Firearms are now the #1 cause of child deaths, passing auto accidents
THOM HARTMANN for ThomHartmann.com
Nina Shapiro reports at Forbes this week in an article titled "The Leading Cause Of Death In Children And Youths Is Now Guns":
"Access to firearms by children, by unlicensed owners, and
absence of safety measures when it comes to both intentional and unintentional
gun-related injuries and deaths, are among the reasons that the incidence of
this horrific, truly avoidable tragedy is on the rise."
The latest con from the GOP is that they're
all about "the children."
- They're
worried that trans people will show up in the "wrong" bathroom
and scare or threaten "the children."
- They're
hysterical that teaching American history will cause white children to
"feel bad."
- They're
locking up women and threatening them with life in prison because they had
a miscarriage that Republicans suspect might have been a self-induced
abortion.
- They're
happily jumping on the 2022 GOP version of the Tsar's antisemitic blood
libel, claiming their political opponents are "groomers"
targeting children.
- They're
enthusiastically embracing the Qanon slogan: "Save the
children!"
Until you mention children killed by guns.
Then, Republicans retreat into a bizarre cone
of silence or simply turn and run away from the conversation altogether. Or,
worse, they continue grooming their own young people to become school shooters,
as you can see below.
Twenty years ago, car accidents were the
leading killer of children and youth; today it's guns.
At the turn of the 21st century, there were
about 14 car-crash deaths among young people (aged 1-24) per 100,000 young
Americans, and only a bit over 7 gun deaths per 100,000. This year, almost 11
out of 100,000 children died from guns while only 8 per 100K died from car
crashes.
And most all of those child gun deaths, which don't happen in any other developed country in the world, are entirely preventable, if only Republicans would stop actively blocking progress.
As I noted in The Hidden
History of Guns and the 2nd Amendment:
A company named Safe Gun Technology, Inc. developed a fingerprint reader that's built right into the grip on handguns and rifles, preventing the weapon from being fired by anybody except those people "authorized" to shoot it by having their fingerprints in its system. Their fingerprint reader, simply a flat spot on the grip where a fingertip would normally lay, can even be retrofitted onto existing weapons.
Another company, Intelligun,
offers a similar fingerprint-reading product and is working with the US
Army's Armament Research, Development, and Engineering Center to
come up with a stock that, instead of recognizing fingerprints (which can be
obscured by dirt, etc.), measures exactly how and where the authorized user
grips his or her gun, another biometric measure that's highly personalized.
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)
recognition of a gun's owner, thus unlocking the weapon, has become a mature
industry; TriggerSmart Technologies sells a gun that unlocks when handled by a
user who's wearing a ring that the gun recognizes. The Germany company Armatix
sells a gun that unlocks by RFID with a watch worn by the owner.
But none of these technologies are making any
significant inroads in the American gun market. In fact, gun dealers who've
tried to sell these products have been threatened, including explicit death
threats.
Fortune magazine reported on a man named
"Doug" who started and ran a website, now closed, at smartgunz.com,
that promoted safer guns and offered the Armatix (RFID with a watch) gun for
sale here in America. He wouldn't give his last name to Fortune,
though, because he feared for his life.
As Fortune wrote:
"And that's why Doug has to be so hush-hush. If his last name were made
public, people would try to put him out of business and, perhaps, threaten to
kill him. That's what happened to the last two gun dealers who tried to sell
this gun."
It's as if the car industry had succeeded in their
1970s campaign against having to put seat belts and airbags into cars, and thus
instead of only around 35,000 people a year dying in car crashes, the number
was two or three times that. And car enthusiasts or agents of the auto industry
were threatening the lives of people offering to sell aftermarket seat belts or
running websites advocating for them.
Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) introduced
legislation requiring one of these sorts of safety devices to be built into any
new guns sold in America; Republican leadership in the Senate refused to even
consider it in committee, much less bring it to the floor for a vote.
The GOP gifted gun manufacturers with
near-absolute immunity against product liability lawsuits, so manufacturers
have zero incentive to sell safer weapons.
Their immunity from lawsuits is so extreme
that the only way the parents of the kids murdered at Sandy Hook could hold
Remington responsible was to instead go after their marketing: they had to
point out how the company was "selling masculinity" to get guns into
the hands of insecure boys.
The danger of an AR15 weapon-of-war in an
elementary school couldn't even be discussed.
Back in the early years of the 20th century
when cars had become so common they were regularly killing people in auto
accidents, states hit on a simple formula to encourage safe driving and
maintain clear lines of responsibility when things went wrong.
- Every
car was required to be registered every year with the state; if it was
found out in public without registration it could be confiscated.
- Every
driver was required to prove knowledge of how to safely drive, with both a
written and a real-life driving test.
