As every time, the mass murder is followed by hand-wringing and endless questions about the perpetrator’s motives and mental condition. We hear, again and again, that the cause of our mass murder epidemic is mental illness, that the solution is to identify those who are dangerously mentally ill and to prevent them from acquiring fire arms. This is nonsense, of course. The rate of mental illness is not higher in the US than elsewhere. I have always argued for one simple point: It’s all about the guns. The more guns there are, the more people die from guns. Period.
But I have yet to come across data documenting the simple proposition that there is a strong correlation between a place’s homicide rate and its rate of gun ownership. Logic is on my side, but what about data?
Last year, I tried to test this hypothesis myself. I used countries as my units of analysis. My results were inconclusive. They did not show that countries with high rates of gun ownership also had higher homicide rates.
I just repeated my effort. But instead of comparing countries, I now compared the fifty US states. My source is States’ gun ownership rates.
I entered the data into a two-by-two table with the following four categories:
2. States with low homicide rates and high gun rates
3. States with high homicide rates and low gun ownership
rates
4. States with low homicide rates and low gun ownership
rates
Thus, both of my attempts to show such a relationship failed. Apparently, other factors outweigh that relationship: These include regional, political, economic, cultural and demographic differences.
I then looked at another
variable which might be relevant: the rural-urban variable. I now
compared the twenty-five most rural states with the twenty-five most urban states. This
was my independent variable. The dependent variable was now a combination of
homicide rate and gun ownership rate. This produced the same four categories as
mentioned above.
This time, I hit upon a very strong correlation. However, it was not the one which I had hoped to demonstrate:
|
Rural states |
Urban states |
total |
A. both homicides and guns high |
11 (Cell A) |
2 (Cell E) |
13 |
B. guns high and homicides
low |
11 (Cell B) |
1 (Cell F) |
12 |
C. guns low and homicides
high |
1 (Cell C) |
12 (Cell G) |
13 |
D. guns low and homicides low |
2 (Cell D) |
10 (Cell H) |
12 |
Total |
25 |
25 |
50 |
The vast majority of the states that own many guns are rural (Cells A and B). This includes ten Southern rural states (which are also high homicide states), but also five “cowboy” states (Montana, Wyoming, Idaho and the Dakotas), three New England states (Vermont, Maine and New Hampshire) and a couple of Midwestern states. Half of the high guns states - largely those that are most rural - are low homicide states (Cell B). Presumably, in these states guns are more often associated with hunting than with murder.
Conversely, the large majority of the low guns states are the more urban states. (Cells G and H) Nevertheless, over half of the low-gun states are among the high homicide states (Cell G).. These include five Southern urbanized states (for example Texas and Florida) three “cowboy” states (New Mexico, Arizona and Nevada) and a couple of Atlantic states. Finally, the ten urban states which have both low gun ownership and low homicide rates include half a dozen Eastern seaboard states (New York, New Jersey, New England) and the Pacific states (California, Hawaii).
Apparently, lifestyle matters. On a per capita basis, rural folks own far more guns than urbanites. However, in half of the rural states this does not produce high homicide rates.. Conversely, half of the urban states have a lower than average gun ownership but high homicide rates anyway.
To be sure, America’s gun problem is getting worse: In 2021, there were 48,830 guns deaths in America. This was up from 39,700 before the onset of Covid, just two years earlier.
The gun deaths were distributed as follows: (US Mass Shootings)
26,328 suicides - 56%
20,958 murders: 43%
549 accidents
537 “legal intervention”
458 undetermined
Over 75% of all homicides and suicides occur by gun. Mass murders make up a small part of all homicides: In 2021, they accounted for only 106 deaths. However, mass murders are exceptionally disturbing. And if there is any crime which occurs more often in America than elsewhere, it is this most heinous one. Nor can I recollect a single mass murder committed by a female (although there have been female serial killers). 100% of American mass killers have been males, almost all of them white.
There are 400 million firearms in America, and the number continues to rise. What is needed is to stop and reverse the spread of automatic firearms - these are weapons of war with no other purpose than to kill large numbers of people as rapidly as possible. They offer no defensive protection, nor are they useful for hunting and other forms of recreation.
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4 comments:
Thank you for sharing your research. I'm sick of the claims that guns don't kill people and te cynical calling for thoughts and prayers˜
Thanks Tom for this information. I agree we need to ban automatic weapons.
Interesting - not too much difference - expected more. I agree - get rid of the guns and have tighter security but I think it is more than the guns - we live in a violent undisciplined society and the more I see of our younger generation the more I worry. Idealism and a spirit of community and friendship seem to have disappeared. The next years will be bad ones especially with Trump. Lucky we are old.
Thanks for your comments.
I like especially Margo's point about our lack of discipline. I don't know to what extent the younger generation has aggravated some of our bad cultural habits. But Margo seems to be touching upon a central and perennial quality of American culture - excessive individualism.
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