guns.

The video was shown many times on cable television, and at schools. At my daughter’s school, permission slips were needed from parents, due to the frightening and graphic images. Later, my daughter and her science fair partner would win a prize in a state science contest for proposing the “Gun Safety Sensor,” a sensor embedded in the handle of a gun that would recognize only the owner’s fingerprints to become operational. At the time, she was told it was a great idea, but no such technology existed, but recently I’ve heard that the New Jersey Institute of Technology is working on just such a sensor.

However, until the day when there are such built-in safety features for guns – and all guns have them, it will be up to the gun owner to properly store the weapon in such a way that tragedies like this can never occur.

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Going Too Far to Sell a Book

I'm no fan of Ann Coulter - not her opinions, not her sarcasm, not her unsuccessful attempts at wit. But of course, she has the right to write, and the right to sell books to whomever is interested in her drivel.

This morning, however, I witnessed just how far over the top she can go just to draw attention to herself. During an interview with Matt Lauer on the Today Show, in which her two most common answers were "I don't know" and "that's why I wrote this book," I listened, in disgust, to her villification of some of the women widowed on 9-11 and the fact that some of them have spoken out against the administration and thrown support behind political candidates. She jumped on the conservative name-calling bandwagon and called them "Grieferatzis." That is not journalism, it is not op-ed, it is not political discourse.

It is just crass.


see some of the video here: mediabistro.com: FishBowlNY