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Daily Mirror article

Just read the article, who knew that bb guns could dent concrete, in a bathroom? Doesn't she mean plaster? Jeez, it's not that hard

 
Shes a journo, not a builder.

This is just an example of how misinformation can be used to sway public opinion.

 
I really wouldn't take this to heart at all. My neighbor works for the Daily Sport and he's quite open about how these sorts of papers make up the vast majority of their stories or at least exaggerate them to the point where it makes it 'story worthy'.

 
Her main claims:

  • Air weapons can hurt or kill children = TRUE
  • Air weapons can get children hurt or killed by the police = TRUE
  • Air weapons can be purchased by children in spite of the laws = TRUE
You couldn't kill a child with an unmodified airgun firing any form of BB, whether steel, ali, glass, plastic, or a bogey.

A waterpistol could get a child killed by the police, or walking around minding their own business behind a Brazilian with a wire in his pocket. The problem isn't waterpistols, Brazilians, or BB guns, it's the number of armed police we now have and the willingness of Chief Constables to allow their deployment to ever more categories of potential risk.

As can cocaine. The plain fact of the matter is that prohibition and punishment has never, ever, not even once, prevented people from obtaining things they want. My point here is that we know this, or at least, if we feel qualified to speak about law and its impact on society, we ought to. It's not news. It's not specific to airguns. It's not specific to children. It is in fact a non-point from which to hang emotion.

I don't need to do any research to know that I am entirely correct when I say that more children have been killed by newspapers than airweapons... perhaps she ought to see if she can start a campaign to make herself unemployed.

 
Nonetheless Ian, it is a fact that children have been killed by air weapons (though admittedly the ones I know about are by air rifles, not air pistols, but then I've not looked into it, so I don't know), a fact that air weapons can get kids killed by police (as you've pointed out and as recent events in the US have shown) and that they are not that hard for kids to get their hands on. All the things that she is pointing out.

This woman is paid to comment on the news, and recent news about a kid with an air weapon getting killed has led to this particular commentary from her, spurred (unless we take the line that all journalists constantly concoct lies about everything) from a personal experience that is relative.

The three complaints people really seem to have against this article are: 1, whether it's relavent (which it is in light of the US shooting), 2, whether she is intentionally saying something that isn't true (I can't see where she is, unless the part about her personal experiences are lies, but that doesn't change the three big truths I've already highlighted that underscore the whole article) and 3, whether she knows what her walls are made out of (I don't really care about this bit!).

 
My points are that, true or not, these facts are not news, they are not particularly relevant to news, given that the kid was shot in the USA, where farting loudly could get you shot by police and the laws are totally different, and, more importantly, there are a great many more things which harm children happening day in day out and many of those are a good deal more useless/pointless and/or generally harmful than airguns. Regardless of which, calling them BB guns in an article which references law, when lawfully they are airguns, is at least disingenuous and that is not something which a journalist can afford to be. Which, especially in the light of the concrete comment, therefore brings us to other motives. It is not up to us to make excuses for the the failures of veracity in a piece written by a professional journalist - if she doesn't know the difference between concrete and plaster she should mention neither - I don't know the difference between an English Horn and Flugelhorn off the top of my head, but if I had a job recording them I would bloody find out!

 
We know the artical is Tosh but if a Newspaper decided t ostart a campaign against Airsoft and AIr Weapons then it will end badly for us.

Politicians like to be seen to be doing things and if it is doing things about kids getting guns then the original artical being tosh won't enter in to it.

Airsofters who are concerned need to contact the Mirror and put them right.

 
But again, what's 'tosh' about it?

For one it's not a 'news' piece, it's a commentary piece. It's not there because she's paid to do investigative journalism, it's there because she's supposed to represent 'concerned mothers' or something of the like (I'm guessing, given that her other pieces seem to be about things like video games - although she seems to be quite liberal in regards to them). Essentially some kid gets shot for having an 'air gun' and The Mirror goes to their 'what would mum think?' lady who says: "as a mother I think that's really worrying, in fact my kids have air guns and they were easy to get. This week I'll let people know that they should be worried too."

Fair enough, she's not really researched the entire background of the specific laws and specific variations of air weapons available (but even if she had, how would that change the point of her article?) but that's because she's just giving an account of her personal experience. 99% of the people who are now commenting on her commentary haven't actually bothered to read what she has said properly anyway! We do have to remember that the term 'BB' is not exclusive to plastic 6mm projectiles and airsoft weapons; there are CO2 powered metal BB guns out there (which given her description of the gun her son bought this seems more likely to be than an airsoft gun). Yet in spite of the fact that she doesn't mention 'airsoft' once in her article we're all saying: "how dare she attack airsoft?!" (and also: "hah! She doesn't know what her walls are made out of!").

