Consumer Group Calls For Hasbro To Stop Selling “Assault-Style” Nerf Guns

New York, New York-(Ammoland.com)- The New York-based Empire State Consumer Project has asked the Hasbro Board of Directors to stop producing “assault-style” Nerf guns.

One of the Nerf blasters the group is targeting is the Ultra One. It is a drum fed toy gun holding 25 soft darts.

Empire State Consumer Project Director Carol Chittenden thinks that parents that buy these toy guns are bad examples for their kids.

“It’s a matter of this being a very vulnerable consumer group. Children buy what they see, and we’re not sure this is driven by market demand for assault weapon toys by children or the industry creating the demand,” said Chittenden.

One of the main issues the group has with Hasbro is a commercial that shows a child’s family giving him bigger and bigger Nerf blasters until the child’s Grandmother shows up and gives him the Ultra One. The family is impressed with the Nerf gun and the commercial ends.

The commercial is comical, but the group thinks it is horrifying that Hasbro is using comedy to sell its “machine gun.” The consumer group plays on emotions by trying to guilt the toy company to stop selling the Nerf gun. The Empire State Consumer Project brings up mass shootings at schools and tries to tie them into Nerf products.

“How does promoting play with huge automatic weapons create joy, creativity and connection around the world, and across generations, and make the world a better place for children? ” The group asked the Hasbro Board of Directors in the letter.

The Empire State Consumer Project asked Hasbro, with a straight face, who the child will be shooting “with his huge cache of assault weapons.” They want the toy company to make nerf products for a child’s “peace-filled imaginations.” The group also states that children don’t really like Nerf guns, but Hasbro, through their advertising, is pressuring the kids into playing with them.

According to the Empire State Consumer Project, children do not want Nerf guns because they are afraid of school shootings. The organization doesn’t supply any data for their accusation, but it does call into question any data that Hasbro has determined from their internal marketing studies.

Toy companies like Hasbro spend millions of dollars into researching product viability. They are in business to make money. If children didn’t want Nerf guns or if parents were not willing to purchase them, they would not be selling them. Parents vote with their pocketbooks.

The Empire State Consumer Project seems to know that there is a massive market for Nerf Guns that they cannot defeat. It is a rite of passage for a lot of dads and their kids. The group appears to be trying to guilt the toy giant into stop selling their very successful and iconic toy line.

The consumer rights group goes even farther and accuses Hasbro of praying on the “most vulnerable group of consumers.” They also say that the toy company is launching an assault on children’s “dignity and their worth as human beings.”

Being a parent, I can tell you that kids love Nerf Blasters and do not require manipulation to want toy guns. I spoke to my six-year-old son Matthew about why he likes Nerf guns and if he liked them because of the Hasbro commercial.

“The commercial is stupid,” Matthew told me, “But it looks fun to play with.”

 


About John Crump

John is a NRA instructor and a constitutional activist. He is the former CEO of Veritas Firearms, LLC and is the co-host of The Patriot News Podcast which can be found at www.blogtalkradio.com/patriotnews. John has written extensively on the patriot movement including 3%’ers, Oath Keepers, and Militias. In addition to the Patriot movement, John has written about firearms, interviewed people of all walks of life, and on the Constitution. John lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and sons and is currently working on a book on leftist deplatforming methods and can be followed on Twitter at @crumpyss, on Facebook at realjohncrump, or at www.crumpy.com.

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Vern

My grandsons and I have had many hours having battles with nerf “assault” guns. Soooo much fun, but those who think they are grown ups in the political world don’t know anything about having fun.

Whormd

Thats the biggest pile of BS I have heard in a while.

JDL

Hasn’t been a problem for 100 years, why suddenly now? Has to be an outside influence. Toy guns do not, and have never, bred mass killers. New York City based anything needs to have a giant cup if STFU.

RoyD

My first “guns” were a set of “Have Gun Will Travel” cap guns including belt and holsters, with silver horse heads on them, with business cards. This would have been Christmas 1959 shortly after I turned four years old. I also had a Gunsmoke sweatshirt mustard colored with Matt Dillon’s likeness on the front. In 1962 I got a toy pistol (revolver with fixed cylinder) that had a barrel that took a “cartridge” that had a projection of the front of it where you slipped a about .35 caliber plastic bullet over it and then placed a cap on the… Read more »

Dragonfly

When is it a better time to start teaching firearm safety and proper handling of firearms? A child knows the difference between a toy car and a real car. Whether it is a squirt gun, cap pistol, or a “Bang, Bang” finger pointed gun, children very quickly learn he difference between play weapons and real weapons.
I think Hasbro should add a line or two to the commercials and tell the parents to teach gun safety. Even a rubber dart can/could injure an eye. Shoot for the body! Not the head. [i.e. center mass]

DF

Jim

I AGREE WE MUST BAN NERF GUNS! Next will come tracer Nerf ammo., then the dreaded green tipped cop killing Nerf bullets of the 1980s. This Nerf violence must stop! These deadly sponge rubber killers are not protected by that Second Amendment thingie.
We have got to stop this Nerf violence before it goes further. Never once has a 4473 been filled out to purchase one of these killers–just another gun show and federal loophole. Stop the violence now, ban Nerfs before they kill more.