Business 'It shoots just like mom and dad's gun': Weapons manufacturer unveils AR-15 for KIDS called JR-15 - I only heard about this because Newsom became angry again and wants to ban gun advertising to kids in any form

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An Illinois gun manufacturer has unveiled an AR-15 style rifle for children it has called the JR-15 and marketed it with the tag line 'It operates just like mom and dad's gun.'

The assault rifle, whose name stands for Junior-15, is 20 percent smaller than a regular AR-15 and weighs 2.3lbs, but its maker, Wee1 Tactical, promises that the firearm packs the same deadly punch as its full-sized version.

The .22-caliber long rifle was introduced last month at the SHOT show in Las Vegas, which is billed as the nation's largest shooting, hunting and outdoor industry trade show.

The event was sponsored by the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the trade association for the firearms industry that is based in Newtown, Connecticut, which, incidentally, was the site of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre that left 20 children and six adults dead.

Wee 1 Tactical's promotional material says that its pint-sized rifle, which bears a logo displaying a skull and crossbones with a pacifier, is designed to 'safely help adults introduce children to the shooting sports.'

The 30-inch-long rifle is semiautomatic and comes equipped with a tamper-resistant safety that needs to be pulled out 'with some force' and rotated before it can fire.

'We believe that this introduction early on will produce a deep respect for firearms that continue and last for a lifetime of safety,' the makers of the JR-15 said in a press release.

Gun-control advocates have reacted with horror to the unveiling of the diminutive AR-15 style rifle geared towards children, especially given a recent spike in gun violence at schools, reported Fast Company.

Between August and December 2021, there were 136 shootings on school campuses, reported the advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety.

JR-15's adult version, the AR-15 semiautomatic assault rifle, was used in 11 mass shootings in the US since 2012, including at Sandy Hook, in Las Vegas and at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

'There’s been youth shooting guns for 80 years, but there’s never been a youth AR-15,' Ryan Busse, senior advisor at Giffords, a gun violence-prevention groups co-founded by former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, told Fast Company. 'I’ve never seen one that’s just an egregiously tactical, offensive weapon of war.'

Josh Sugarmann, founder and executive director of Violence Policy Center, told the website that while there have been other weapons manufacturers that have marketed guns towards children, Wee1 Tactics is the first company to create a kids' version of an AR-15.

'I think what makes the WEE1 JR-15 really just so horrific is the fact that it’s saying the quiet part out loud,' he said. 'There’s no shame.'

California Gov Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, expressed his shock and dismay at Wee 1 Tactics, and called on conservative politicians receiving support from the National Rifle Association to condemn the JR-15.

'This is VILE,' Newsom tweeted this week. 'A skull & crossbones with a pacifier on weapon of war. Made to look "cute" to appeal to kids.'
 
they know what they're doing. i'd be surprised if Newsom didn't have stock in the fucking company.

Although i'll admit making a .22 rifle and pretending its for kids is a pretty great marketing tool, even the name is great. If this company really had balls they'd have displays with like the gun in that shitty plastic packaging all action figures are in, that you need fucking snips to open.
 
they know what they're doing. i'd be surprised if Newsom didn't have stock in the fucking company.

Although i'll admit making a .22 rifle and pretending its for kids is a pretty great marketing tool, even the name is great. If this company really had balls they'd have displays with like the gun in that shitty plastic packaging all action figures are in, that you need fucking snips to open.
Those things are pretty easy to open with your hands. Just need to get access to the back of the box.
 
Remember kids, rimfire cartridges do not cycle reliably in automatics.
I'm going to assume you mean semi automatics and call bullshit. A 10/22 with factory magazines will almost always perform flawlessly no matter what ammo you feed it and even if you don't clean it. It's a miracle of a rifle.
.223 doesn't kick much more than .22 at all and it's a much more reliable round in a magazine fed semi auto weapon.
I still agree with this though. When I transitioned my kids I shot my M-4 off my nut sack to demonstrate to them that even though it is loud as hell it doesn't kick.
 
Just a reminder that schools in the US once offered marksmanship classes, and you used to be able to order rifles by mail, no ID required.
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Cool.

I mean most kids around where I live know how to handle and shoot a gun by the time they're five. Why wouldn't you market towards them? It's a skill like any other and the earlier you start the better and safer you will be.
I remember in the 90's the tv preaching that if you see a gun you should run away and tell an adult. There was a huge marketing campaign at the time and it is probably why so many people are afraid of a piece of metal and wood (or plastic) now. In my house we just learned how to responsibly use the tool that is a firearm. I have passed that knowledge on to my kids.
 
Just a reminder that schools in the US once offered marksmanship classes, and you used to be able to order rifles by mail, no ID required.
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A 10 dollar rifle, not even single shot spring powered airsoft rifles sell at that level no more.

I remember in the 90's the tv preaching that if you see a gun you should run away and tell an adult. There was a huge marketing campaign at the time and it is probably why so many people are afraid of a piece of metal and wood (or plastic) now. In my house we just learned how to responsibly use the tool that is a firearm. I have passed that knowledge on to my kids.
The 1990s had a lot of retarded shit that refuses to go away.
 
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