Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
SecularMotion
SecularMotion's Journal
SecularMotion's Journal
July 2, 2015
Experts study ‘gun culture’ and its impact on gun violence
Almost a third of American adults own a gun, but the rate varies widely by state and tops out at almost 62 percent of people in Alaska, new survey data show.
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
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
July 1, 2015
Risk managers offer workplace gun violence mitigation tips
Businesses and other organizations are facing growing gun violence and need to consider it in their risk management plans.
Of 160 active shooter incidents in the U.S. between 2000 and 2013, over 80% occurred at sites where people worked, according to an FBI study published in late 2013. Nearly 70% of the incidents ended in five minutes or less, with more than half of the incidents ending before police arrived.
Employers from a wide range of sectors, including Starbucks Corp., Cigna Corp., and most recently Uber Technologies Inc., have banned guns from the workplace in an effort to protect their employees and manage risk.
Employers are also incorporating active shooter emergency drills and training employees to communicate any threats that may lead to violence
http://www.businessinsurance.com/article/20150630/NEWS06/150639986/risk-managers-offer-workplace-gun-violence-mitigation-tips?tags=|83|302
Of 160 active shooter incidents in the U.S. between 2000 and 2013, over 80% occurred at sites where people worked, according to an FBI study published in late 2013. Nearly 70% of the incidents ended in five minutes or less, with more than half of the incidents ending before police arrived.
Employers from a wide range of sectors, including Starbucks Corp., Cigna Corp., and most recently Uber Technologies Inc., have banned guns from the workplace in an effort to protect their employees and manage risk.
Employers are also incorporating active shooter emergency drills and training employees to communicate any threats that may lead to violence
http://www.businessinsurance.com/article/20150630/NEWS06/150639986/risk-managers-offer-workplace-gun-violence-mitigation-tips?tags=|83|302
June 29, 2015
In Japan, even the gun enthusiasts are in favor of gun control
ISEHARA, Japan Chiaki Sakurai heard a story from his shooting buddies about an American school in Japan.
I heard that theres an American school here that has a sign out front saying No guns,? he said incredulously one day this week during a break from target practice at a shooting range. The school has a sign, even though its in Japan!
Its not the prohibition that shocked Sakurai, a 56-year-old who has been shooting competitively for three decades, but the idea that such a sign would ever be needed. Why would anyone be carrying a gun at all, let alone into a school?
The story about the sign might be an urban legend, but Sakurais astonishment was totally unfeigned.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/in-japan-even-the-gun-enthusiasts-are-in-favor-of-gun-control/2015/06/27/283cfaea-19a6-11e5-bed8-1093ee58dad0_story.html
I heard that theres an American school here that has a sign out front saying No guns,? he said incredulously one day this week during a break from target practice at a shooting range. The school has a sign, even though its in Japan!
Its not the prohibition that shocked Sakurai, a 56-year-old who has been shooting competitively for three decades, but the idea that such a sign would ever be needed. Why would anyone be carrying a gun at all, let alone into a school?
The story about the sign might be an urban legend, but Sakurais astonishment was totally unfeigned.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/in-japan-even-the-gun-enthusiasts-are-in-favor-of-gun-control/2015/06/27/283cfaea-19a6-11e5-bed8-1093ee58dad0_story.html
September 1, 2014
I Wanna Get Me A Gun
August 7, 2014
Right wing discourse on guns is completely shaped by the gun industry’s desire to sell more guns
Ive noticed a dramatic uptick in gun nuts talking about how people need to learn to be comfortable around guns, which has, in turn, led to this whole open carry bullshit, which uses the line that its good to be comfortable around guns as its justification. (However, the emotional motive behind swinging a gun around in public is still the desire to dominate and terrify, but were all familiar with the glib ease with lying that is widespread on the American right.) Theres even a childrens book pushing the idea that its wholesome family fun to open carry. When I was young and growing up in gun-loving Texas around gun-loving people, the notion that you should just be tossing guns around and displaying them everywhere like some yahoothe idea that guns are safe and we should feel comfortable around themwas strongly discouraged. Guns were locked away and we were told that they are very dangerous. But while thats surely a smarter move if you want to minimize accidental shooting, the correct belief that guns are dangerous had to go because its clearly stifling gun profits. Theres still a little bit of talk about gun safety on the right, but its just a little ass-covering. The emotional pitch now is that guns are safe and they should be everywhere all the time until you forget how fucking dangerous they really are.
