where to begin in this?
I have, I think, a pragmatic view on this - like custardo, ie most toy guns are cheap and badly made and that is a major reason why I don't buy them. Yet anyone who visits our house will see we have quite an arsenal of mostly broken cheap plastic guns, courtesy of my oldest ds.
How did this happen? like many here I vowed to ban toy guns, but as ds got older (4 onwards), he began to acquire them. Every time he went to a fair and had a go on the hook a duck, boot fairs and children's school fetes, he saw cheap plastic guns aplenty, new or secondhand. Give him pocket money, turn my back and hey presto, he had one.
Now I could have taken them off him, and to begin with I did. But I also saw how much fun he was having with them while how little obsessed he was with them - he soon forgot them and ha ha they soon broke anyway because they were so badly made.
He was no angel before he played with guns - as a toddler he would hit out sometimes and he was very boisterouis. Playing with guns did not make this behaviour worse or better, imo.
He was much more 'violent' when he had his hands on a huge water shooter - these and light sabres fall into a grey area imo - they have far more visual impact than toy guns, yet are, I think, seen my many as more acceptable. Yet you still use them to shoot or stab, so what's the difference? Is it just that guns look more authentic? I don't believe in this argument a lot, but do believe in ignoring gun play with anything, sticks, watershooters or guns, unless another child is likely to get hurt or upset. And I still wouldn't buy one as a present. I tolerate up to a point, but don't encourge.
Now son number 2 has access to a range of toy guns and a ready playmate in my oldest son. The guns are kept in my oldest son's bedroom but usually find their way downstairs until I clear them away. If we have young guests I try to make sure no guns are in easy reach.
The guns form part of my sons many role play games ie sitting on the top bunk shooting crocodlies - but certainly not the only part. I don't stop gun play as such, but do stop violence - hitting, pushing, throwing. Guns imo do not cause this. My boys will rough play just as easily with no accessories. My toddler somtimes makes guns from lego, but prefers to make cars and space ships.
I can see how some might think my attitude is lax, but I must say it is far more difficult to keep toy guns away from young children if they have older siblings who are allowed gun-like things (from action men to waterpistols) unless you keep the toys under lock and key. If gun play was at the root of any bad behaviour I would do this, but to be honest, I don't think it is.
I wonder if anyone here has sucessfully enforced a strict anti gun rule with more than one child when you have a big age gap between the oldest and youngest? I would be interested to know how this went.