As an airsofter I'm always concerned when airsoft related articles are full of falsehoods and/or misinformation that reflect badly on our sport (or indeed endanger it's continued existence), but I really just can't see it with this particular commentary from a low level pseudo celebrity. As I've said before, she has not mentioned airsoft by name, and simply stated these points:

  • Air weapons can hurt or kill children = TRUE
  • Air weapons can get children hurt or killed by the police = TRUE
  • Air weapons can be purchased by children in spite of the laws = TRUE
Not an attack on airsoft, but a commentary from someone who is paid to reflect the concerns of parents (and arguably these things should be a concern - I really don't think the argument: 'yeah, but cocaine can get kids killed too!' is sufficient enough to mean we should ignore other issues that can get them killed). If the best we've got as a reply to this article is: "you're stupid Fiona Phillips! Your walls are made of plaster not concrete. There's no way that the guns that our kids can easily get hold of could dent concrete (though you're right to say they could blind and potentially kill them)" then I don't really think we have much of worth to say.

 
What makes it tosh is that there are several factual inaccuracies which all make the 'threat' she is commenting on seem more worrying than if she had researched her topic thoroughly. The point about cocaine is valid because the only way a child can get hold of any BB gun, air weapon or airsoft, is illegally and therefore, if she wants to comment on this, the responsible journalistic approach would be to find out exactly how it was done and compare that to how difficult it is for children to obtain other prohibited potentially harmful items.

To simply make out that potentially lethal BB guns are easily obtainable is classic scaremongering, otherwise known as tosh. Especially since the power necessary to fire a metal BB with lethal force is not available in something easily concealed like an ordinary air pistol. In fact, given the ballistic differences between a BB and an aerodynamic lead pellet, I doubt that the average air rifle could do it. Which then brings us on, responsibly, to comparing how difficult it is to obtain high powered air weapons to obtaining illegal firearms, which we know is also possible.

"Shock horror! A threat to your children exists! You already know it exists, but we need to fill column inches."

...just doesn't play as a tag line as well as a 'new' threat exaggerated and conflated with other more dangerous threats. Tosh sells, but that doesn't mean we should forgive it simply because the style of the piece isn't investigative journalism. If she had written that I am a fine upstanding citizen, it would still be libellous, no matter the style of the piece. Just as she would damage my reputation, which could affect my livelihood, 'libelling' BB guns in general could affect many people's livelihoods...

 
We all know how this works.

Editor asks her to submit a piece of so many words for a certain deadline.

That is her job.

She looks around her and thinks "what can I write about".

This little occurrence with her son suddenly gives her a subject.

If you look at her other work, its all in the same vein.

What worries me is that people might read the article and it colours their prejudice against people like us. That discrimination is now irrevocably lodged in peoples brains until the next time.

She has probably forgot the article now and has already moved on to the next one, the next deadline that pays the mortgage. Most of the readers wont bother even reading the comments, so the article cannot be put to rights.

The damage is done. Such is tabloid journalism.

 
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What makes it tosh is that there are several factual inaccuracies...
Where? With the exception of the fact that she means 'plaster' when she says 'concrete' the only possible other 'inaccuracy' I can find is when she says: "A toy gun, which is built to look like a real gun, that can cause injury when fired inappropriately and which is available to anyone, no age limit, online," and that's only because I can't work out whether she is referring to here or in the US (which admittedly is due to her awful writing style). Though even if she is referring to the UK (where there are theoretical age restrictions and yes, she should have made this clear again as she did earlier in the article, referring to an "over 18 rule") we all know that these aren't always adhered to; even if we don't trust her reported personal experience of this there was a thread on this very forum this weekend in which a 14 year old was talking about how he had just bought an M4 online and how his mate got one by just giving his dad the money to buy it for him!

This is actually an issue, whether we feel threatened by it or not. It is too easy for kids to get air weapons which can hurt them or get them killed; why are airsofters so annoyed about someone pointing this out? Surely what they should be annoyed about is the fact that this issue isn't properly addressed. And no, I don't think your cocaine argument is valid, because the context you used it in suggested we should not talk about the problems of air weapons when the problem of cocaine exists, and that's like saying we shouldn't talk about cocaine because meth exists, or, to reverse your final point that "the responsible journalistic approach would be to find out exactly how it was done and compare that to how difficult it is for children to obtain other prohibited potentially harmful items," that a news article about children easily obtaining cocaine wouldn't be valid unless the journalist who wrote it also investigated and talked about how easy it is to obtain air weapons (and indeed any other illegal thing) by comparison within the same article.

We can't not discuss a problem just because there are other problems out there and we can't become NIMBYs just because someone points out that there are problems in an area which we are involved with and care about.

