Apologies if someone already posted this, but I think a dose of perspective would be useful here:
Gun data: Being shot is a common way to die in the US
A couple of cherry-picked data points:
— Chances of dying by assault by gun = 1 in 315
— Chances of dying in a mass shooting = 1 in 11,125
— Chances of dying in a foreign-born terrorist attack = 1 in 45,785
What’s interesting to me is the cost/benefit analysis that drives us to advocate for preventative policies that none of us actually
want to have to enact.
Every time I go through the TSA bullshit at the airport, I think about how absolutely crazy it all is. The chances of dying by terrorist attack are so infinitesimally small, yet we willingly put up with ridiculous security lines and air travel restrictions.
Similarly, the chance of dying by mass shooting is incredibly small, and the chances of dying in a mass school shooting is orders of magnitude smaller than that. Yet, there seems to be a growing sentiment that we should be fortifying our schools or even home-school our kids in order to keep them out of a dangerous and scary environment. Why? It’s driven by irrational fear.
We also see mass (and quickly dissipating) movements for gun control every time there’s a mass shooting, but we have so much more to legitimately fear from regular, everyday (non-AR15) gun violence. The statistical gap between shootings by semi-automatic rifle and shootings by handgun (typically cheap, crappy revolvers) is as wide as the Grand Canyon. But people seem to be much more inclined to rally around gun control measures targeting sinister looking, high tech weapons. Again, irrational fear, not rational analysis.
Personally, I think it’s incredibly stupid that civilians can easily own semi-automatic rifles, but I don’t really lose much sleep over it. I’m much more concerned with the vast numbers of handguns that are floating around out there.