Gene Beggs
Active member
There was no attempt at propaganda or as some would suggest a conspiracy by the anti-gun crowd to take away our 2nd Amendment Rights. Our rights, as some easily forget, are repeatedly affirmed by the Supreme Court.
CNBC only talked about the Remington 700 trigger prior to the new X-Mark Pro, not the entire gun universe. It was made quite clear, throughout the entire program, what the subject was.
I don't feel the mother was at fault. The young boy, as the father mentioned, was sitting on a nearby horse with his sister. At some point, as his mother was unloading, he slid off the horse, in view of his sister, and made his way around the backside of the trailer where he was eventually hit with a bullet that initially passed through the wall of the trailer. He was completely out of view from his mother, father and sister.
One could argue, I suppose, that his sister was at fault because she let him slide off the horse and move to a position on the other side of the trailer in line with her mother's unloading. To accuse the daughter would be just as wrong as accusing the mother, when it was neither of their faults. Remington acknowledged that fact by settling the case in favor of the family.
Remington at some point in time, made the decision that they would pay off on wrongful death claims because, economically, it would be cheaper then fixing a problem they were well aware of. Many companies do the same thing everyday. It's a fact of life.
Art, I wouldn't argue with you on the points you make. We all see things from our own perspective. Nothing we could say or do would change anything that has happened. In the case of the Montana mother whose son was killed, I wonder if the same thing would have happened if the rifle had been a Winchester Model 70 which has been known to fire inadvertently when the safety is disengaged?
What if you or I had been unloading that rifle; would we have done anything differently?
We could discuss this forever and never get everyone to agree on who was at fault. I'm sure the decision makers at Remington considered all their options and chose the best course of action based on the information they had at the time. It's not a perfect world.
Gene Beggs