 
I feel dangerous ground is being trod on and that the united front we should take is as a parent its her job to control her children and if they are buying guns illegally its a matter of shutting down the site and dealing with the police. the jurno scum read these forums looking for storys don't give them ammo to further ruin airsoft.

 
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the article cannot be put to rights.

The damage is done. Such is tabloid journalism.
Teen Journos In BB Gun Massacre
Today in Wapping armed police were called to an incident involving an armed gunman at a well known sushi bar frequented by female journalists. During the bloodbath which ensued, Ian Gere, 45 of Nottingham UK, is reported to have killed an unknown number of patrons and one employee. In the aftermath two children aged 15, Clarice Puddinskin and Ashley Vespantsov, winners of last month's highly popular Useless Wannabe competition sponsored by The Mirror, lay dead amidst the carnage which also claimed the lives of adult journalists and employee, Japanese ballistics student, Ironi Kendo. Gere himself was finally gunned down in a heavy but accurate hail of police gunfire before he had chance to reload his weapon. At this time it is not known whether our own beloved columnist Fiona Phillips was present at the massacre, but colleagues have confirmed that she is alive and well. (Turn to page 6 for her comment)

Sex And The City
A witness told the Mirror that Gere entered the establishment with his face hidden behind a black mesh paintball mask and carrying a Chinese made American M16 rifle modified to fire steel ball bearings. He was dressed head to toe in a black uniform, just like those used by the SAS during the famous Iranian Embassy Siege. Before opening fire with his easily obtainable weapon, he shouted "Why don't you stick to pretending your lives are episodes of Sex And The City and writing about that? I mean sh*t, that's something you can do accurately without all the bother of even cursory research!" A survivor stated that he then opened fire, spinning round and round spraying thousands of steel BB's in every direction, shattering tableware, denting concrete walls, and causing horrifying injuries, many of which proved fatal.

Cheap Handle Makes All The Difference
When the high capacity magazine eventually ran out of ammunition, Gere turned the steel butt of the weapon on the room full of helpless women. In this cowardly and heartless prolonged attack Gere ignored their cries for help and screams and, even as The Metropolitan Police Tactical Firearms Unit stormed the building, continued to viciously beat his victims. Using the weapon as a makeshift club was made all the easier because it had been modified with a tactical foregrip, which we were surprised to discover can be bought for only £7.99 online, attached to the heavy steel rails surrounding the rifle's barrel.

Terrorist Training Centres All Over UK
Firearms experts confirmed that the M16's shorter barrel makes it ideal to be concealed under a raincoat, but the addition of the foregrip allows for greater accuracy from such carbine sized assault rifles. It is believed that Gere was trained in the use and modification of such weapons at Skirmish Paintball, a nationwide franchise which holds regular weekend events at its secretive out of the way locations. Alongside the familiar stag party and corporate team building events is the little known practice of "Airsoft" which uses these BB guns to train all participants, many as young as 14 or below, in the use of assault weapons, easily modified pyrotechnic explosives, and terrorist tactics. Coalition Government spokesperson Max Fullers-Hitbag announced that this quasi-legal activity has long been under surveillance by the security services but, at this time, he was unable to comment on such ongoing investigations.

 
BTW Longshot, what makes your reply comment above tosh is taking only part of what I said and arguing against it as if my point was indeed the narrow view which you apparently believe is merely repetition, since you have pretty much restated your previous objections to previously made points. I am not going to re-catalogue the factual inaccuracies I have already drawn attention to, but instead draw your attention to the italic "all" which followed shortly after the section of my sentence you chose to quote.

My point is that, if the wench in question had made one inaccurate statement, it could simply be sloppy work. If her inaccuracies averaged out so that some made the story seem more worrying and some less, it would be simply even sloppier. But that is not the case. In fact her trivial seeming 'mistakes', which you have correctly inferred as such, all serve to make the article more worrying. The effect of this consistent 'exaggeration' then, in the minds of uninformed readers, is the same as a single well stated argument drawing upon indisputable facts.

The truth however is that she is a professional writer. Her copy is proof read before publication. The whole process is overseen by editors and lawyers who fully know the difference between accidental vagueness which can be allowed to stand because it doesn't affect the tone of the piece in any relevant manner and a series of small lies, each of which is couched in terms vague enough to be deniable and each of which can be dismissed as too trivial to matter, but which nevertheless create the desired tone for the article. Basically she is either a lying bitch or an incompetent bitch overseen by liars.

 
Why are we even still talking about this?

 
Because........

THIS

IS

SPARTA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

no...wait. Wrong place....

*carry on*

 
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I doubt anyone aside from the people on this thread read the article, there are killer spiders on the loose, they are in our homes people fucking hell global warming will end us all ( ignore the snow we had last year )Plus maybe the SAS murdered Diana

 
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