This is a pretty common theme among gun control advocates. "Sure", the argument goes, "it may be that in the unlikely event that someone breaks into your house, you'll be able to protect your family with a gun. But it's much more likely that a member of your family will kill or injure himself with the gun by accident."
Well, one of the things I do for a living is data, and one of the reasons I put so much work into making a living is that I have three small, beautiful children at home. So while I like my guns (all four of them...) I love my kids. And it seemed worth digging into the standard questions and data on this issues to see what is really going on.
Luckily, we live in the a country with lots of great public information available over the internet. So you and I are perfectly free to go trawl the Center For Disease Control data about causes of death and injury throughout the country each year. (Last year of data available, 2003.) I'll first look at the major complaints about gun accidents put forward by gun control advocates, and then look at the hard data dealing with the topic.
The biggest fear, for parents especially, is of children finding guns and hurting themselves by accident (or while playing with the gun). The American Academy of Pediatrics has this to say:
Q) How can I keep my child safe from gun injury?And Lambert's Harvard Magazine article has this to say:
A) The safest thing for your child is not to have a gun in your home, especially not a handgun.
Many times a teenaged boy will find a gun such as a semi-automatic pistol in his home and, after taking out the ammunition clip, assume that the gun is unloaded. He then points the pistol at his best friend and playfully pulls the trigger, killing the other lad with the bullet that was already in the chamber. "People say, 'Teach kids not to pull the trigger,' but kids will do it," Hemenway says. In a 2001 study, for example, small groups of boys from 8 to 12 years old spent 15 minutes in a room where a handgun was hidden in a drawer. More than two-thirds discovered the gun, more than half the groups handled it, and in more than a third of the groups someone pulled the trigger—despite the fact that more than 90 percent of the boys in the latter groups had received gun-safety instruction.
Hence product redesign may do more good than safety education. Hemenway suggests such changes as adding "a magazine safety, so that when you remove the clip, the gun does not work. Or make guns that visually indicate if they are loaded—just like you can tell if there is film in a camera."
(You can read the study that he mentions here.) Well, there a couple things to note here. A number of guns already have the safety features that Hemenway mentions here. Also, I kind of wonder how realistic a test this was. I mean, 8-12 year olds may be inexperienced and exuberant, but they're not idiots. If they're set loose in a room as part of a study (even though they don't know what they study is of) many of them would probably assume that any gun they find in the room is either a fake or unloaded. It's not quite the same as finding your dad's .45 in his sock drawer and horsing around with it.
It's certainly true that a number of people die in the US each year as a result of gunshot wounds. From the Harvard Magazine article:Gun deaths fall into three categories: homicides, suicides, and accidental killings. In 2001, about 30,000 people died from gunfire in the United States. Set this against the 43,000 annual deaths from motor-vehicle accidents to recognize what startling carnage comes out of a barrel. The comparison is especially telling because cars "are a way of life," as Hemenway explains. "People use cars all day, every day—and 'motor vehicles' include trucks. How many of us use guns?"The first thing that jumps out at you is that the US primarily has a suicide and homicide problem. The number of actual accidental deaths is tiny.
Suicides accounted for about 58 percent of gun fatalities, or 17,000 to 18,000 deaths, in 2001; another 11,000 deaths, or 37 percent, were homicides, and the remaining 800 to 900 gun deaths were accidental.
Now, Lambert acknowledges this in the Harvard Magazine article, however he argues (as apparently does Hemenway in his book) that without guns available, people who contemplate suicide are less likely to be successful, and people who commit crimes (if they're not carrying a gun as opposed to if they are) are less likely to injure or kill their victims.
Here, I suppose, you run into a question of how one thinks about the world. The purpose of a gun is to hurl a small but very dense projectile very, very fast -- thus punching a hole in whatever it hits. This means that if you use one to commit suicide, you're likely to be successful. Now, I'm in no sense in favor of suicide. I believe it to be a grave moral sin, which by its nature drastically reduces one's chances of having time to repent and seek forgiveness before death. But while I believe people shouldn't commit suicide, I'm not sure that denying them effective tools for doing so is the right way of dealing with the problem. (I'm not saying it wouldn't be effective, I'm just not sure that it's the right thing to do.)
