Touching on a difficult subject here. Growing up as a shooter I wasn't allowed to handle firearms (can we call them that for the time being and not weapons?) until I was around the age to get my minor's permit, which was 12. I still went hunting and camping with my dad and enjoyed everything the outdoors had to offer before that. That included witnessing a lot of hunting.
Shooting is engrained in the US culture and it's as simple as that. We've been conditioned to thinking it's evil as a matter of course in Australian culture. The politicians by and large hate it (shooters party and similar mobs excepted) and Martin Bryant was effectively the straw on the camel's back as far as Howard was concerned - that was all that was needed to prove that shooting was deadly and should be banished as much as reasonably possible in this country while he was able to pull the strings. He didn't grow up like I did, so I expect he was biased one way just like I am the other.
Military automatic firearms and similar unnecessary rifles were deemed illegal, yet so was my 3 shot semi auto shotgun that I used 3 our of 4 weekends to shoot clays and when season permitted, rabbits and shotguns. Bolt action rifles somehow remained, as though they are somehow safer. Amongst all this I still went shooting with some people who I'd question were suited for shooting or really shouldn't be a part of the sport. Laws aside, you can't stop stupidity.
Long story short I was no criminal then and I'm no criminal now. I love shooting and intend on bringing my kids up on it. Far more [US] Americans intend on doing the same and they did with their parents, and their parents and so on. This is an example of someone who brings their kids up in it at an arguably too-young age, and being conditioned to doing the same thing for the past 20 years clearly got so complacent that the girl lost control and ultimately led to his ultimate demise. This girl will now have to live with this for the rest of her life, which is just as horrific as the family members who just lost their dad, brother and son.
Is America to blame? I don't think so. I won't let my daughter shoot until she's old enough to get her permit, but that doesn't make me superdad. The yanks would call me soft, and meanwhile half of Australia would probably call me barbaric. They are far more relaxed on shooting and in my opinion far too relaxed, but this isn't an example of a nation out of control. This is a terrible event. I'm sure though that daily there would be hundreds of 9 years olds shooting to no ill effect, and this was simply a situation where all there holes in the Swiss cheese lines up and complacency took over.
The last line in that article says it all to me: "But really, this child was being trained to kill." This is an absolute insult and another example of journalism that has caused craploads of ranting on this forum. This kind of crap frustrates me no end. In my opinion an Uzi is completely unnecessary for any type of shooting and nobody should be owning them, but appropriate handling and training (which is what was being attempted) prevents incidents occurring anyway. This was a freak event. Her simply handling an Uzi does not turn here into a trained killer just like I am not a killer from the 10s of thousands of rounds I might have handled in the past. If anything I've been trained not to kill, and have more respect for them than any activist might have.
I'd much rather my kids out in the wilderness breathing fresh air and stinking of campfire smoke having a rabbit stew than sitting in their rooms playing games, hating the country life that so many of our ancestors depended on. I spent my fair share of time playing games sure, but I'm glad I spent those weekend hunting bunnies, living off the land and bonding that I fear our kids are getting less exposure too. But then again, I'm just a product of my upbringing aren't I?