Is the great American Gun Nut a dying species?
As gun sales have surged, stories on rising female gun ownership have become a staple for local and national news outlets. The sheer frequency of such headlines gives them the ring of truth. But the best available data says their sweeping conclusions dont hold up.
The CBS News and Lake News reports were each sourced to a survey of gun dealers by the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), who told the group that they were seeing more female gun buyers. The catch is that the NSSF survey and others like it, researchers say, are based on anecdotal evidence that does not reflect reality.
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The GSS report has not prevented a credulous press from publishing stories based on the faulty studies. Gun advocates and trade groups continue to push such stories, perhaps because of another trend made clear in the GSS data: While the number of female gun owners has remained essentially the same over that last 30-plus years, the proportion of men who own guns has steadily declined over that same period. From 1980 to 1990, between 44 and 52 percent of male respondents said they owned a gun. In the past five years, that number has averaged close to 35 percent.
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. . . it doesnt appear that the gun industry has been able to introduce significantly more women to shooting. Instead, the statistics suggest that the gun business depends on a shrinking group of customers male and female who buy more and more weapons. Stories about first-time female gun owners, even if theyre based more on anecdotes than hard evidence, obscure that unsettling fact.
http://www.thetrace.org/2016/03/female-gun-ownership-debunked/
Cue the gunners; "The GSS is wrong because I wouldn't tell any one I have a gun!" They say the same thing about the CDC except the ONE TIME it cited Kleck's faulty study that says there are 2 million defensive gun uses a year in which case they were on the CDC like a duck on a junebug. Nobody with a gun will admit to owning one but they're only too proud to claim using it in self defense? Wishful thinking much?
If the GSS isn't enough how about words from the gun industry itself:
If we dont improve at cultivating new hunters and shooters, the sport we love and industry we work in will eventually die away. Thats a strong diagnosis, but a realistic one. Like many enthusiast sports in this busy, competitive world, people are leaving faster than new ones are coming in and this is a recipe for industry-wide trouble down the road.
Shooting for a New Audience: Reaching New Demographics is Critical to Our Industry, Shooting Sports Retailer, May/June 2007
Were talking about a tiny gun intended for the very youngest shooters the ultimate first gun. Were targeting the six- to 12-year-old range.... With the number of hunters declining, its crucial to get kids introduced to the sport as early as possible. The HotShot [youth rifle] means that even the youngest shooters now have a gun sized just for them.
Test Fire: Thompson/Center HotShot, NRA Family, January 2, 2014
Don't hold your breath thinking the gunners will accept any of this. They'd rather believe whatever the gun industry tells them, like smart guns are un-reliable and suppressors (silencers) are a hearing protection safety accessory. If the gun makers say it, it's true!
NashuaDW
(90 posts)based on my observations from the Florida Gun & Knife show I attended last Sunday.
There was a line of folks at all four ticket windows waiting to pay to get it, the place was packed, wasn't exactly 50/50 male - female but close.
Several (more than 10) were selling purses designed for concealed carry.
Kids got in free and there were a bunch of kids there.
The handguns I was interested in are still going for way too much, need to wait for a pissed-off wife selling off her husbands guns.
Bottom line - 'Gun Nut' not a dying species
billh58
(6,641 posts)speaks and prepares to draw his "handgun" for self-protection from evil grabbers. Florida: The land of the Gun Nuts, and Home of the Paranoid.
awoke_in_2003
(34,582 posts)laying their guns out where their kids can get them...
jimmy the one
(2,717 posts)FL's link: While the number of female gun owners has remained essentially the same over that last 30-plus years, the proportion of men who own guns has steadily declined over that same period. From 1980 to 1990, between 44 and 52 percent of male respondents said they owned a gun. In the past five years, that number has averaged close to 35 percent.
Confronted with the downturn, the gun industry is looking for positive stories to tell. A swell in the ranks of women gun owners has enormous implications for the industry both economically and politically, a 2014 {pro gun National Shooting Sports Foundation} NSSF report on female gun buyers says.
If the gun industry can draw in more women, it will be better able to make the case to lawmakers that its customers represent a broad constituency of Americans.
But it doesnt appear that the gun industry has been able to introduce significantly more women to shooting. Instead, the statistics suggest that the gun business depends on a shrinking group of customers male and female who buy more and more weapons.
Stories about first-time female gun owners, even if theyre based more on anecdotes than hard evidence, obscure that unsettling fact.
Getting near that rule of thumb (but not quite), where 20% of the fanatics, purchase 80% of the fetish.
billh58
(6,641 posts)"Getting near that rule of thumb (but not quite), where 20% of the fanatics, purchase 80% of the fetish."