Similarly, I'll admit that it's true that if one could somehow make guns very, very scarce, that fewer people would be killed by gun wielding criminals. While it's true that determined criminals (say, bank robbers or hard core gang members) will be able to get guns no matter what, more casual criminals would probably forgo guns in a less gun saturated society. However, I have a tempermental preference for a world in which, even if criminals can get hold of guns, I can have them as well, than one in which I'm definately not going to be armed, and many (though not all) criminals still are. (And I'm not even the sort of gun owner who keeps guns loaded and ready to hand. It would take me a good minute or two to go upstairs, unlock my handgun case, slap the magazine into place, and work the slide.)
Yet these considerations aside, we still have the 800-900 accidents that take place very year. Are these indeed mostly cases of boys pointed automatics at their best friends, thinking they are unloaded?
Well, with the help of the CDC's website, I pulled the data for 2003, the last year available, and I bucketized the data by age range.
Age | Accidental Gun Deaths | Total Population | Rate |
1-7 | 15 | 27,424,800 | 0.0000547% |
8-13 | 24 | 25,086,531 | 0.00009567% |
14-18 | 88 | 20,628,022 | 0.0004266% |
That's a total of 127 accidental deaths. For comparison, I pulled accidental deaths by drowning for the same period and the same age ranges. (I thought drowning was a good comparison, as opposed to car accidents, since people are in cars every day, while swimming is an occasional recreational activity which many children are not accustomed to doing safely.)
Age | Deaths by Drowning | Total Population | Rate |
1-7 | 550 | 27,424,800 | 0.00200548% |
8-13 | 102 | 25,086,531 | 0.00040659% |
14-18 | 258 | 20,628,022 | 0.00125073% |
That's 910 deaths by drowning in the same period: more than seven times as many.
So where does the famously large number of child gun deaths come from? Well, first of all, a lot of gun control advocates (including the APA in the page linked to above) use statistics that include homicide and suicide as well as accidents, and they include ages 1-19 instead of 1-18, since 19-year-olds have a staggering number of homicide deaths and suicides compared to real children. Sticking with the same buckets and time period as before, here are the stats of murder and suicide.
Age | Gun Suicides | Total Population | Rate |
1-7 | 0 | 27,424,800 | 0.00% |
8-13 | 0 | 25,086,531 | 0.00% |
14-18 | 536 | 20,628,022 | 0.00259841% |
Age | Gun Homicides | Total Population | Rate |
1-7 | 0 | 27,424,800 | 0.00% |
8-13 | 52 | 25,086,531 | 0.00020728% |
14-18 | 1103 | 20,628,022 | 0.00534710% |
Now, I don't for a moment mean by any of this that gun safety is not important. Gun safety is incredibly important, because guns are incredibly dangerous when misused. But this data seems to suggest very strongly to me that Americans actually do a very good job of keeping small children from harming themselves with guns. Without question, guns should be stored safely, and children should be taught how to handle them safely (and what they can do to something which is shot). But it does appear that this kind of training can and does work to prevent accidental gun deaths the vast, vast majority of the time.
The danger area with guns is when teenagers get old enough to get hold of them and decide to use them in crime to to kill themselves. That's a major societal and legal problem. But it's not a gun safety problem.
9 comments:
Excellent work, sir.
Interesting. I don't think the problem is gun safety, so much as training your kids.
I'd like to see what the breakout of gun accidents is in rural states where kids are exposed to guns and trained early, and urban states where a kid finds a gun and has never held one before.
I think I'm going to take my girls out into the woods and give them a lesson.
I have searched long and hard for a portrayal of cool headed common sense. I believe this breath of fresh air is just what the respiratory therapist recommended,(Speaking metaphorically of course.) In this world of alarmist second hand and sensationalist smog.
