I love how the article brings up the point that there was a LOADED GUN that was perfectly in reach of the child.
Now, I'm not gonna take a stance on gun control or gun possession laws or any of that crap, since I don't own a gun, don't use a gun, and frankly don't have enough experience with firearms or people with firearms to make an educated statement on it, but I do know enough about firearms (Point them at a person, pull the trigger, and watch them die) to know that you should at least keep them behind some kind of locked door, in some lock box, or at least on top of the refrigerator so your kids can't get them.
I think that's the issue that a lot of these alarmist media outlets have when they cover the "connection" between guns and video games. Even if, by some very, very broad measure, you can connect the disparagingly distant elements together, you then have to address how the ones responsible for the crime got the guns in the first place. This isn't like GTA, where you can knock a cop out and grab his gun or go to any store and pick up a AK-47 for $50. Even though the US doesn't have any real restrictive gun laws, there are enough hoops that the uninitiated, immature, or psychopathic can't get their hands on a gun without getting it from someone else that already owns a gun, and usually the latter tends to have their guns out in the open where someone else can get them.
We're claiming that the media is irresponsible for wrongly educating and influencing the masses, and yet we're perfectly fine not addressing the fact that we're leaving potential weapons out in the open for anyone to get. I'm pretty sure Obama would cause a shitstorm if the big red button that launches all the nukes was unattended for even a minute.