Ryan McMaken over at Mises.org brought to light a Pew Research Center report that found that the murder rate in the U.S. has been cut in half over the past 20 years or so from 7 per 100,000 to 3.6 per 100,000, in spite of widespread proliferation of guns.
The gun death rate has already dropped
over the same time period, though not as drastically. In 1993, it was about
15.2 per 100,000. Twenty years later in 2013, it was down to10.6.
Despite these numbers, a majority of
poll respondents thought that the crime rate had gone up: Despite the attention
to gun violence in recent months, most Americans are unaware that gun crime is
markedly lower than it was two decades ago.
A new Pew
Research Center survey (March 14-17) found that 56% of Americans believe the
number of crimes involving a gun is higher than it was 20 years ago; only 12%
say it is lower and 26% say it stayed the same. (An additional 6% did not know
or did not answer.)
Men (46%)
are less likely than women (65%) to say long-term gun crime is up. Young
adults, ages 18 to 29, are markedly less likely than other adults to say
long-term crime is up—44% do, compared with more than half of other adults.
Minority adults are more likely than non-Hispanic whites to say that long-term
gun crime is up, 62% compared with 53%.
These people must watch too much TV.
You can blame shows that either glorify and romanticize violence, or make it
look like it’s more prevalent than it really is, such as in crime dramas.
But even more than that, the news
media love to fixate on violent crimes, particularly mass murders, simply
because they’re shocking. They know that their viewers will be hooked to the
tube if they sensationalize a mass murder. They do it for the ratings, which
translate into more ad revenue.
People are so hoodwinked by the
media that they don’t realize that the truth is that violent crime is down
drastically, and gun
ownership is up drastically. People’s
perceptions are at stark odds with reality.
http://lastresistance.com/14459/report-murder-rate-cut-in-half-over-past-2-decades-despite-increase-in-guns/
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