Posted on 06/21/2013 11:35:44 AM PDT by marktwain
Someone came by searching for TOO MANY PEOPLE DIE FROM GUNS ACCIDENT.
If the annual total were one, that would be one too many. None the less, Americans are making remarkable progress at reducing the number of gun accidents. You can click on the chart on the left for a clearer view. You will see that 112 years ago, the fatal firearms accident rate was 3.6 per 100,000 population, three times the homicide rate.
In 1904, the fatal accident rate was 3.4 per 100,000. A gun safety drive by a number of State Rifle and Pistol Clubs dropped the rate to 2.0 in 1906, and 1.9 in 1908. The accident rate rose after the State Associations dropped their programs around 1912, going as high as 2.6 in 1928.
The Second World War took many young shooters off the fields and ranges, and the outdoor magazines put more emphasis on gun safety. Fatal gun accidents declined 1.6 in 1948, 1.4 in 1954, and 1.1 in 1962.
A rise in untrained hunters caused a rise to 1.5 per 100,000 in 1968, when the National Rifle Association and State Rifle and Pistol Associations began the drive for hunter safety training, high visibility clothing afield, and other safety measures. As you can see from the graphic, those gun safety programs caused a continuing decline in fatal gun accidents.
By the late 1980′s the accident rate had declined to 0.7, or 7 per million population, with almost half of those killed in fatal gun accidents being children. The National Rifle Association responded with the Eddie Eagle program that teaches children who SEE a gun to STOP what they are doing and GO get an adult. The result has been a sharp downward trend in fatal gun accidents, with 2010, the latest year for which data is available showing just 503 fatal firearms accidents.
Now, as I said to start with, even one gun accident is one too many. Every firearms accident is preventable. And all three of the successful gun safety drives have been initiated by gun clubs, the first by State Rifle and Pistol Associations, the second and third by the National Rifle Association.
Those campaigns have driven the number of fatal firearms deaths from 2,763 in 1900, when the population was just 76,094,000, to a total of 503 among a population of 313,544,041. Percentage wise, that is a 95 percent reduction in an Americans risk of becoming a firearms accident statistic. And while the shooting and gun hobby groups were making you safer, what were the gun control groups doing?
They were fighting tooth and nail to prevent these gun safety programs. When a Borough of Queens Catholic Church, disturbed by the number of firearms accidents in the diocese, asked New York Mayor Ed Koch for permission to give gun safety classes, the Church was turned down flat. Even after the Church offered to pay off duty police officers to teach the classes.
When a Harris County, Texas gun club offered to provide free Eddie Eagle material and qualified instructors to Houston schools, anti-gun Mayor Kathy Whitmire refused to allow it.
The fact is that groups like Handgun Control, Inc., currently doing business as the Brady Campaign; and the other well funded firearms propaganda groups have done everything possible to prevent life saving gun safety training.
Training that has cut the number of fatal firearms accidents from 1,689 in 1986 to just 503 in 2010. Lifesaving training that has not been permitted in many areas, thanks to gun control groups.
Stranger
OK, try this . . . Too many people die from motor vehicle accidents.
“If the annual total were one, that would be one too many.”
OK... ok... the author is one ignorant dummass.
Please see my editorial this weekend.
More children die from accidentally drowning in 5 gallon buckets than die from accidental gunshots.
Did you bother to read the article?
Any accidental death is too many, regardless of mechanism.
It is not possible to prevent all such deaths, mainly because many people are idiots. But reducing their numbers is quite doable, and for guns has been done. In America this has resulted in a 95% reduction in 100 years.
Is that a bad thing?
Gun saftey should be taught to all, even if you don’t even own a gun or intend to!
1. if someone is showing you a gun and points it your move their hand and tell them to not do that.
2. If that does not work knock the crap out of them!
3. IF I am being shown a gun I do not even touch it or pick it up. IF it’s on the range where a bud and I are doing comparison fine!
4. Never assume another person knows gun saftey! One of my best friends was killed @ 14 because of a stupid act.
5. IF you own a gun and are not sure of your prowess, take a course
They do, and per mile driven they’ve been tremendously reduced in 100 years, possibly as much or more than gun accident fatalities.
And how many from drunk drivers and how many from knives and how many from .....
And the same logic that drives your remarks, drives mine. Which, I think, is our point yours and mine alike
The end result of protecting people from their folly is a world fool of fools.
Yes, guns are scary. Watch out.
Are you sure that’s not “motors vehicle Accidentses”, like “guns accident”?
Let us have a look at the top 10 most common causes of accidental deaths which are oftentimes the result of errors in judgment and simple miscues.
1. Car Crashes, 43,200 fatalities a year
2. Accidental Falls, 14,900 fatalities a year
3. Poisoning by liquids or solids, 8,600 fatalities a year
4. Accidental Death by Drowning, 4,000 fatalities a year
5. Accidental Deaths from Burns and Fires, 3,700 fatalities a year
6. Death by Suffocation, 3,300 fatalities a year
7. Accidental Gun Firing, 1,500 fatalities a year
8. Death by Gas Poisoning, 700 fatalities a year
9. Surgical and Medical Complications, 500 fatalities a year
10. Accidental Death Caused by Machineries, 350 fatalities a year
There are accidents with everything including guns that are tragic. A few do happen with no human stupidity or ignorance. Are you familiar with the stove pipe theory of accidents?
I do not know were you got the figure, but it is wildly out of date. Current numbers are about 600. I think 2010 was 602.
Number four killer.
Neah. Just politically correct boiler plate.
I'm not and a quick Google came up empty. What is it?
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