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Related: About this forumGun violence is a subject for medical research
Republicans have consistently established themselves as the party rejecting scientific facts and research and this time were not only talking about denying climate change. For over 19 years, Republicans have stubbornly refused to budge on their gag order preventing the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) from conducting research on gun violence.
Just this week, Leader Pelosi (D-Calif.), my Democratic colleagues, and I pushed for a series of motions on the floor of the House that called for a vote on my Gun Violence Research Act, a bill that would lift the ban on the CDC with respect to studying gun violence. Although my Democratic colleagues in the House voted overwhelmingly to bring my Gun Violence Research Act to the floor for an immediate vote each time, the Republican majority continues to sweep the issue of gun violence research under the rug and refuses to even debate the issue. Instead, Republicans have consistently signaled to the American people that they have placed the priorities of special interest groups, like the NRA, above the safety and well-being of the people they represent.
The origins of the issue can be traced back to when the CDC first began conducting gun violence research as a public health issue in the 1980s. Largely considered the tipping point for the CDCs research was a 1993 CDC funded study published in the New England Journal of Medicine titled Gun ownership as a Risk Factor for Homicide in the Home. This study ultimately concluded that keeping a firearm in the home was associated with a significantly greater risk of homicide and suicide. Such findings ran contrary to the talking points of the NRA, whose PR campaign staunchly advocated that privately owned firearms in households provided safety and protection. Naturally, regardless of the truth of the study, such findings left the NRA unsettled and greatly apprehensive.
So the NRA did what they do best. They came out guns blazing calling for the outright elimination of the entire center that funded the study, the CDCs National Center for Injury Prevention. This is the very center that conducts life-saving research into everything from seatbelts to child abuse. After not gaining much traction, the NRA eventually reneged on their lobbying efforts to dismantle the center and instead opted for a new route: the Congressional power of the purse.
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/269736-gun-violence-is-a-subject-for-medical-research
Just this week, Leader Pelosi (D-Calif.), my Democratic colleagues, and I pushed for a series of motions on the floor of the House that called for a vote on my Gun Violence Research Act, a bill that would lift the ban on the CDC with respect to studying gun violence. Although my Democratic colleagues in the House voted overwhelmingly to bring my Gun Violence Research Act to the floor for an immediate vote each time, the Republican majority continues to sweep the issue of gun violence research under the rug and refuses to even debate the issue. Instead, Republicans have consistently signaled to the American people that they have placed the priorities of special interest groups, like the NRA, above the safety and well-being of the people they represent.
The origins of the issue can be traced back to when the CDC first began conducting gun violence research as a public health issue in the 1980s. Largely considered the tipping point for the CDCs research was a 1993 CDC funded study published in the New England Journal of Medicine titled Gun ownership as a Risk Factor for Homicide in the Home. This study ultimately concluded that keeping a firearm in the home was associated with a significantly greater risk of homicide and suicide. Such findings ran contrary to the talking points of the NRA, whose PR campaign staunchly advocated that privately owned firearms in households provided safety and protection. Naturally, regardless of the truth of the study, such findings left the NRA unsettled and greatly apprehensive.
So the NRA did what they do best. They came out guns blazing calling for the outright elimination of the entire center that funded the study, the CDCs National Center for Injury Prevention. This is the very center that conducts life-saving research into everything from seatbelts to child abuse. After not gaining much traction, the NRA eventually reneged on their lobbying efforts to dismantle the center and instead opted for a new route: the Congressional power of the purse.
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/269736-gun-violence-is-a-subject-for-medical-research
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Gun violence is a subject for medical research (Original Post)
SecularMotion
Feb 2016
OP
What about the CDC study that shows over 70,000 defensive gun uses annually?
Nuclear Unicorn
Feb 2016
#1
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)1. What about the CDC study that shows over 70,000 defensive gun uses annually?
Where did that report come from if the CDC isn't allowed to study guns?
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,577 posts)2. The control minded view "safety" as prohibition.
The same way certain groups view abstinence as "safe sex", the prohibitionists look at "no gun" as a "safe gun".
pablo_marmol
(2,375 posts)3. Nope. Never gonna happen.
The medical community has a long and consistent history of advocacy and DISHONESTY when it comes to gun violence research. They are distrusted with very good cause.
Dishonest articles such as the one posted here keep money flowing to the NRA, and lose elections for Democrats. So by all means, SecMo --- keep up the "good" work.
ileus
(15,396 posts)4. Easy subject...guns are devices that are predictable, nothing to report.
I can publish a gun violence research paper in less than a page.
No people violence....that's a whole different story.