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According to the 2007 Small Arms Survey, there are currently 270 million guns owned by civilians in the United States–that’s nearly half of all guns owned worldwide!

Research shows that gun violence is directly linked to the easy availability of firearms. The key difference between the United States and other industrialized nations, however, is our rate of lethal violence from guns — not our overall rate of violence.

Shockingly, in the United States:

* There are approximately 90 guns for every 100 people.

* Each year, an estimated 4 million guns are sold by licensed dealers.

* Between 34-40% of households have a gun.

You would think Americans were stock piling weapons for a revolution or war, but the truth is it’s simply become part of our culture — a culture of violence that we have become increasingly numb and accustomed to.

Additionally, the gun lobby is very effective at convincing Americans that they need guns in their home, in their cars and in the workplace for self-defense. To be effective though, a homeowner, for example, would need to be sitting by the door holding a loaded gun and ready to fire it 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It would be an isolating and anxious way to live.

Facts are not on the gun lobby’s side either. Rather than making us a safer society, the proliferation of guns in the U.S. is in fact making us less safe as a nation. With more than 30,000 gun deaths each year, over 12,000 of which are homicides, we are the most violent industrialized nation on earth.

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With over 270 million guns in civilian hands in our country and more than 30,000 gun-related deaths each year, Americans should be concerned about the proliferation of guns in the United States.

Due to the easy availability of firearms, the United States is the most violent industrialized nation on earth. In fact, the United States own more than half of all the privately held firearms worldwide.

Take into consideration that in 2004, firearms were used to murder 56 people in Australia, 184 people in Canada, 73 people in England and Wales vs. 11,344 in the United States — it’s crystal clear that we, as Americans, tolerate an intolerable level of gun proliferation and violence in our country.

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FSA Updates

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Gun Violence Prevention Advocacy Update

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Special News Update: One Year After Virginia Tech Massacre

News

Gun Violence Prevention Advocacy Update

  • Wisconsin Radio Network: Wisconsin Anti-Violence Effort Remembers Virginia Tech:
  • As the nation marks the one year anniversary of the Virginia Tech Massacre, one group is calling on Wisconsin lawmakers to help prevent future gun violence….

    Jeri Bonavia with the Wisconsin Anti-Violence Effort (WAVE) says it highlights a tragedy occurring nationwide each day. She says over 30 people are murdered everyday with guns in the US, and at least another 50 die as the result of gun violence or suicide.

    WAVE is joining several groups nationwide that are holding “lie-ins” to mark the anniversary of VA Tech. They’ll gather in Milwaukee and at the state Capitol building in Madison today, where demonstrators will lie down one by one in silence to honor the victims of gun violence everywhere.

  • Brady Campaign and Virginia Tech Victims Invite You To Take Action: Close the Gun Show Loophole.





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Commentary

(We are pleased to post the following press release from our partners in the States United to Prevent Gun Violence).

For Immediate Release

February 11, 2008

Contacts: Thom Mannard (312) 341-0939
Bryan Miller (856) 371-3038

Shockingly - Legislators Respond to Week of Gun Horrors by Seeking to Dismantle Existing Laws to Limit Gun Availability, Contrary to Public Opinion

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Kathleen Monahan is the Project Director of The Illinois Violent Death Reporting System & Serves as Board Chair of Freedom States Alliance.

I have the privilege of working with advocates, members, and the rest of the Board to promote the message that we can reduce gun violence in our lives. And because I also work in violence prevention, my job has given me a unique view of firearm injuries and death. I work on the Illinois Violent Death Reporting System.

The Illinois Violent Death Reporting System (IVRDS) proceeds from the understanding that the more you know about a violent death, the better you will be able to prevent that kind of death in the future. For Illinois counties participating in the project – Cook, Kane and Peoria — IVDRS provides detailed information about violent deaths in their jurisdictions. The ultimate goal is for IVDRS to become a statewide data repository for violent deaths.

The idea behind this effort is not only taking hold in Illinois, but around the country.

The National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS) launched by the CDC in 2002, funds 17 states to collect information on homicides, suicides, and other violent death categories. There is a precedent for understanding how this system works – look at the federal Fatality Analysis Reporting System, which contains data on all fatal vehicle crashes in the country. By studying this data, we have already prevented thousands of car crashes. By studying data on violent deaths, we are learning how to prevent violent deaths. (For more information, see www.preventviolence.net)

When someone dies a violent death, there’s an assumption that all of the information surrounding the incident is being looked at – probably because there is news about it reported on an ongoing basis. In most cases, though, there isn’t enough research available. That’s what this system will create: a researchable database.

It can be a challenge to get the information we want. In fact, it can take months or even years. What it takes is for people, and counties, to come together and agree that this needs to happen. What we hope to look at with this data is disparities – who is being affected more by this violence, and how can we work with these communities to prevent it? And, of course, this data can inform people about the circumstances leading up to homicides and suicides that are linked to firearms. It’s nice to know that there is now a focus on violence at the national level.

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