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Showing Original Post only (View all)Wow! Gun deaths set to out strip automobile fatalities [View all]
Gun deaths set to outstrip car fatalities for first time in 2015
Deaths from firearms are set to outstrip car fatalities for the first time, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and reported by Bloomberg News.
The CDC estimates that auto-related deaths--long on the decline as more motorists wear seat-belts and face harsher penalties for drunk driving--will fall to 32,000 in 2015. Deaths from firearms, which include suicides and accidents, are estimated to rise to 33,000 over the same period.
Every day, 85 Americans are shot dead, about 53 of them in suicides. This figure is still lower than 1993's peak in gun deaths (37,666), but has risen significantly since firearm deaths reached a low in 2000 (28,393). The data goes back to 1979.
Meanwhile, USA Today, which looked at FBI figures, reports that 774 people were killed between 2006 and 2010 by a mass killer, defined as a person who kills four or more people in one incident. The figures show that mass killers strike on average once every two weeks. A third of the 156 mass killings did not involve firearms, but rather fire, knife or other weapon. Almost all of the mass killers in those years were men, and their average age was 32. The dozens of deaths caused by mass killers represented about 1 percent of all homicides between 2006 and 2010.
Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/gun-deaths-set-outstrip-car-fatalities-first-time-152632492.html
Deaths from firearms are set to outstrip car fatalities for the first time, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and reported by Bloomberg News.
The CDC estimates that auto-related deaths--long on the decline as more motorists wear seat-belts and face harsher penalties for drunk driving--will fall to 32,000 in 2015. Deaths from firearms, which include suicides and accidents, are estimated to rise to 33,000 over the same period.
Every day, 85 Americans are shot dead, about 53 of them in suicides. This figure is still lower than 1993's peak in gun deaths (37,666), but has risen significantly since firearm deaths reached a low in 2000 (28,393). The data goes back to 1979.
Meanwhile, USA Today, which looked at FBI figures, reports that 774 people were killed between 2006 and 2010 by a mass killer, defined as a person who kills four or more people in one incident. The figures show that mass killers strike on average once every two weeks. A third of the 156 mass killings did not involve firearms, but rather fire, knife or other weapon. Almost all of the mass killers in those years were men, and their average age was 32. The dozens of deaths caused by mass killers represented about 1 percent of all homicides between 2006 and 2010.
Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/gun-deaths-set-outstrip-car-fatalities-first-time-152632492.html
53 replies
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In any event, people don't buy cars for the express purpose of killing other people with them.
djean111
Dec 2012
#1
What you described is an often-overlooked consequence of mass gun ownership
Democracyinkind
Dec 2012
#52
Plus, a typical person will spend more time operating a vehicle than operating a firearm.
bulloney
Dec 2012
#21
How precious...and a car on a non-op or an agricultural vehicle is OK on private property, too.
libdem4life
Dec 2012
#35
And domestic terrorists don't usually fire rounds on kids on their own private property. That, too
libdem4life
Dec 2012
#47
+!000. Especially poverty caused by the financial sector and propped up by their lackeys
jtuck004
Dec 2012
#28
Cars are heavily regulated regarding safety, efficiency, emissions,
aint_no_life_nowhere
Dec 2012
#13
Please proceed, then, Citizen. You'll get no quarrel from most of us here. LOL
libdem4life
Dec 2012
#36
Feel free to drive your homemade rocket fuel powered car from your driveway into your garage
aint_no_life_nowhere
Dec 2012
#51
That's the law if you get a DUI ... can't pass a background check for a weapon ...
libdem4life
Dec 2012
#49
I hadn't realized that suicides were such a big component of the gun death numbers.
DeschutesRiver
Dec 2012
#26
Tax the bejesus out of guns, and we'd be able to afford the regulation and the mayhem and death
libdem4life
Dec 2012
#37
Cars have been ever-engineered to be safer, while guns have been ever-engineered to be more deadly.
Atypical Liberal
Dec 2012
#44
True. More reason why guns should be treated as cars...speaking of the ability to regulate and
libdem4life
Dec 2012
#50