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Guns
Reduce Accidents and Other Fascinating Facts and Figures To Amaze
Your Friends
by
Greg Perry
by Greg Perry
DIGG THIS
Only a few
trends are encouraging these days:
Computer prices
decrease as their computer power increases. That’s great.
Ultra-cool
flat-screen, wall-mounted televisions are more abundant and less
costly than ever. Glad I put off buying one before now.
Hollywood incomes
are dropping like rocks since the strike. Couldn’t happen to a nicer
group of people.
Some good trends
are related to health and safety. You hear about most of them. As
you know, heart attack victims are surviving far longer than ever.
My father’s triple bypass in 1995 seems almost like a non-event
today as he drives his truck to his rental houses daily to do what
needs to be done (at age 72). Stroke
deaths dropped an astounding 63% from 1970 to 2002.
A Trend
That Hits a Bull's-Eye
One trend related
to health and safety that you may not know about is this: firearm-related
accidents have steadily decreased since such record keeping began
in 1903. Far more important and astounding is that for the past
10 years this drop was extra dramatic.
You might need
to read that previous paragraph again.
Surely you
knew all this already. I doubt Katie Couric would miss an opportunity
to announce such news. Probably CNN has run this statistic on its
scrolling ticker constantly since the details were released to the
public. And you just know Barbara Boxer has repented of all the
lies she’s told about guns and safety. Certainly, the pro-Republican
(but not pro-right) FoxNews probably has aired 20 specials to educate
the public about this good news for gun owners. Without a doubt,
government schools across America’s great plains have begun educating
students about shooting being a far safer activity than ever. To
keep all her gun-loving voters, Hillary’s probably running on an
Americans-Are-Safer-with-Guns platform.
What’s that?
You didn’t know gun accidents are at an all-time low and have been
decreasing both per capita and in percentage terms steadily for
more than 100 years?
You know why
you didn’t know this don’t you? The media and the politicians don’t
want you to know this. Yet, the data that produces these
conclusions comes from the National Safety Council. The NSC’s sole
mandate is to "educate and influence people to prevent accidental
injury and death." This group isn’t one you’d think would want
to take up the NRA’s cause. The NSC encourages lots of laws and
then more laws to promote safety in the workplace. The NSC loves
to publish OSHA safety violations when they can find them. As a
matter of fact, you can thank the National Safety Council for the
fact that 3-foot ladders are no longer sold in America.
(It’s because
3-foot ladders aren’t tall enough to hold all the safety stickers
and warning labels groups such as the NSC promote.)
(Yes, I’m joking
about the 3-foot ladders. But if you’ve ever seen a ladder coated
with the required warning stickers lately, you know it’s close to
being true.)
"Everything
in moderation" isn’t bad advice. It’s usually the things we
do or crave in excess that get us in trouble, right? Overstating
safety dangers has an interesting side effect. The more safety warnings
they put on medicine bottles, especially over-the-counter medicines,
the less people will read the label. Have you taken a cough
syrup or something like that lately? You want to take it
properly. You want to take it safely so you look at the label and
instructions to find the proper dosage. Typically, I would bet most
people start reading through the scores of finely-printed paragraphs
that describe the dangers, the side effects, the problems with children
taking the medicine, and you start skipping ahead trying to find
the dosage, and you skip down a few paragraphs and the warnings
are still being listed, and you look towards the end and realize
it’s somewhere earlier in the text… and you look elsewhere in the
instruction sheet and see you’re in the Spanish translation of everything,
so you give up and take a spoonful or two of the syrup. You’re coughing
too much to read the novel on the label or instructions. Yet, groups
like the NSC want more and more text on everything you touch because
they are basically bureaucrats who believe their words are important.
Safety is
important. That is why putting too much safety verbiage on products
such as medicine and ladders has the opposite effect from the intended
one: too many warnings help to ensure that users of those products
won’t read any of the warnings. They’ll glance at all the
text and decide they’re too busy to be bothered so they just start
using the product.
