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Gun violence in USA has increased - BBC - Another Fault of American society

Muji.Iqbal

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How many US mass shootings have there been in 2023?​

    • Published
    • 9 May


Gun sale in Virginia
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Data shows gun ownership in the US has grown over the last several years
Gun violence is a fixture in American life - but the issue is a highly political one, pitting gun control advocates against people who are fiercely protective of their right to bear arms.
We've looked into some of the numbers behind firearms in the US.

Mass shootings on the rise​

There have been more than 200 mass shootings across the US so far this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive, which defines a mass shooting as an incident in which four or more people are injured or killed. Their figures include shootings that happen in homes and in public places.
There have been two in Texas in the last week - five killed at a home in Cleveland, north of Houston, and eight dead at a shopping mall in Allen, near Dallas.
In each of the last three years, there have been more than 600 mass shootings, almost two a day on average.
The deadliest such attack, in Las Vegas in 2017, killed more than 50 people and left 500 wounded. The vast majority of mass shootings, however, leave fewer than 10 people dead.
Graphic showing year by year mass shootings

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How do US gun deaths break down?​

48,830 people died from gun-related injuries in the US during 2021, according to the latest data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
That's nearly an 8% increase from 2020, which was a record-breaking year for firearm deaths.
While mass shootings and gun murders (homicides) generally garner much media attention, more than half of the total in 2021 were suicides.
Chart showing a breakdown of gun-related deaths in the US

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That year, more than 20,000 of the deaths were homicides, according to the CDC.
Data shows more than 50 people are killed each day by a firearm in the US.
That's a significantly larger proportion of homicides than is the case in Canada, Australia, England and Wales, and many other countries.
Graphic showing an international comparison of gun-related killings as a percentage of all homicides in each country. The US leads with nearly 80.5% of all homicides occurring with guns, compared with 40% in Canada, 11% in Australia and 4% in England & Wales..

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How many guns are there in the US?​

While calculating the number of guns in private hands around the world is difficult, the latest figures from the Small Arms Survey - a Swiss-based research project - estimated that there were 390 million guns in circulation in the US in 2018.
The US ratio of 120.5 firearms per 100 residents, up from 88 per 100 in 2011, far surpasses that of other countries around the world.
Chart showing civilian gun ownership around the world

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More recent data out of the US suggests that gun ownership grew significantly over the last few years. A study, published by the Annals of Internal Medicine in February, found that 7.5 million US adults became new gun owners between January 2019 and April 2021.
This, in turn, exposed 11 million people to firearms in their homes, including 5 million children. About half of new gun owners in that time period were women, while 40% were either black or Hispanic.

Who supports gun control?​

A majority of Americans are in favour of gun control.
57% of Americans surveyed said they wanted stricter gun laws - although this fell last year - according to polling by Gallup.
32% said the laws should remain the same, while 10% of people surveyed said they should be "made less strict".
Gun control opinion

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The issue is extremely divisive, falling largely along party lines.
"Democrats are nearly unanimous in their support for stricter gun laws," another Gallup study noted, with nearly 91% in favour of stricter gun laws.
Only 24% Republicans, on the other hand, agreed with the same statement, along with 45% of Independent voters.
Some states have taken steps to ban or strictly regulate ownership of assault weapons. Laws vary by state but California, for example, has banned ownership of assault weapons with limited exceptions.
Map showing states with assault weapon bans - California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York & Washington DC, and those with restrictions Minnesota, Virginia and Washington, March 2023

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Some controls are widely supported by people across the political divide - such as restrictions governing the sale of guns to people who are mentally ill or on "watch" lists.

Who opposes gun control?​

Despite years of financial woes and internal strife, the National Rifle Association (NRA) remains the most powerful gun lobby in the United States, with a substantial budget to influence members of Congress on gun policy.
Over the last several election cycles, it, and other organisations, have consistently spent more on pro-gun rights messaging than their rivals in the gun control lobby.
A line chart showing the amount spent per year by gun rights groups and gun control groups on federal lobbying in the US from 2008 to 2022. Gun rights groups have consistently spent more than double what gun control groups have. Gun rights spending peaked in 2013 at just under $20m - gun control groups spent just under $3m in the same year. In 2022, gun rights groups spent $13m, while their opponents spent $2.3m.

