Hayward school to sponsor toy gun exchange

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Hayward school to sponsor toy gun exchange

By Rebecca Parr

The Daily Review
Posted: 06/06/2013 04:25:44 PM PDT
Updated: 06/06/2013 04:49:30 PM PDT

HAYWARD -- An elementary school will hold a toy gun exchange Saturday, offering students a book and a chance to win a bicycle if they turn in their play weapons.

Strobridge Elementary Principal Charles Hill maintains that children who play with toy guns may not take real guns seriously.

"Playing with toys guns, saying 'I'm going to shoot you,' desensitizes them, so as they get older, it's easier for them to use a real gun," Hill said.

At Saturday's event, called Strobridge Elementary Safety Day, a Hayward police officer will demonstrate bicycle and gun safety, and the Alameda County Fire Department is sending a rig and crew to talk about fire safety.

Fingerprinting and photographing of children will be offered, with the information put on CDs for parents to use, if needed, in a missing child case. All youngsters attending will be given a ticket to exchange for a book, Hill said.

Every child who brings a toy gun will get a raffle ticket to win one of four bicycles, Hill said.

Hill said he got the idea for the toy gun exchange from a photographer, Horace Gibson, who takes students' school pictures and who expressed concern about the spate of shootings of young people by police in Oakland.

Hill said police are rightfully fearful of being shot when they encounter so many armed suspects, and there have been cases nationwide where police mistook a toy gun for a real one.

advocate questioned the idea that playing with toy guns desensitizes children to real weapons.

"Having a group of children playing cops and robbers or cowboys and Indians is a normal part of growing up," said Yih-Chau Chang, spokesman for Responsible Citizens of California, a group whose goal is to educate the public about the facts behind gun rights.

"While the intentions are obviously good on the part of the school administration, this doesn't really educate children about guns or gun safety," he said. "Guns are used in crimes, but they are more often used in defensive ways which prevent violent crime from occurring in the first place."

Chang also questioned whether toys can look like real weapons.

"Toy manufacturers are forced to paint guns in bright colors, usually orange or yellow, that make it virtually impossible for an officer to mistake it for a real gun," Chang said.

Hill, though, noted a recent case where a little boy in Kentucky used a rifle that was painted pink and accidentally killed his sister. Some toy weapons that he has seen have only a red tip to indicate they are not actual weapons.

"Some of the guns I've confiscated, if they're stuck down in a waistband, the average person would think it's a real gun," Hill said. "I could easily see one of our sixth-graders wanting to fake out someone at a 7-Eleven by walking in there" with a toy gun. "They would think it's funny, but it could turn into tragedy."

Hill hopes the toy gun exchange idea catches on.

"If we want older kids to not think guns are cool, we need to start early," he said.

Contact Rebecca Parr at 510-293-2473 .

Strobridge Elementary Safety Day

When: 9 a.m.-noon Saturday
Where: 21400 Bedford Drive, Hayward
 

Hayward school to sponsor toy gun exchange

By Rebecca Parr

The Daily Review
Posted: 06/06/2013 04:25:44 PM PDT
Updated: 06/06/2013 04:49:30 PM PDT

HAYWARD -- An elementary school will hold a toy gun exchange Saturday, offering students a book and a chance to win a bicycle if they turn in their play weapons.

Strobridge Elementary Principal Charles Hill maintains that children who play with toy guns may not take real guns seriously.

"Playing with toys guns, saying 'I'm going to shoot you,' desensitizes them, so as they get older, it's easier for them to use a real gun," Hill said.

At Saturday's event, called Strobridge Elementary Safety Day, a Hayward police officer will demonstrate bicycle and gun safety, and the Alameda County Fire Department is sending a rig and crew to talk about fire safety.

Fingerprinting and photographing of children will be offered, with the information put on CDs for parents to use, if needed, in a missing child case. All youngsters attending will be given a ticket to exchange for a book, Hill said.

Every child who brings a toy gun will get a raffle ticket to win one of four bicycles, Hill said.

Hill said he got the idea for the toy gun exchange from a photographer, Horace Gibson, who takes students' school pictures and who expressed concern about the spate of shootings of young people by police in Oakland.

Hill said police are rightfully fearful of being shot when they encounter so many armed suspects, and there have been cases nationwide where police mistook a toy gun for a real one.

advocate questioned the idea that playing with toy guns desensitizes children to real weapons.

"Having a group of children playing cops and robbers or cowboys and Indians is a normal part of growing up," said Yih-Chau Chang, spokesman for Responsible Citizens of California, a group whose goal is to educate the public about the facts behind gun rights.

"While the intentions are obviously good on the part of the school administration, this doesn't really educate children about guns or gun safety," he said. "Guns are used in crimes, but they are more often used in defensive ways which prevent violent crime from occurring in the first place."

Chang also questioned whether toys can look like real weapons.

"Toy manufacturers are forced to paint guns in bright colors, usually orange or yellow, that make it virtually impossible for an officer to mistake it for a real gun," Chang said.

Hill, though, noted a recent case where a little boy in Kentucky used a rifle that was painted pink and accidentally killed his sister. Some toy weapons that he has seen have only a red tip to indicate they are not actual weapons.

"Some of the guns I've confiscated, if they're stuck down in a waistband, the average person would think it's a real gun," Hill said. "I could easily see one of our sixth-graders wanting to fake out someone at a 7-Eleven by walking in there" with a toy gun. "They would think it's funny, but it could turn into tragedy."

