Let's say both parents in this thread get 20 years for negligent homicide: do we really think that has a deterrent effect? I just don't think you can reach people who are stupid enough to leave a loaded gun around a toddler.
I don't think there is a chance to effect behavior if you are already that careless and stupid. I think if you have people like that with guns something bad happening because of carelessness is a matter of time. Even though there is no way to accomplish it right now, the only way to protect kids like the ones in this thread is making sure their parents, who are obviously unfit to own guns, don't have them.
		
		
	 
Couldnt we use the punishment and harsh sentencing coupled with wide publicity of the crime and sentence/punishment to elicit some sort of pavlovian response in the wider populace of the ignorant. If they are that dumb would it really be that much harder than training or retraining a dog?
I think harsh sentences for careless storage coupled with wide publicity and a campaign to educate the wider populace on proper handling and storage could bear as much fruit as some of the tech that you are hoping will be a partial answer. Perhaps those things all coupled together could yield real results. As I said earlier in the thread. We change behavior and attitudes through conditioning and education.
In Florida I dont know why we couldnt use the 10-20-Life statute we have in place to punish parents whose children are injured or killed due to their negligence. Just like we charge the driver of the getaway car in a robbbery/murder as if he pulled the trigger himself.
		
 
		
	 
If you are talking about a campaign similar to what we have seen on smoking, as in multiple-decade spanning, hugely funded campaign, then maybe after about a decade we could see an effect. I like the idea of getting both that and the tech investment going.
I've been thinking a good deal about what you have said about a mandatory requirement. I don't agree it should be optional but I want to posit something to you:
What if, instead of our government mandating smart-gun firing tech on every gun sold, the mandate was that if gun manufacturers did not have a working, effective smart gun line by, say, 2020, that they would not be able to legally sell any guns in the American market. This would preserve the freedom of choice in whether a person buys a smart gun or not, and at the same time force the R&D investment from the manufacturers needed to perfect the technology. Then, our government could offer a 20% tax incentive for people who opt for smart gun technology, at the same time increasing penalties for accidents caused by guns without the tech after the options have been in market for three or so years.
Then, after the tech has been in a wide market for a long time, and if it has proved viable and reliable, you could follow that up with regulations that all new guns sold have the technology?
Would that be something you could get behind?
- Preserves individual choice
- Provides safer alternatives for those that want it
- Drives R&D on the tech further in shorter period of time by spurring investment
- Does not cost taxpayers anything
- Does not in any way limit anyone's 2nd amendment rights