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Violent Crime vs. Gun Violence
In relentless succession, a parade of towns and cities have this year joined the bloodstained ranks of American mass shooting locations. The mere mention of the places Charleston, Chattanooga, Colorado Springs, San Bernardino evokes images made familiar at Columbine and Virginia Tech and Tucson and Newtown: the police battalions rushing to respond, the shocked survivors and bereft loved ones, the eerie portraits of newly infamous killers.
But the truth is that these cities and towns and the events that now define them, however lethal they were and however large they understandably loom, comprise just a small fraction of the gun violence recorded in America during this or any year. In 2013, the last year for which government statistics are available, less than 2 percent of more than 33,000 gun deaths in the country were due to mass shootings. Tallies of gun-related fatalities are in turn dwarfed by totals for gun injuries. Every 12 months, more than 118,000 people are shot; many are left with devastating physical impairments and crippling health care bills.
But the truth is that these cities and towns and the events that now define them, however lethal they were and however large they understandably loom, comprise just a small fraction of the gun violence recorded in America during this or any year. In 2013, the last year for which government statistics are available, less than 2 percent of more than 33,000 gun deaths in the country were due to mass shootings. Tallies of gun-related fatalities are in turn dwarfed by totals for gun injuries. Every 12 months, more than 118,000 people are shot; many are left with devastating physical impairments and crippling health care bills.
-Snip-
Violent crime has fallen drastically since the 1990s, but guns stubbornly claim a disproportionate share of American misery, with rate of firearms-related death largely holding steady for the past 15 years. That grim constancy has come as regulation, industry safety improvements, and public health campaigns have reduced the mortality of other products. CDC tables show that in 2013, guns killed 3,428 more people than falls, 4,635 more people than alcohol, and 30,876 more people than fires. Researchers have forecast that 2015 will be the year that bullets kill more Americans than car accidents, which had long been the leading cause of death due to injury in the U.S.
Rarely does routine gun violence make the front pages. Always, there are Americans for whom it hits home. That may be the volunteer EMS crew in Imperial, Nebraska, who lost longtime member Dave Ridlen to a rifle accident in early November. Or the Carthage, Texas, family robbed of a 22-year-old son after Jonathan Todd Williams was asked by his father to answer a knock at the door, only to be blown away. It includes the South Carolina grandmother killed in her car when her two-year-old grandson found a loaded revolver in the backseat. Or the eight members of Valerie Jacksons family, including six children, all murdered by her ex-boyfriend David Conley, who acquired a gun online despite being prohibited from owning one. But even as gun violence occurs all over the country, its burdens are unequally distributed. In parts of cities like St. Louis, Chicago, and Baltimore not to mention forgotten parts of cities like Charleston, Chattanooga, and San Bernardino shots ring out with terrifying frequency and density, without drawing CNNs broadcast trucks or prompting the President to step up to a podium.
Rarely does routine gun violence make the front pages. Always, there are Americans for whom it hits home. That may be the volunteer EMS crew in Imperial, Nebraska, who lost longtime member Dave Ridlen to a rifle accident in early November. Or the Carthage, Texas, family robbed of a 22-year-old son after Jonathan Todd Williams was asked by his father to answer a knock at the door, only to be blown away. It includes the South Carolina grandmother killed in her car when her two-year-old grandson found a loaded revolver in the backseat. Or the eight members of Valerie Jacksons family, including six children, all murdered by her ex-boyfriend David Conley, who acquired a gun online despite being prohibited from owning one. But even as gun violence occurs all over the country, its burdens are unequally distributed. In parts of cities like St. Louis, Chicago, and Baltimore not to mention forgotten parts of cities like Charleston, Chattanooga, and San Bernardino shots ring out with terrifying frequency and density, without drawing CNNs broadcast trucks or prompting the President to step up to a podium.
https://www.thetrace.org/2015/12/gun-deaths-interactive-map-2015/
The Second Amendment absolutist Gun Nut "militia" likes to cite a falling violent crime rate as evidence that gun violence is also falling, which is yet another Big Lie on their list of right-wing NRA/ALEC talking points.
Support a Liberal gun control organization of your choice and help to put an end to the violence on our streets caused by a proliferation of too many guns in too many wrong hands.
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Violent Crime vs. Gun Violence (Original Post)
billh58
Apr 2016
OP
SunSeeker
(53,718 posts)1. K & R
flamin lib
(14,559 posts)2. Can I get an AMEN! nt