Hill hopes the toy gun exchange idea catches on.

"If we want older kids to not think guns are cool, we need to start early," he said.

Contact Rebecca Parr at 510-293-2473 .

Strobridge Elementary Safety Day

When: 9 a.m.-noon Saturday
Where: 21400 Bedford Drive, Hayward

"At Saturday's event, called Strobridge Elementary Safety Day, a Hayward police officer will demonstrate bicycle and gun safety, and the Alameda County Fire Department is sending a rig and crew to talk about fire safety."

I understand what upsets you about this but I still see a positive message here.
 

simply astounding. Positive message? I think not. Teaching the younguns to be scared little rabbits. Toy gun exchange, what a bunch a bla bla bla's.
 

Consider for a second that gun violence is glamorized in rap music. I believe the point of this exercise is to teach kids early on to respect guns rather than view them as toys. That using a gun is not just something cool like cops and robbers we played as kids but carries real consequences that are not to be taken lightly.
 

Taking away toy guns is not going to make kids respect guns.Showing and teaching kids about what real guns can do is the only way they will gain respect for them.If you hide guns from kids and do not teach them,guns will remain the mysterious forbidden object that must be sought out.
 

What's next? Take away the (Pit bull stuffed animals??) Wait a minute doesn't the liberal mind say you can't just give one bike away That could be traumatic and some kid could flip out and Knerf someone. Who thinks this crap up????

Fingerprinting and photographing of children will be offered, with the information put on CDs for parents to use, if needed, in a missing child case. All youngsters attending will be given a ticket to exchange for a book, Hill said.

They left out DNA. And the book is written by Saul Alinshy???
 

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will they exchange those very scary pop tarts that have been chewed into the "L" shape or the piece of paper shaped like an "L"? What will they do with those thumbs and forefingers that can make the shape of a gun?
 

Consider for a second that gun violence is glamorized in rap music. I believe the point of this exercise is to teach kids early on to respect guns rather than view them as toys. That using a gun is not just something cool like cops and robbers we played as kids but carries real consequences that are not to be taken lightly.

Maybe they should be teaching the kids to not lissten to trash music instead......

Would be great if someone was there giving squirt guns away to the kids..............
 

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I wonder how millions and millions of kids who grew up playing with toy guns (including myself) didn't go out and kill someone. This crap just goes on and on and on. Such a shame...
 

Toy guns don't kill people, governments do!
 

in 2011 there were 1.05 million abortions in the US. Is there anything the kiddies could turn in to prevent a few of those deaths? Just askin'. I'm sure Feinstein doesn't care at all about those deaths.
 

I know....I know!! We can have all the little girls turn in their dolls for books and that will eliminate all of these unwanted pregnancies. Why haven't we thought of this before. The left is really onto something and we should pay a little more attention as to how we should live.
No more fake burgers and fries, toy warplanes and warships, no bows and arrows, no monsters, no toy Indians and cowboys, no toy soldiers, no rubber knives, no pirates with swords, no toy tanks or missile launchers, no toy catapults, no weapons with Star Wars characters, NO NOTHING! Turn them all in for books. Please note: Books will need to be approved by Oprah Winfrey or a Democratic caucus.
There must be something in the air here in California that makes people think like idiots. So far I'm hoping it hasn't affected me but maybe it has. I know these folks are oblivious to their stupidity, even when you point it out.
 

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Article states that "Strobridge Elementary Principal Charles Hill maintains that children who play with toy guns may not take real guns seriously."
If that is true, then children that play with baby dolls may not take real babies seriously and could result in child abuse later on. Correct or stupidity?? You decide.
 

When the cop gives his "gun safety" presentation is he going to actually teach them how to safely handle a gun or is he just going to say, "OMG...........don't ever touch one of these. It could kill you!! Find an adult and have it safely removed from the area so nobody dies!!,,,,,,,,,STAY AWAY!!"
 

I saw a news clip of it this morning. A few things came to mind. First, it looked like there was about 10 kids there to "turn in" a toy gun. Second, EVERY toy gun looked like it was fresh from the store. I know how my son's nerf guns look the first day he gets them, and these turned in have NEVER been played with. It's all just a publicity stunt.
 

When the cop gives his "gun safety" presentation is he going to actually teach them how to safely handle a gun or is he just going to say, "OMG...........don't ever touch one of these. It could kill you!! Find an adult and have it safely removed from the area so nobody dies!!,,,,,,,,,STAY AWAY!!"

Yup,heres a cop teaching gun safety.Somebody should of told him to keep his ego out of the classroom and not to act like a wanna be gunslinger.Idiot.old video but WTH

 

there is so much wrong with this idea I don't even know where to begin. Forget about the idea a parent should raise their child. lets just remove all their toys so parents don't have to teach the children anything. And also as far as I know most schools now a days have a ZERO tolerance to guns, so will they be arresting and suspending any child that participates in this by bringing a toy gun in for the trade. while were at it lets make sure all this kids names are written down for possible future problem children (after all its a list of children that play with toy guns) then lets book all these children and give them a permanent record ... and lets not forget the police after all a ZERO tolerance is a zero tolerance. so lets arrest the polce man that carry their service weapon on them at this event. OMG I could go on for ever on this .. gezze
 

I made an intelligent response without being too one sided. I even tried to put a positive spin on it without "trashing the idea".

These are the responses I get (above)? Sorry I even bothered...
 

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