This is all corporate marketing 101. No doubt the very real fear that guns are dangerousbacked by statistical evidence showing that having one in your house raises your chances of being murdered or assaulted by gun, being shot by accident, and committing suicideis a huge barrier to selling more guns. So just like the ads in the 50s that tried to calm consumer fears of cancer by showing doctors smoking, theres a push to signal that guns are not dangerous. You should just have them laying around all the time. You should strap them to your body! Guns should just be so familiar you completely forget that they can blow your head off if you handle them incorrectly. Theyre so safe we should have kids firing them to pass on to the next grade! Theyre just like very expensive action figures and you should collect them all!
The shift from concealed carry to open carry as a focal point is also indicative of how much the discourse on guns on the right is being shaped by the gun industrys desire to sell more guns. Anyone who knows anything about markets knows that conspicuous consumption is a huge driver of profits, and that convincing people that owning your product will say something about them as a person is a really good way to sell widgets. (Anyone who claims theyre immune to this is probably lying, and you can find their iPhone on them somewhereor their Android, with which they signal how theyre different and smarter than everyone else.) With guns, the fact that people lock them away or hide them on their person, therefore, is clearly stifling sales. Shifting towards arguments about how people need to be comfortable with guns and open carry is better than concealed carry allows people to display their guns. Being able to use guns to signal your identity to othersor to make others believe you are toughshifts guns directly into the conspicuous consumption category, which is huge for gun sales. Entire industries are built on selling stuff thats main purpose is showing off that you own this particular item, which any purse manufacturer or luxury car salesman can tell you.
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/08/06/right-wing-discourse-on-guns-is-being-completely-shaped-by-the-gun-industrys-desire-to-sell-more-guns
This is all corporate marketing 101. No doubt the very real fear that guns are dangerousbacked by statistical evidence showing that having one in your house raises your chances of being murdered or assaulted by gun, being shot by accident, and committing suicideis a huge barrier to selling more guns. So just like the ads in the 50s that tried to calm consumer fears of cancer by showing doctors smoking, theres a push to signal that guns are not dangerous. You should just have them laying around all the time. You should strap them to your body! Guns should just be so familiar you completely forget that they can blow your head off if you handle them incorrectly. Theyre so safe we should have kids firing them to pass on to the next grade! Theyre just like very expensive action figures and you should collect them all!
The shift from concealed carry to open carry as a focal point is also indicative of how much the discourse on guns on the right is being shaped by the gun industrys desire to sell more guns. Anyone who knows anything about markets knows that conspicuous consumption is a huge driver of profits, and that convincing people that owning your product will say something about them as a person is a really good way to sell widgets. (Anyone who claims theyre immune to this is probably lying, and you can find their iPhone on them somewhereor their Android, with which they signal how theyre different and smarter than everyone else.) With guns, the fact that people lock them away or hide them on their person, therefore, is clearly stifling sales. Shifting towards arguments about how people need to be comfortable with guns and open carry is better than concealed carry allows people to display their guns. Being able to use guns to signal your identity to othersor to make others believe you are toughshifts guns directly into the conspicuous consumption category, which is huge for gun sales. Entire industries are built on selling stuff thats main purpose is showing off that you own this particular item, which any purse manufacturer or luxury car salesman can tell you.
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/08/06/right-wing-discourse-on-guns-is-being-completely-shaped-by-the-gun-industrys-desire-to-sell-more-guns
July 24, 2014
Senators Propose Compromise On Rifle Permit Discretion For Police Chiefs
The Barrett letter was signed by Sens. Kenneth Donnelly (D-Arlington), Benjamin Downing (D-Pittsfield), Barry Finegold (D-Andover), Jason Lewis (D-Winchester) and Kathleen OConnor Ives (D-Newburyport). All six voted in favor of the Sen. Michael Moore amendment last week that removed discretion from the Senate bill.
We favor legislating reasonable grounds for denying a hunting rifle in appropriate cases, but we want these grounds to give narrower and clearer guidance to both law enforcement and citizens. We have a substantial number of constituents who object to formulations on hunting guns that seem too careless or too rushed, the letter states.
The House gun bill proposed to give discretion to police chiefs to deny a Firearm Identification Card to someone who might not fall under the list of prohibited persons, but has demonstrated or engaged in behavior that suggests they could be a threat to public safety. Chiefs already have such discretion in issuing handgun licenses.
The six senators, who were among the 28 that voted to strip the provision from the bill, argued the language was too broad and open to interpretation. They proposed a new section that would allow a chief to deem an applicant unsuitable if they have demonstrated that they pose a concrete and articulable risk of harm in the reasonably near term to himself or to others.
http://www.wbur.org/2014/07/23/senators-rifle-permit-discretion-police
We favor legislating reasonable grounds for denying a hunting rifle in appropriate cases, but we want these grounds to give narrower and clearer guidance to both law enforcement and citizens. We have a substantial number of constituents who object to formulations on hunting guns that seem too careless or too rushed, the letter states.
