Courtesy of Mother Jones:
Nobody, save perhaps for the hardcore gun lobby, doubts that gun violence is a serious problem. In an editorial in the April 7 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine, a team of doctors wrote: "It does not matter whether we believe that guns kill people or that people kill people with guns—the result is the same: a public health crisis."
And solving a crisis, as any expert will tell you, begins with data. That's why the US government over the years has assessed the broad economic toll of a variety of major problems. Take motor vehicle crashes: Using statistical models to estimate a range of costs both tangible and more abstract—from property damage and traffic congestion to physical pain and lost quality of life—the Department of Transportation (DOT) published a 300-page study estimating the "total value of societal harm" from this problem in 2010 at $871 billion. Similar research has been produced by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on the impact of air pollution, by the Department of Health and Human Services on the costs of domestic violence, and so on. But the government has mostly been mute on the economic toll of gun violence. HHS has assessed firearm-related hospitalizations, but its data is incomplete because some states don't require hospitals to track gunshot injuries among the larger pool of patients treated for open wounds. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has also periodically made estimates using hospital data, but based on narrow sample sizes and covering only the medical and lost-work costs of gun victims.
Why the lack of solid data? A prime reason is that the National Rifle Association and other influential gun rights advocates have long pressured political leaders to shut down research related to firearms.
In response to the fact that data was hard to come by Mother Jones found their own researcher, Ted Miller at the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation. And this is what he found:
Miller's approach looks at two categories of costs. The first is direct: Every time a bullet hits somebody, expenses can include emergency services, police investigations, and long-term medical and mental-health care, as well as court and prison costs. About 87 percent of these costs fall on taxpayers. The second category consists of indirect costs: Factors here include lost income, losses to employers, and impact on quality of life, which Miller bases on amounts that juries award for pain and suffering to victims of wrongful injury and death.
In collaboration with Miller, Mother Jones crunched data from 2012 and found that the annual cost of gun violence in America exceeds $229 billion. Direct costs account for $8.6 billion—including long-term prison costs for people who commit assault and homicide using guns, which at $5.2 billion a year is the largest direct expense. Even before accounting for the more intangible costs of the violence, in other words, the average cost to taxpayers for a single gun homicide in America is nearly $400,000. And we pay for 32 of them every single day.
Of course 2nd Amendment advocates will argue with the numbers, even though traditionally conservatives are not very good at math, however even if this data is off a little the numbers are staggering.
So $229 billion is the annual cost for the freedom that the 2nd Amendment provides for us?
That seems a price that is simply too high to pay. And that does not even include the simple cost of human life.
I finally realized that NONE of that matters to gun humpers. NO amount of collateral damage, including butchered children - yes, including even their OWN butchered children - is heinous enough to stop masturbating with their sacred guns. Nothiing is more divine to them than that deadly piece of phallic shaped metal.
ReplyDeleteTheir obsession is obscene.
DeleteBut worse than that, it is destroying the ability of the rest of us to have any chance at life, liberty and happiness.
The gun-sucking bastards will happily raise taxes to cover THOSE costs.
ReplyDeleteI read this article in Mother Jones. The statistics are chilling, and it sure doesn't seem like anything will change anytime soon.
ReplyDeleteI read it too and have been in a funk since. When will this insanity end?
ReplyDeleteYahoo has an article today about NRA illegally using donations for politics.
ReplyDeletewww.yahoo.com/politics/the-nras-deceptive-shell-game-with-donations-a-116744915796.html