SlartyBartFast wrote:The insular paranoid nature of gun owners and organisations doesn't help the cause either. Need real leadership that will promote to positives of the sports to the public at large and cooperate for reasonable ownership and training requirements and regulations. Not groups that are forever fighting any and all outsiders.....
I think the biggest problem I'm seeing as a brand new shooter that's holding back shooting is lack of communication and a lack of cooperation. If the sport can't work effectively with the strengths of different people within the sport, how can the sport expect to work at encouraging the public to take it up?
I think the above is really important to remember when promoting shooting, doubly so in the U.S. Here, we are constantly inundated with negative images of gun violence on the news media. It is used as a political football. The stereotypical shooter in America owns as many firearms as he can possibly horde, lives in the middle of nowhere, hates the government, and is generally presented as a danger to the community. This stereotype needs to be countered.
I believe that the extremist approach by some gun organizations has done much more harm than good to the reputation of gun owners. The sport aspect is one of the few areas left that is "untainted" by this association. Shooting sports by their very nature subject competitors to rules that emphasize safety and careful handling. Even pointing an unloaded gun in the wrong direction (or even the right direction at the wrong angle) in a conventional 2700 or an ISSF discipline will get you disqualified. The public needs to be educated about this. Sure, there are mass shootings every year here in the U.S. There are also thousands of competitions throughout the country that are handled safely.
I believe that it is time to stop "fighting" gun regulation so hard (that's not to say that fighting regulations is wrong. It's needed at times. Some people in my profession make their living doing just that. But we've gone too far in the public's view.) and instead demonstrate that firearms competition is a safe and respectable sport.
Want to shoot big guns? Enter silhouette shooting. Do you prefer being able to shoot the head off of a pin? Air Rifle might be your thing. Do you prefer the thrill of paramilitary "First Person Shooter" excitement? IPSC might be just the thing for you. What about wild west reenactments? Try cowboy action shooting. Want something convenient that you can shoot in your own basement? Try air pistol or rifle.
The tools are there. The interest is there. The publicity is not. This must change! When reading an Olympic Pistol book originally made in German, I was struck by how little attention was paid to North America by the international shooting community. The big players were European and Asian. We really need to step it up and prove that we have what it takes to compete on an international level, and force other countries to pay attention to what our athletes are doing!
As I continue to speak about firearms in estate planning to the legal community, I fully plan to emphasize these aspects and continue to promote shooting sports. This is my contribution. I challenge each of you to find your own way to contribute.