In the same category

Some Facts About Gun Ownership In The United States

IMG Auteur
Published : August 04th, 2019
811 words - Reading time : 2 - 3 minutes
( 0 vote, 0/5 )
Print article
  Article Comments Comment this article Rating All Articles  
[titre article pour referencement]
0
Send
0
comment
Our Newsletter...
Category : Editorials

About 43% of U.S. households own firearms. I did not grow up in one of them; and so, in the past, I was generally of the opinion that other people should not own firearms either. But, I changed my mind. This was largely due to a growing appreciation of the fundamental principles that led to the Second Amendment in the first place, especially in the case of the United States. Along the way, I learned something about firearms in the U.S., which is a lot different than what you hear in the media.

Basically, the legal ownership of firearms, especially long guns (rifles and shotguns) is amazingly problem-free. We have been doing it for over two hundred years, and it hasn’t really been an issue. Today, the homicide rate is about the lowest it has been in U.S. history. You would think people would celebrate this a little bit. It is true that the homicide rate in the U.S. is somewhat higher than in some other countries; but, it is lower than a lot of other countries. Firearm homicide in the U.S. is mostly related to 1) race, basically Blacks and Hispanics; 2) illegally-obtained firearms; 3) pistols; 4) in certain large urban areas, most of which already have strong restrictions against firearms. Blacks and Hispanics commit homicide at rates far higher than non-Hispanic Whites. Where firearms are used, this is 90% pistols; and, in 90%+ of situations, these firearms were illegally obtained.

Since everyone in law enforcement knows this, and it hasn’t changed in decades, then what is all the fuss about legal ownership of rifles and shotguns, mostly by non-Hispanic Whites? Well, it doesn’t take too much thinking to figure that out, and it appears to me that tens of millions of Americans have come to the same conclusion: there is an agenda to intentionally disarm the U.S. population. Why? I am sure it is for a good reason.

As we can see, the homicide rate today is the lowest in decades, and around the same as the lows of the 1960s. Those lows of the 1960s themselves represented some of the lowest figures in U.S. history.

Whether homicide rates were higher or lower in the 19th century seems to be a matter of some debate. This chart asserts that late 19th century homicide rates were very low; but it clearly has an anti-gun-control message and might be skewed:

This chart asserts that crime rates were quite high:

Here is some decent data:

This is interesting, because we see the homicide rate among Colonial-era British (non-Hispanic White) around 1.0-2.0 during the eighteenth century.

Homicide in New York City was probably well above the national average in the nineteenth century, just as it is today. But, it doesn’t seem to have been a problem. It looks like homicide rates during the nineteenth century were actually quite low.

The homicide rate in England and Wales today is 1.20 per 100,000. For Scotland it is 1.10; in Canada, 1.80.

This fall in homicide rates in the U.S. has taken place during an expansion in firearms ownership:

In general, I don’t emphasize the argument that widespread firearms ownership reduces crime. Nevertheless, we find that homicide rates are highest in cities with strict gun-control laws. The U.S. city with the lowest homicide rate is: Plano, Texas.

We find little correlation between gun ownership and homicide.

When talking about these topics, you often hear about “gun violence.” This includes suicide; and in fact, most deaths by “gun violence” are by suicide.

You can tell when people are intentionally trying to mislead you because they talk about “gun violence,” expecting you to believe that this means “firearm homicide.” It is true that firearms are a preferred method of suicide in the United States. But, the suicide rate in the United States is not particularly high (13.7 per 100,000, age-standardized rate); it is about the same as Europe (12.9), and lower than some places with very low firearms ownership, such as Japan (14.3). The suicide rate in the U.S. has picked up in recent years. Here too we see a lot of differences between races: blacks have an extraordinarily low suicide rate.

The percentage of households that own (legal) firearms has fallen somewhat over the years. But, it is still pretty high.

There is considerable discrepancy in this data.

As you probably guessed, gun ownership is more common among Republicans. Nevertheless, 25% of Democrat households say they own firearms.

I think I will draw things to a close for this week, but please note the vast discrepancy between reality (lowest homicide rate in 100 years — hooray!) with the ridiculous headlines you’re being fed by the mainstream media about an “epidemic of gun violence.”

Of course nobody makes mistakes like this by accident; certainly not over a period of years. Thus, we must conclude that this is intentional.

<< Previous article
Rate : Average note :0 (0 vote)
>> Next article
Nathan Lewis was formerly the chief international economist of a firm that provided investment research for institutions. He now works for an asset management company based in New York. Lewis has written for the Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Japan Times, Pravda, and other publications. He has appeared on financial television in the United States, Japan, and the Middle East.
Comments closed
Latest comment posted for this article
Be the first to comment
Add your comment
Top articles
World PM Newsflow
ALL
GOLD
SILVER
PGM & DIAMONDS
OIL & GAS
OTHER METALS