The term “gun-violence” is used to blame guns for human behavior in an attempt to push society towards supporting the elimination or destruction of our 2nd Amendment. The narrative and rhetoric are just tools used to achieve those ends.
There is no such thing as “gun violence.” What we are talking about is human violence, but people who believe more gun legislation is good for our society, will ignore the fact that “the person” is responsible for the action, not the gun. Those folks who refuse to succumb to the dishonest rhetoric and false narratives surrounding the gun conversation are starting to speak out.
Violence can only be committed by a person or animal. Violence is a behavior. Putting the word “gun” before the word “violence” is misleading because it creates a premise that doesn’t exist. It creates imagery in the mind that could never occur in reality. Those who profit from this type of rhetoric, need it because if they had to tell the truth and discuss human behavioral issues, they would not have the likes of CNN promoting their sham. Isn’t it interesting that the FBI will list the number of murders and the weapons used by number on their website, giving an accurate breakdown for informative purposes. Yet the anti-gun folks will only focus on gun related deaths and label them, “gun violence.”
Mark Bryant, Founder of the “Gun Violence Archives,” uses this and other similar terms in what would seem an attempt to perpetuate an irrational fear of guns. Mark also claims to have created the term “mass shooting” to qualify four people being hit with a bullet. This is similar to Barack Obama’s executive action to change “mass killing” from four to three people in an attempt to qualify more gun related deaths in his push for overreaching national gun laws. Of course, these terms are used in a way that encourage people to view guns as the problem and redefining the word “mass” (indicating a large quantity) as only 3 is clearly a way to justify the use of rhetoric for the purpose of fear and hype.
Is it a coincidence that those who create this type of anti-gun rhetoric fail to share the fact that guns are used defensively between 1.67 million and 2.5 million times per year in America. Have they not read the studies? Maybe they just don’t want you to read them. Maybe the anti-gun folks should start using the term “gun benevolence,” because for every 1 time a person uses a gun to do harm, there are 174 times when a gun is used to stop an act of violence and potentially save lives.
Those who profit from violence will also claim they want to save lives but in order to do that, they need you to support illegal violations of the 2nd Amendment. Portraying themselves as wanting to prevent suicide is often a good tool to emotionally coerce large numbers of people. Many of these folks will claim that most suicides wouldn’t exist had a gun not been present. Bloomberg funded “The Trace” claimed that “Research indicates that red flag laws and waiting periods are more effective at reducing firearm suicide.”
Do we ever stop to question this and other similar claims? Do we ever stop to ask how they are tracking suicides that never actually happened? How is it possible to measure something that never occurred? Is it likely that a person intent on killing themself would simply decide not to do it because they couldn’t find a gun? How do they know that even if a person attempted suicide and failed by other means that they would have gone through with it if they had a gun? The truth is they don’t, yet they hypothesize so you will believe that suicides would be reduced in the absence of guns even though we have data showing that not to be true. Australia is a perfect example of the suicide rate not being affected after a gun ban.
The suicide angle helps them portray themselves as caring, while guilting those who don’t know any better into supporting gun restrictions. The “gun violence” narrative helps those lacking critical thought believe that guns are lurking around every corner just waiting to attack.
https://www.ammoland.com/2023/02/gun-violence-is-fake-news-2/?ct=t(RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN)#axzz7uFI2TXLC
No comments:
Post a Comment