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A number of states have also gone as far as to largely eliminate restrictions on who can carry a gun. In June 2021, for example, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed into law a "permitless carry bill" that allows the state's residents to carry handguns without a licence or training.
Similarly, in April last year Georgia became the 25th in the nation to eliminate the need for a permit to conceal or openly carry a firearm. The law means any citizen of that state has the right to carry a firearm without a licence or a permit.
The law was backed by the NRA, and leaders within the organisation called the move "a monumental moment for the Second Amendment".



Calling USA a shitty country with its school shootings, mass shootings, and gun violence, gun crimes, and homicides.
 
as usual please move to the dedicated thread for those always eager to create a new one

Gun Control & Gun Violence in U.S | Mega Thread​

We have a right to criticize the American society, when American rednecks criticize the values of other societies. This is also free speech as well.

They have gun laws which are not applicable in 2020's.

They have gun laws from 1780's. They are outdated now.
 
We have a right to criticize the American society, when American rednecks criticize the values of other societies. This is also free speech as well.

They have gun laws which are not applicable in 2020's.

They have gun laws from 1780's. They are outdated now.

That's fine. The PDF admins even created a dedicated thread for you to do it in...try putting it to good use. It's at 34 pages...just holler away in there to your heart's content..or do have some other agenda and posting in that thread just won't work for you.
 
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That's fine. The PDF admins even created a dedicated thread for you to do it in...try putting it to good use. It's at 34 pages...just holler away in there to your heart's content..or do have some other agenda and posting in that thread just won't work for you.
Or when USA goes on imperial wars, their soldiers come back as quadruple or triple amputees. Good those bastards got their punishment like in Afghanistan and Iraq wars.

Or an American commented on their own soldiers: "All the lost limbs, and money lost."
 
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Or when USA goes on imperial wars, their soldiers come back as quadruple or triple amputees. Good those bastards got their punishment like in Afghanistan and Iraq wars.

Or an American commented on their own soldiers: "All the lost limbs, and money lost."

There have been plenty of threads created on PDF by people like you who feel the perpetual need to vent and vent and vent and vent.

You aren't the first and you'll hardly be the last.

I have to give credit to the Iranians...they hardly ever feel the need to vent even though they were on the direct receiving end of plenty of crap.

Maybe they all just have better dispositions than you. They simply have better things to do and contribute lots of great stuff in their forums.

Or when USA goes on imperial wars, their soldiers come back as quadruple or triple amputees. Good those bastards got their punishment like in Afghanistan and Iraq wars.

Or an American commented on their own soldiers: "All the lost limbs, and money lost."

People see it in different ways. Some see amputees while others see it as yet another round of a real-life videogame where you can watch targets in an aircraft's crosshairs getting blown-up daily with people saying at least these weapons got used instead of rotting on a shelf. Whatever floats a person's boat.
 
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There have been plenty of threads created on PDF by people like you who feel the perpetual need to vent and vent and vent and vent.

You aren't the first and you'll hardly be the last.

I have to give credit to the Iranians...they hardly ever feel the need to vent even though they were on the direct receiving end of plenty of crap.

Maybe they just have better dispositions.
I also forgot to mention alcoholism problem in USA and drunk driving in USA.
 
I also forgot to mention alcoholism problem in USA and drunk driving in USA.

The US doesn't have a monopoly on that. Even China's is likely worse...but you don't see me going over into the China forum's and posting that.

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Here I'll save you the trouble and have ChatGPT list the US issues.
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You feel all better now that I covered things pretty well???
 
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I never heard of drunk driving in China.

WTF? What kind of sheltered life have you been living?
They are allowed to openly drink in the public streets..even in Canada and many states in the US you can't do that.


 
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WTF? What kind of sheltered life have you been living?
They are allowed to openly drink in the public streets..even in Canada and many states in the US you can't do that.


but not as much as USA.

The US doesn't have a monopoly on that. Even China's is likely worse...but you don't see me going over into the China forum's and posting that.

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Here I'll save you the trouble and have ChatGPT list the US issues.
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You feel all better now that I covered things pretty well???
Look mate, at least there is no school shootings in Pakistan like every week, okay or in China.
 
We have a right to criticize the American society, when American rednecks criticize the values of other societies. This is also free speech as well.

They have gun laws which are not applicable in 2020's.

They have gun laws from 1780's. They are outdated now.
The right to own firearms is a natural right, even Islam promotes mastery at weapons for the sake of self defence, hunting and sport. These rights arent outdated, theyve always existed and can never be outdated.
 
The right to own firearms is a natural right, even Islam promotes mastery at weapons for the sake of self defence, hunting and sport. These rights arent outdated, theyve always existed and can never be outdated.

Never owned a gun and most likely never will, but I agree.
 

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