Fortunately
the gun industry hasn’t plastered too many warnings on guns. Sometimes
a rifle or shotgun barrel might have a stamped referral for the
user to read the instruction manual’s safety guidelines but the
gun makers don’t overdo it. Unlike the ladder industry, gun makers
don’t think yellow and red stickers improve the look or effectiveness
or safety of their products.
Reading through
the NSC’s web site will make you
sorry to be alive because you’ll be convinced that whatever you
do next, whether it’s decorating for Christmas or eating your next
meal, whatever you do you’ll die a horrible accidental death. So
if the NSC’s data states that firearms accidents are at a 100-year
low, you should take that data with more than a grain of salt. They
seem to me to be run by the kind of people who don’t
want to promote any good news about owning guns. Yet, the facts
are facts and they were confident enough with the data to release
it.
Man’s Favorite
Sport Is Girls But Shooting’s Probably a Safer Sport
I didn’t know
that firearm accidents are at a century-year low even though I stay
abreast of news related to guns. I learned about this incredible
study in the National Shooting Sports Foundation’s Industry
Intelligence Reports, Volume 2, Number 5, 2007. If you cite
the National Shooting Sports Foundation as your source when you
pass along the gun-related safety statistics that are so low you
will be stunned, any opposition hearing you will surely argue that
anything the National Shooting Sports Foundation publishes is biased
toward guns. And that may be somewhat true. But why are gun owners
not allowed to hear anything but bias against guns everywhere
they turn? Does the fact that the National Shooting Sports Foundation
prints something change the truth about data they publish? Not at
all. In today’s world, if you want to hear any good news about guns
you’ll have to find it in some pro-freedom publication or web site
because every other source will squelch the information immediately.
I suggest you
use the original-source organization, the National Safety Council,
as the basis for the figures you cite. You don’t have to state that
the National Shooting Sports Foundation put the data into nice charts
and easy-to-understand text. The data came from the NSC so quote
them when you announce these findings to those on the left who hate
your freedom but pass a copy of the National Shooting Sports Foundation’s
publication to every freedom-lover you know so the news can spread.
It has to spread this way because the major media is too busy trying
to locate a gun accident to report good news about the lack of accidents.
The next time
a politician wants to limit your use of guns once more, put the
real data in front of them.
Consider these
facts the NSSF states so eloquently:
- In the past
10 years, firearm-related accidents in the home have dropped by
more than 44 percent!
- Over the
past 9 years, the number of unintentional firearm-related fatalities
for children 14 and under has decreased by 69 percent!
- Firearms
are involved in fewer than 1.2 percent of accidental fatalities
among children 14 and under!
- The number
of unintentional firearm-related deaths has decreased by 40 percent
– from 1,225 accidental deaths in 1995 to just 730 in 2005!
- Accidental
fatality rates involving firearms are at the lowest levels in
history at 0.2% per 100,000 population!
- Since 1903,
the rate per 100,000 population of accidental fatality rates has
declined by 94 percent!
- Of firearms,
fires, flames, smoke, motor vehicles, and ingestion of food or
objects, unintentional fatalities in the USA from firearms had
the largest rate of decrease in the past decade!
- More people
died from natural heat or cold in 2005 (the final year in the
study) than by firearms!
- The record-high
year of firearm-related accidents was in 1930 where America experienced
3,220 incidents. In 2005 this number had dropped to only 730 in
spite of the fact that the population grew considerably and the
number of firearms present in America skyrocketed!
- If you really
want a safe sport, go hunting! In 2005, there were 808 non-fatal
shooting accidents and 95 fatal shooting accidents out of 20.9
million active hunters (those who hunt more than once each year
aged 7 and older). Cheerleading, Archery, Baseball, Boxing, Football,
Hockey, Martial Arts, Mountain Biking, Mountain Climbing, Skateboarding,
Snowboarding, Soccer, Softball, Tennis, Volleyball, Water Skiing,
and Wrestling each had fewer participants and more
injuries than hunting!
Let me offer
two caveats. First of all, I have difficulty accepting the term
accidental injury/death when it relates to guns. I
accept only negligent injury/death. If the four rules of
gun safety are adhered to (Will
the BATF Seize Cheney's Gun?) there will be no gun accidents.
