Looks just like a .38 at night! Fun for the whole family!
Does anyone remember the old SNL sketches with Dan Akroyd as the toy executive?
As a child I had a 3/5s or so replica of a Springfield bolt-action rifle. Made from wood and metal, the bolt actually appeared to cycle a bullet. Haven’t seen those in years.
I wouldn’t say they look “realistic”, though. Just real…especially the ones without the red barrel tips.
While I definitely wouldn’t say they should be made illegal, I do think it’d be an extremely bad idea to let your kid play with one in public in general.
Bah!
When I was a kid (early 60’s) toy guns REALLY looked real. They were even made out of heavy steel. I had a cap gun that not only looked like a colt snubby, it was actually as heavy as one.
Not only that, alot of the kids in my town were actually playing with real guns! No shit! Many of our dads came home from Korea with junky surplus Colt 1911 .45’s. They would remove the firing pin and glue a piece of wood in the magazine well and then
-poof- a new real toy gun. Not one of my friends ever got shot by a cop.
Is anybody else bothered by the idea of handing out stiffer punishment for somebody who robs a bank with a toy than for using a real gun? Or am I the only one?
Must be a Texas thing, I guess – most of the folks I know haven’t even seen this stuff, and none of the toy stores out here in California (the ones I’ve visited, anyway) have anything comparable. And IIRC, the larger toy store chains have a policy of not selling realistic toy guns anyway.
(The toy geeks I associate with prefer guns that double as megalomaniacal robots anyway)
Won’t work. When I was a child, my friends and I would take those brightly colored toy guns and we would paint them flat black. Same thing with the orange tips on toy guns too. You just can’t sneak up on someone with a bright gun that easly.
I saw one for sale here in Prague a few months ago. I forget the make, but it looked like a 9mm Beretta. The whole thing was hot pink with neon green and blue highlights. So, they are actually being made that way, not just painted afterwards.
Yeah, there are kids out there with real guns – more than ever. But despite what you’ve read/heard in sensationalist news stories, half of US kids aren’t packin’ heat. Toy guns still outnumber real guns among 12 year-olds by a HUGE margin, so yeah, I’d take the bet that it’s not a real gun. And if I were a police officer, I’d take the bet that it’s a toy even if the odds weren’t so horribly tilted – that’s their job. They sign up to protect the public, including that child.
You want to make that situation more difficult for the cop? Outlaw toy guns. That makes the split-second decision on whether the item that 12 year-old child is pointing at you is a deadly weapon much more difficult if there aren’t supposed to be any toy guns in your city. Remember, it doesn’t have to actually be a toy gun that makes the officer feel threatened:
Banning toy guns doesn’t solve the problem as all kinds of items can be mistaken for a deadly weapon. Furthermore, it may only make the “is that a weapon?” situation more difficult to assess. It just doesn’t seem like an answer.
Now, a law that imposed a fine on the family for a child that points a toy gun at a police officer (or even just any old citizen out there) would get my support.
What about that guy who was recently killed for “pointing” a cell phone at the cops? Considering cell phones can also be used to aid in countless crimes maybe we should ban all cell phones too?