Teach people. What a novel idea....
As the old saying goes... "Gun control is using two hands." Mind you, if it is a rifle or shotgun, you might want to include the shoulder as well. :-)
I wonder what the percentage is for kids actually being mischievious and playing with their parents guns.
Well done, Darwin.
Decades ago I went through EMT training, and being pro-gun already, I really paid attention to the figures on accidental poisoning. Small children, household chemicals, early 1980's: Over 500,000 incidents PER YEAR. Over 12,000 deaths of small children PER YEAR from accidental poisoning.
For "Accidental poisoning" read "Children of the 1-3 year range who are too young to know better get into household chemicals and try them out, because kids that age always want to taste stuff." Also their taste organs are underdeveloped and something an older person will spit out, they will swallow. It's heartbreaking.
And it's not "accidental"; it's NEGLIGENT. Got it, anti-gun liberals? There's no way a single one of those 500,000 poisonings should have happened. No kids ever get into those household poisons "accidentally." If they are properly secured the kids can no more get them than they can go to the Moon. The same, of course, goes for guns. Properly secured, they can no more hurt a careless child than one of the bricks mortared into the wall.
Oh, and there's another aspect to the bogus statistics about gun safety: The vast majority of times a firearm is used successfully to ward off an assailant, it is by the DISPLAY, not the DISCHARGE, of a firearm.
In the aftermath of hurricane Andrew, there was a lot of looting, including, sadly of homes with the occupants still there. Gangs of looters just threatened the occupants with violence if they resisted. There were, however, no lootings of homes where the occupants had firearms which they displayed. There were essentially no shootings.
Now the anti-gun people don't report the statistics on display-only incidents.
There's also the fact that in many circumstances, the majority of these confrontations are never reported. This skews the figures even further.
I spoke to a man--he did a trigger job on my .357 magnum--who is a retired police officer. During the Rodney King anti-white riots, I mean "pro-freedom uprising", a gas station less than a block from his home was torched by a mob of several hundred. He lives in a cul-de-sac. The mob appeared at the opening to this cul-de-sac. Halfway down the street my interlocutor was standing there, shoulder to shoulder with two neighbors. Another retired peace officer and a retired soldier. All three had gray hair. Two cradled assault rifles, and one a shotgun. Presumably they also wore sidearms. The did not aim their weapons at the mob. Nor did they seek cover. Not one member of the mob took a single step down their street. Also, though a number of them were doubtless packing firearms themselves, not a single shot was fired at these three gray-haired men.
Back to the accidentally-shooting-your-children scare: Please note that there are tens of millions of homes with firearms, and--what was it? Less than a thousand fatalities? Whereas there are many times that number of fatalities from homes with poisonous chemicals.
Apparently Americans who keep firearms at home are orders of magnitude more responsible about their children's welfare than those who keep ant poison and the like.
The truth is that the anti-gun movement in this country is dominated not by principle but by ideology and pathology. Ideology, because it's a way to attack their enemies, and it's a way to deprecate individual self-reliance and responsibility at the expense of big government and people with social-science degrees. Pathology, because too many people are afflicted with hoplophobia--that's a pathological and irrational hatred and fear of weapons, especially firearms. No, you won't find the term in the psychiatric literature. It was coined by the late Mel Tappan, who wrote a little gem called "Survival guns", about how to arm yourself to protect yourself in disasters.
Again, Darwin, well done.
--LER
Very interesting stuff - thanks for putting this together.
My kids are all involved in shooting sports through 4-H and YHEC. Both great programs. YHEC is the NRA's youth program. My kids love it and they know more about gun safety than most adults.
Good research & post. I, of course prefer a less scholarly approach, but that's just me.
Unrelated, but I know you've read about the Derb in the past. Sad:
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=ZDBmYzcyZTgzNzNkYWM0MzY3YjE1ZThhZGJiMDRiZWE=
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