Whoever pulls the trigger is responsible for the placement of the
bullet, intentional or otherwise. I’ll stick with the improper term
accident for this article simply because that’s the wording
used in the study.
In addition,
I realize than a firearm-related injury is likely more serious than
a tennis injury. Yet the fact that there were fewer tennis players
than hunters but almost 19,000 more accidental injuries from tennis
in 2005 means that the incessant harping we hear from the anti-gun,
freedom-hating, America-loathing pundits is steeped in lies, untruths,
and exaggerations. You knew that already if you regularly read LewRockwell.com
but now you have some stone-cold facts to back up your beliefs.
Why Is Shooting
A Safer Activity Than Fishing?
Several reasons
have been cited for this incredible decrease of firearm-related
deaths and injuries. I can offer some of my own. Since 1995, the
first year of the huge decade of decrease in gun-related accidents,
a huge number of states issued concealed carry permits. With those
permits comes some required training. That training is not real
training and I doubt the required class has been responsible for
teaching Americans much about proper gun handling but being able
to carry a weapon has spurred many to learn even more about using
their guns elsewhere and become far more proficient and responsible
than they otherwise would have.
Institutions
such as Gunsite,
Suarez International, Thunder Ranch, and the newly-opened mecca
for gun training, the U.S. Shooting Academy, have seen a tremendous
boom in business as more and more states offer concealed carry permits.
People are learning to shoot not just to carry and not just for
defense but also for the fun and sport of it. But institutions such
as Gunsite never let a skill supersede any aspect of safe gun handling.
The safety rules always come first without exception. If you take
a class at a place like Gunsite, the odds of you ever committing
a negligent discharge are about as slim as Rudy Giuliani honoring
the second amendment.
Now if
you carry or own a gun you should take a class from one of
these institutions, but until you do lots of other resources are
available on the web as well as books and magazines, where gun training
and proper handling are described and taught. By the way, no matter
how much or how little training you have, the very next book
you should read is Boston’s
Gun Bible. Every answer a novice or pro has is answered
somewhere in Boston’s book and you’ll come away with far more than
gun knowledge; you’ll have wisdom.
Although the
idea of a lock on a gun is ludicrous in almost every situation,
the free market has created many good solutions for the homeowner
who wants to keep his or her firearm close with fast access but
still off-limits to children who may be curious but are not ready
to handle weapons. Little safes that fit under your bed or nightstand
that can instantly open with the right fingerpress combination are
incredible (Amazon has one of the best ones ever conceived here).
Gun Owners
Are Calm
Not only has
the increase in concealed-carry states reduced gun crime in those
states, it has also reduced accidental injuries and deaths related
to the firearm. Unlike the lie that almost every Hollywood production
in the past 40 years has portrayed about Americans who own firearms,
the gun owner who has the proper training and knowledge of how to
use the gun are typically the calmest people you’ll meet. See, when
you have a firearm and you know how to use it, and you practice
with it, you know that if you ever must take action, you
can. That assurance means you don’t have to boast to feel superior.
You don’t have to test an opponent because you know your skill set.
You have an edge. You have the ability to handle a life-threatening
situation so you don’t allow situations to escalate as you might
if you weren’t as prepared and confident.
That’s another
reason the firearm-related injuries and accidental deaths have decreased.
Gun owners are calmer and safer in general.
The
father of the Modern Pistol Technique, the late Colonel Jeff Cooper,
had this to say: "A good shot must necessarily be a good man
since the essence of good marksmanship is self-control and self-control
is the essential quality of a good man."
One can conclude
from Colonel Cooper’s words that good men aren’t apt to spoil
a vice-presidential hunting trip with a negligent discharge.
December
8, 2007
Greg
Perry [send him mail] is
the pistol-packing author of more than 75 books. What he does best
is teach others how to maximize their eBay income. That's because
he smashes his eBay competitors by implementing time-proven Direct
Marketing techniques that others completely ignore. If you've ever
considered eBay, you'll make far more money when you read his profit-boosting
book, eXtreme
eBay How to Quickly Apply the Most Powerful Direct Marketing
Techniques in the World to Every Item You Sell on eBay.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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