The excellent @pluralistic highlighted this Wired article from 2015 regarding car “accidents”. The author’s story mirrors our own loss of our three year old daughter playing in front of our house in 2012. There needs to be greater accountability for people using automobiles.

https://www.wired.com/2015/10/stop-calling-daughters-death-car-accident/

#CrashNotAccident #Cars

Stop Calling My Daughter's Death a Car Accident

When we say “accident,” we are saying deaths on our cities' streets are inevitable.

WIRED

@thegaffer @pluralistic The shooting sports community has been working for years to do something similar, replacing the term "accidental discharge" with "negligent discharge" to reflect the fact that barring extremely rare mechanical malfunctions, guns don't just go off on their own.

If it fires without you intending, it's because you were doing something stupid and dangerous like having it loaded when you shouldn't have, leaving your finger on the trigger, etc.

So just like with a significant number of car crashes, it's not an accident it's negligent behavior on the part of the operator. This sort of terminology should become more prevalent in general.

@azonenberg @thegaffer @pluralistic its true! Most guns are even designed not to go off when dropped or hit -- only from pulling the trigger.
SIG Sauer P320 - Wikipedia

@RealGene @azonenberg @thegaffer @pluralistic RIP Sig Sauer enjoyers.

Another fun one is the CZ 52, an antique Czech semiauto. I had one go off when i turned the safety on once... My finger wasnt even on the trigger lol.

I had it pointed downrange and was still in firing stance so everything was ok. But it was a great reminder why the golden rule of gun safety is what it is:

"Never point a gun at something you wouldnt want to shoot"

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CZ_52

CZ 52 - Wikipedia