So, we can see where the CDC took a stab at this but their null conclusion appears at odds with numerous studies that employed principles of economic data analysis.
I think you are too quick to buy into the Kool-Aid that you are being given by clearly biased sources.
The perspective of the "Gun Owners Association" (deemed "the only
no-compromise gun lobby in Washington" per Paul Rand) is absurd.
The article states:
CDC admits there is no evidence that gun control reduces crime. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has long been criticized for propagating questionable studies which gun control organizations have used in defense of their cause. But after analyzing 51 studies in 2003, the CDC concluded that the "evidence was insufficient to determine the effectiveness of any of these [firearms] laws."(9)
Admits? How about "CDC
found there is no evidence that gun control reduces crime."? An admission implies guilt or at least being wrong, but their mission is simply to find out. The gun lobbies want to use the fear that big government is at work fabricating or manipulating data to abuse you. Yet, their conclusion was "there is no evidence that gun control works". If the CDC actually operated as this site believes... with heavy bias and low ethics, and they had an agenda, why don't you believe they could be more effective? Explain what about their research you believe to be biased/bogus and why.
They did make the conclusion that "having a gun in the home increases the likelihood that a resident of that home will be injured. That seems a no-brainer and about equivalent to saying houses with electricity are more likely to have death by electrocution. Perhaps the NRA and Gun Owners feel threatened by that statement, but I would be inclined to reach two conclusions from that statements:
1) If you don't have a reason to own a gun, but just are thinking about getting one for "fun", You might reconsider (especially if you have family).
2) Gun safety needs to be emphasized according to an examination of the ways in which those deaths occurred. I believe there are many good designs for gun safety currently available, but I also believe there are plenty of gun owners who are not educated on this topic.
As a side story - When I was in 5th grade, I found a locked box in the back of my dad's closet. I started looking for keys stashed nearby. I found it in his nightstand and discovered my dad had a .38 in that box. For me that was the end of the story. Dad never knew I had found his gun.
However, in a parallel dimension
, I could have shared the knowledge of that gun with peers or showed it off. The potential was there for an accident despite my dad believing all was safe. Today, the box would be more likely to have a combination, but I'm sure he wanted the key close to the gun so he could retrieve it if he heard strange noises in the house.[/QUOTE]