The House gun bill proposed to give discretion to police chiefs to deny a Firearm Identification Card to someone who might not fall under the list of prohibited persons, but has demonstrated or engaged in behavior that suggests they could be a threat to public safety. Chiefs already have such discretion in issuing handgun licenses.
The six senators, who were among the 28 that voted to strip the provision from the bill, argued the language was too broad and open to interpretation. They proposed a new section that would allow a chief to deem an applicant unsuitable if they have demonstrated that they pose a concrete and articulable risk of harm in the reasonably near term to himself or to others.
http://www.wbur.org/2014/07/23/senators-rifle-permit-discretion-police
July 23, 2014
How to Beat the NRA In 7 (Not-So-Easy) Steps
The NRA remains one of the most formidable forces in American political life. But it is not bulletproof. Since the massacres in Aurora and Newtown, states from New York and Maryland to Colorado and California have made modest progress against the gun lobby, passing a raft of new laws aimed at reducing gun violence. There are sharp lessons to be learned from these victories, and even more important ones to be gleaned from the playbook of the NRA itself. The seven strategies below can empower gun-control advocates to stop bemoaning their helplessness, and start carrying the day.
1. Commit to a Generation-Long Battle
The NRA is engaged in a long war. Americans committed to combating gun violence must be also.
By and large, the NRA doesn't win with flashy, high profile political fights. The gun lobby wins like the Baltimore Ravens of the Ray Lewis era, marrying competent offensive execution to a punishing defense that keeps opponents out of the red zone.
This approach has enabled the NRA to grind out national victories, state by state, often without the need for federal legislation. Consider concealed-carry law. There's no national standard. But thanks to the NRA's relentless efforts, Illinois last year became the 50th state to pass legislation allowing its residents to pack heat. Likewise, the radical redefinition of self-defense embodied in "stand your ground," has quietly been made law in more than two dozen states.
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/how-to-beat-the-nra-in-7-not-so-easy-steps-20140714
1. Commit to a Generation-Long Battle
The NRA is engaged in a long war. Americans committed to combating gun violence must be also.
By and large, the NRA doesn't win with flashy, high profile political fights. The gun lobby wins like the Baltimore Ravens of the Ray Lewis era, marrying competent offensive execution to a punishing defense that keeps opponents out of the red zone.
This approach has enabled the NRA to grind out national victories, state by state, often without the need for federal legislation. Consider concealed-carry law. There's no national standard. But thanks to the NRA's relentless efforts, Illinois last year became the 50th state to pass legislation allowing its residents to pack heat. Likewise, the radical redefinition of self-defense embodied in "stand your ground," has quietly been made law in more than two dozen states.
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/how-to-beat-the-nra-in-7-not-so-easy-steps-20140714
July 23, 2014
Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson has introduced his gun control legislation; read it here
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson has introduced legislation that would create a city gun offender registry as part of a sweeping city gun law overhaul he announced last month.
The proposal (click here to read the legislation) would require gun offenders to register with the city's safety department within five days of either being released from prison, or within five days of moving to Cleveland.
The offender would have to re-register every four years.
The gun registry legislation would replace a city assault weapons ban. The Ohio Supreme Court in 2010 affirmed state lawmakers' right to pass a uniform statewide gun law that blocked Cleveland and other cities from passing tougher laws such as assault weapons bans and handgun registration requirements.
http://www.cleveland.com/cityhall/index.ssf/2014/07/cleveland_mayor_frank_jackson_35.html
The proposal (click here to read the legislation) would require gun offenders to register with the city's safety department within five days of either being released from prison, or within five days of moving to Cleveland.
The offender would have to re-register every four years.
The gun registry legislation would replace a city assault weapons ban. The Ohio Supreme Court in 2010 affirmed state lawmakers' right to pass a uniform statewide gun law that blocked Cleveland and other cities from passing tougher laws such as assault weapons bans and handgun registration requirements.
http://www.cleveland.com/cityhall/index.ssf/2014/07/cleveland_mayor_frank_jackson_35.html
July 20, 2014
Americans are losing their faith in religion
Most people lost their faith in politicians and America's political institutions long ago. Now, they're abandoning organized religion.
The trend has existed for some time. According to statistics released by Gallup in 2012, fewer Americans than ever before have a great deal of confidence in organized religion. This is not all, though; public confidence in television news, banks and public schools has reached rock bottom as well.
In March, an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll showed that things haven't turned around over the last two years. According to NBC reporter Carrie Dann, "One in five Americans say religion does not play an important role in their lives, a new NBC/WSJ journal poll shows the highest percentage since the poll began asking participants about their focus on faith in 1997."
