Gun Control & RKBA
Related: About this forumExperts study ‘gun culture’ and its impact on gun violence
Gun ownership was closely tied to social gun culture, wherein family and friends also own guns and think less of non-gun owners, researchers found.
About 29 percent of people nationwide reported owning a gun. Only five percent of people in Delaware and six percent in Rhode Island owned a gun, compared to almost 62 percent in Alaska. More than half of people reported owning a gun in West Virginia, Arkansas, Montana, Wyoming and Idaho. Regionally, gun ownership was least common in the Northeast and most common in the South and West.
About 5 percent of people said they used their gun for hunting, and 10 percent reported attending gun safety classes.
http://www.wctrib.com/news/nation/3777318-experts-study-gun-culture-and-its-impact-gun-violence
ileus
(15,396 posts)From reading this it's pretty easy to tell the "experts" here are idiots.
"They may be buying more than one, now that's scary and mean. Don't they know guns kill?"
Gun Culture want a load of bunk...
nightscanner59
(802 posts)that it scared even the Fox people into shutting it down. That and the more reasonable opinions were all coming from their enemies. To wit: http://www.democraticunderground.com/1022870
The best many of us can do is attempt to change hearts and minds one at a time. Not that such will get anywhere with the entrenched, but children are listening.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)You've got a tough row to how considering the usual Controller tactics revolve around sex-based name-calling, claiming gun owners are murderers in waiting and responsible for the death of children, claiming that those who are able to speak to technical facts is a reason to be dismissed out of hand and a general refusal to acknowledge the individual right to self-defense.
The children who are watching would probably consider such behavior as beyond childish.
Eleanors38
(18,318 posts)A quick perusal of gun-related posts over the last couple of months alone should be sufficient to illustrate how many DU controllers think.
Going back thirty or forty years, you had to search obscure journals for vitriol aimed at non-gun-owners, but plenty could be found in the editorials, in-depth commentary, guest columns directed at gun-owners. This wasn't the bathroom scrawl of some anonymous jerk with a Marksalot, but academics, government leaders, culture critics, noted columnists, etc.
The penis talk, bucked-toothed stereotypes, and yee-hahs in the woods was promulgated early and often.
Is it any wonder?
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)It all sounds so familiar --
"Those people, they ain't like us. They're dangerous and not to be trusted. Why, you never know when one might snap. They'll come after our women and children. They're what's wrong with this country. They ruin it for decent folk. Don't worry about what the law says, they're just a minority. We need to do something before they hurt us. Things will be so much better once they're no longer living amongst us. You'll see. Just trust me."
sarisataka
(18,926 posts)Ingredients
1 12-ounce can SPAM® Classic, diced fine
1 cup Thousand Island salad dressing
1 (14-ounce) can sauerkraut, drained well
2 cups shredded Swiss cheese
16-18 slices swirled rye bread
1/4 cup melted butter
Directions
1Mix SPAM® Classic, dressing, sauerkraut, and cheese together; set aside.2Cut off the crust on each bread slice. Roll out bread slices thin with a rolling pin. Spoon SPAM® mixture onto bread slices (about 3 tablespoons). Roll up and slice each roll in half. Coat with melted butter.3Place roll-ups on a baking sheet. Bake at 375°F for 15 minutes. Makes 32-36 roll-ups.
Oh, BTW-
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Also note the survey from the OP was an online survey.
sarisataka
(18,926 posts)random sample.
But I'm sure this gives us TRUE, SET IN STONE, UNQUESTIONABLE DATA!!!!!!
Just like that 40% of guns are sold unchecked at gun shows
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,489 posts)...to my 5 minute break that I'll be taking for the next 10 minutes.
With that in mind, I'll return to work in about a half hour.
- Courtesy of Irish uncle and first on the job supervisor.
Shamash
(597 posts)Just from the story I can spot unsupportable assumptions, errors and ignorance. Or to do the mental translation that happens between the eyeballs and brain for some DUers, "perfectly acceptable guidelines to base policy on". But I do like this, since it seems to apply in reverse:
I imagine anyone here at DU could have told them that without surveying 5,000 random Americans. Speaking of which, if that is truly a representative sample of Americans, that would mean they surveyed 12 whole Alaskans and 17 Rhode Islanders in order to get their results for these states.
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,489 posts)...is both doubtful in validity and impaired in its systematic design. I further infer that these issues preclude said post's titled subject from being taken seriously as the term "expert" would remain in serious doubt.
Or, as I often would like to say...
...another bunch of conclusions based on misinformation developed by a team expertly skilled in the science of assertion and conclusion jumping.