- And
every driver was required to carry liability insurance, so if there was an
accident the victims were covered, regardless of who was at fault.
For about 100 years drivers have lived with
these three simple requirements, and they've worked. The liability insurance is
particularly effective: as a "free market solution," insurance
companies now compile information on drivers' safety records, including their
history of violence, and set their rates accordingly.
Think about it: if Adam Lanza had murdered
those kids at Sandy Hook by mowing them down in the street with his mom's SUV,
their families would have gotten $1 million each from Geico (for example). But
because he killed them with a gun, they got nothing; even survivors of gun
shootings and "accidents" get nothing for medical bills.
The only city in America that's taken a cue
from that century of insurance experience is San Jose, California which in 2021
put a liability insurance requirement into place for all gun owners in the
city.
If you've committed gun-related crimes or your
guns have killed people in the past, the "free market" for insurance
will make it very expensive to own a gun; if you're a gun owner who keeps your
weapons in a gun safe and uses trigger guards, your rates will be nominal.
One of the main reasons fewer children are
dying in car accidents now than a decade or two ago is that the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has been compiling statistics for
decades and has repeatedly identified safety flaws in particular vehicles or
the way they're used.
Throughout that time gun safety advocates have
wanted a federal agency to compile gun injury and death statistics, but a
bought-off member of Congress, Arkansas Republican Jay Dickey, attached the
notorious "Dickey Amendment" to a must-pass omnibus spending bill in
1996.
In response to a growing number of
research papers in
the 1980s and early 1990s calling gun deaths a national health crisis and
demanding federally funded science on the issue, his NRA-sponsored amendment
banned any federal dollars from being used to research gun
injuries or deaths in the US.
As The New England Journal of Medicine noted this
week:
"Although substantial federal funding has been devoted to
research on motor vehicle crashes, the firearm industry and gun-rights organizations,
led by the National Rifle Association (NRA), have been effective at keeping
federal dollars from financing firearm-related research."
Republicans in Congress continue to attach the
Dickey Amendment to every major omnibus spending bill and refuse to vote for
any that doesn't contain it. If anybody is "grooming" children toward
dangerous behavior, it's Republicans proudly grooming their own kids to be
future school shooters:
There's also the problem of the simple
proliferation of guns, and the fact that more and more of them are
semi-automatic weapons of war rather than simple revolvers or sport-shooting
guns and rifles.
In 2010, a bit fewer than 10 million guns
were sold in
the US. Just the one year of 2020 saw that number more than double to nearly 22
million guns sold in just a 12-month period; 2021 added another 19
million guns to America's homes.
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure
out that the more guns there are—particularly lacking any incentives to secure
them safely—the more gun deaths (accidental, homicide, suicide) there will be.
There are now more guns in America than there
are people, a bizarre situation that no other developed country in the world
experiences. Literally none.
The average of
all countries in the world is 9.86 guns per 100 civilians. The United States
is highest in
the world at 120.5 guns per 100 people. Yemen, which is in the middle of a war
with Saudi Arabia and dealing with an internal insurgency, comes in second at
52.8. No other nation is even close; even Afghanistan and Iraq average around 20 deadly
weapons in the hands of every hundred people.
While President Biden has signed an
executive order banning the scourge of untraceable "ghost guns" and
put gun safety in his last State of the Union speech, there is so much more to
do.
Tuesday of this week a group of young
activists including mass shooting survivor and March For Our Lives leader
David Hogg covered the
front of Senator Chuck Schumer's office with body bags because of his
unwillingness to bring gun control legislation to the floor of the Senate
during this election year.
Meanwhile, the NRA, still flush with an
infusion of cash from
Russia, has succeeded in
lobbying 25 states to allow anybody to carry a concealed gun with no background
checks, no training, and no permit, regardless of their criminal or violent
history.
America is neither poor nor stupid. We figured
out how cars were killing people and put an end to most avoidable automobile
deaths using a combination of commonsense laws (like mandatory licensure and
insurance) and safety measures (seatbelts, carseats, padded dashes, anti-lock
brakes, etc.).
The problem is that the GOP, their newfound
concern for "the children" notwithstanding, does everything they can
to block any reasonable solutions to the problem of gun violence and deaths in
America, particularly among our kids.
We have both the technology and the resources
to deal with childhood injuries and deaths from the only product sold in
America that is specifically designed to kill human beings.
We just have to shame Republicans enough to
stop taking money from and embracing this death-dealing industry so America can
put these reasonable steps—that have worked so well in other developed
nations—into place here.
Thom Hartmann is
a talk-show host and
the author of "The Hidden
History of Monopolies: How Big Business Destroyed the American Dream"
(2020); "The Hidden History of the Supreme Court and the Betrayal of America"
(2019); and more than 25 other books in print.