She continues, "Twenty-one percent of respondents said that religion is 'not that important' to their lives, compared to 16 percent who said the same in 1999. In 1997, 14 percent of Americans said religion did not play an important role in their lives."
http://www.delawareonline.com/story/opinion/contributors/2014/07/16/faithful-trend-religious-belief-becoming-disapearing-act/12732567/
The trend has existed for some time. According to statistics released by Gallup in 2012, fewer Americans than ever before have a great deal of confidence in organized religion. This is not all, though; public confidence in television news, banks and public schools has reached rock bottom as well.
In March, an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll showed that things haven't turned around over the last two years. According to NBC reporter Carrie Dann, "One in five Americans say religion does not play an important role in their lives, a new NBC/WSJ journal poll shows the highest percentage since the poll began asking participants about their focus on faith in 1997."
She continues, "Twenty-one percent of respondents said that religion is 'not that important' to their lives, compared to 16 percent who said the same in 1999. In 1997, 14 percent of Americans said religion did not play an important role in their lives."
http://www.delawareonline.com/story/opinion/contributors/2014/07/16/faithful-trend-religious-belief-becoming-disapearing-act/12732567/
July 19, 2014
The Zealot: Larry Pratt Is the Gun Lobby's Secret Weapon
One morning during the winter weeks after the Sandy Hook massacre in 2012, the gun lobbyist Larry Pratt made the short drive from his offices in Springfield, Virginia, to the Arlington headquarters of the Leadership Institute, a training center for young conservatives. Pratt and the Institute's founder, Morton Blackwell, share a history in conservative activism going back four decades, and Pratt had spoken there many times, providing legislative updates on the politics of guns. Today, there seemed to be a jauntiness to the oddly boyish-faced 71-year old, who'd found himself at the center of a national media story just beginning to fade. He opened with a joke.
"Piers Morgan sends his regrets he won't be able to attend," Pratt deadpanned.
The audience chuckled at the reference. On December 18th, 2012, four days after Adam Lanza's killing spree, the CNN host had invited Pratt to debate gun control, as most major networks have over the years. When Pratt stated that gun-free school zones and, by extension, gun control advocates like Piers Morgan were to blame for the tragedy in Newtown, Morgan stuttered and seethed. "You're an unbelievably stupid man, aren't you?" said the host.
Pratt's critics have called him many things over the years: extreme, radical, pernicious, creepy, dogged, effective. But no one who's studied his multi-faceted career could describe him as stupid. On CNN, Pratt was smart enough not to tell Piers Morgan what he really thinks about the Second Amendment. Because what he really thinks resonates deeply with the theocratic tenets of Christian Reconstructionism, which holds that American government should be ordered according to events and dictates found in the Old and New Testaments. Nor is Pratt so stupid as to use his regular access to mainstream media to promote the "active measures" he believes American gun owners will one day be forced to unleash on a secular federal government. As he explained in his 1999 essay, "What does the Bible Say About Gun Control?" Pratt writes, "If Christ is not our King, we shall have a dictator to rule over us, just as Samuel warned."
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-zealot-larry-pratt-is-the-gun-lobbys-secret-weapon-20140714#ixzz37uFyWpzM
"Piers Morgan sends his regrets he won't be able to attend," Pratt deadpanned.
The audience chuckled at the reference. On December 18th, 2012, four days after Adam Lanza's killing spree, the CNN host had invited Pratt to debate gun control, as most major networks have over the years. When Pratt stated that gun-free school zones and, by extension, gun control advocates like Piers Morgan were to blame for the tragedy in Newtown, Morgan stuttered and seethed. "You're an unbelievably stupid man, aren't you?" said the host.
Pratt's critics have called him many things over the years: extreme, radical, pernicious, creepy, dogged, effective. But no one who's studied his multi-faceted career could describe him as stupid. On CNN, Pratt was smart enough not to tell Piers Morgan what he really thinks about the Second Amendment. Because what he really thinks resonates deeply with the theocratic tenets of Christian Reconstructionism, which holds that American government should be ordered according to events and dictates found in the Old and New Testaments. Nor is Pratt so stupid as to use his regular access to mainstream media to promote the "active measures" he believes American gun owners will one day be forced to unleash on a secular federal government. As he explained in his 1999 essay, "What does the Bible Say About Gun Control?" Pratt writes, "If Christ is not our King, we shall have a dictator to rule over us, just as Samuel warned."
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-zealot-larry-pratt-is-the-gun-lobbys-secret-weapon-20140714#ixzz37uFyWpzM
Profile Information
Member since: Sun Jan 14, 2007, 02:51 PMNumber of posts: 7,981