Actually, although it did not happen much, earlier, when children were considered necessary to the financial survival of the family through work on farms and in factories, mines etc., and the concept of childhood or adolescence did not exist as it does today (hence, I believe children's brains developed more rapidly), there were children who murdered their parents and other horrific crimes that occurred on par with today's crimes. A very interesting book that details some of this is called Wisconsin Death Trip. Fascinating stuff. There are accounts of all sorts of horrific crimes in there including one in which a bunch of students beat to death their teacher, out on the prarie.
But again, my point is being lost in the exceptions to the rule you are citing. These are red herrings and do not follow the logic of the argument. There is not the need today for unsupervised access to guns for children as there was in the good ole' days. It was NECESSARY for children to hunt and work and help protect their families from roving bands of outlaws and Native Americans on the frontier. It was a very hard life full of extreme danger. A good movie illustrating a bit of what life looked like and the dangers that were present is The Missing by director Ron Howard. There were no police forces on the frontier like now. There was no 911. A nearest neighbor could be 100 miles away or more. It was a dirty, dismal life much more dangerous than today. It's not the same today. Please do not try to convince me that it is necessary for children today in this country to have unsupervised access to guns. Even if their families supplement their food with hunting.
But, I do agree with Fairy, in part. I think the issue really isn't ultimately about gun control. It's about parental responsibility and figuring out how to deal with children who may have emotional issues. One thing I can think of is therapy, supervision and hiding all firearms and knives from a child who has made death threats. It just makes sense. Another thing is putting one's own children's interests above one's own.
I wondered what Dr. Laura would say about these cases and lo' and behold, she talked about it
first thing this afternoon. She mentioned the unformed brains of children and she said that the irresponsibility of people who put the interests of their children second to their own interests in shacking up with new women and starting new families, forcing the first children to have to compete for attention with the new family, will cause many more of these types of killings in the future. Things need to change. It's in the same vein to me, as women so desperate for a man that they disregard the safety issues bringing a new guy around may pose for their young children. This carp has got to stop. You make a kid, your responsibility is to that kid, not your own desires to have a mate. My motto is no new family, no new mates involved with one's kids until those kids are of age. Period. I know it has worked for some and I think that's wonderful, but all too often it does not. It's not worth the risk, to me. Divorced, widowed or single parents can date, just don't bring them home and don't let them around your kids. MHO.