Rule #1 is often modified to a more extreme version, to hammer home the essential point: "All guns are always loaded." Gun enthusiasts generally act this way at all times. People who are inexperienced with guns sometimes violate this rule, thinking that since the gun is unloaded it is safe to "play" with it. That's not even true if the gun is really unloaded, and because human error is often the foremost factor in gun accidents, it is safer to make the extreme assumption.
One potentially fatal assumption is that when the cartridge magazine is pulled out, the gun is unloaded. But there can be one bullet already loaded in the firing chamber.
Rule #2 applies to both loaded and unloaded weapons. Remember rule #1. Even when your gun is unloaded, and you know it is unloaded, you should carry it in such a fashion that the gun still doesn't point at anything you aren't willing to destroy.
Rule #3 is violated frequently by police and criminals in movies and television programs. But properly trained users will only place their finger on the trigger when it is time to fire. The time that it takes to slip the finger to the trigger is minuscule, as compared to the high degree of safety obtained by following this rule. Modern guns never simply "go off". It takes a finger on the trigger.
Rule #4 is self-explanatory. You must know not only what you are shooting at, but what is beyond it and near it. In some emergency situations (a hostage crisis) it might be necessary to take a risky shot -- but you must know what you are doing first, to be safe.
Stop! Don't Touch. Leave the area. Tell an adult.
Guns which are not in use at all, i.e. not in use for home defense, can be stored even more securely unloaded and in a safe with a trigger locking device.
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