We must be talking about different stories, mine the shooter shot the instructor, not themslves in the head.
I think what Tony is referring to, is it was the fault of the instructor, not the kids.
Now that NFA machine guns are becoming more popular, I hope tragedies like this do not become more common.
The way things have gone since Reagan signed the '86 ban, and ammo has been in the past decade or so, they arent near as popular as the once were. Long gone are $200 guns and $100, 2000 round cases of ammo. These days, you need to be fairly well off to get into the machine gun world.
Tragic for sure and a hard way to learn a lesson. I am in the camp of teach em young and teach em well, but my kids, and grandchildren never handled a firearm I didn't know forwards and backwards and within their capabilities.
As it should be.
Instructors do need to recognize, accept and insist that some things are beyond the physical capabilities of some children to manage.
I agree, and that goes for anything firearms related.
FA firearms are not the instant world destroyers that the majority of people believe them to be.
Some are very tame. Others are easily controlled by anyone proficient with firearms in general. And, some are quickly controlled with minimal training.
Some are well within the skill level of a 9 year old with some experience.
I think a lot of the problem is lack of experience with them by the majority of shooters, to understand them.
Some really are very tame and a very easy to shoot well with, and with little training, things like the smaller, faster guns, like the MAC's, need some understanding and time shoting them.
The problem with the MAC's, UZI's, and similar, that have the mag located in the grip, and the grip located amidships, is that the gun wants to rotate around that grip when fired, especially if you try and shoot it without the stock deployed. Even with the stock deployed, if you dont mount it properly, and/or it should slip out of your shoulder, it will want to try and rock back towards you.
TV/movies have taught generations the wrong way to handle FA firearms. People see too many wrong things on TV and think its real life. Something I will say is a selling point for teaching your kids to know the difference. My kids used to always call BS when they saw anything firearms related on TV or the movies, but even more so with anything FA. They knew some guy with a MAC in each hand, shooting away in a movie, was BS, but that was only because they knew what was real, and what wasnt. So teaching kids young (and even adults), is important.