Diary

Guns & Sensationalism

DEMachina.

Posted to Diary on Mon Aug 27, 2007 at 09:32:33 AM EST. RSS.

With the upcoming reports regarding the Virginia Tech shooting last spring, as well as a new story here on TnT on the subject, I thought I'd address a flawed article I found soon after this happened.

I came across this article from Newsweek, entitled "A Day in the Life of a 9mm." Like any other tragedy, the shooting at Tech has brought out the extremists on both sides, which is nothing new. I also find myself a little puzzled why there's so much more fuss around 33 deaths in America when more than 70,000 people have died in Iraq (that website only tallies confirmed deaths, so the real total is doubtless higher).

Disclaimer: I'm a gun owner, but also a pacifist.  I don't find the two mutually-exclusive, but I won't get into that.

The article is trying to demonize specifically 9mm handguns (I think). It seems pretty clear the authors aren't really concerned with guns or logic.

I'll now take this piece by piece:

When Cho Seung-Hui armed himself with a 9mm Glock for his rampage (he also carried a .22-caliber Walther) he was standing in a tradition of bloodshed stretching back more than a century, adding to a toll that almost certainly dwarfs that of the legendary Colt six-shooters. German officers in World War I shot deserters with their Lugers, the original 9mm semiautomatic. When four New York City cops mistakenly unleashed a fusillade of 41 shots on the unarmed Amadou Diallo in 1999, they were firing 9s. It's an icon of rap culture: 'Cock my nine, and separate yo' head from yo' spine,' Ice Cube memorably muttered in homage to the murdered Notorious B.I.G. Of the 188 shots fired in the Columbine High School massacre, which until Virginia Tech set the standard for depraved mass schoolroom slaughter, 55 came from Dylan Klebold's Tec-9.

First, saying "almost certainly" is generally a way of saying "I'm making this up." The "almost" kind of lets the author off the hook, since they're not totally making things up. It's still highly disingenuous, though. I'll believe it when I see actual, you know, facts. The reference to WWI is irrelevant; the fact that German officers did this (and I think this is bringing us into Godwin land) has nothing to do with a 9mm somehow being "worse" than any other. Same goes for the rap lyrics, assuming they're even evidence of what street culture really was, and even if that's true, it's a pretty serious jump to automatically conclude that people actually acted based on this culture. The Tec-9 is a questionable example. First, that's one of any number of 9mm guns that exist. Second, the Tec-9 has long had a bad reputation because the original model was easy to convert to being fully automatic (this changed when the ATF forced some design changes in 1982). Finally, the 55 rounds mentioned is only 30% of the 188 that the article itself says were fired. So why are we talking about this one gun as somehow the worst of the bunch?

Next some basic factual misrepresentations:

A 9mm round--romantically called a "parabellum," from the Latin slogan ("If you seek peace, prepare for war") of its original German manufacturer--weighs a little more than a quarter of an ounce, with a diameter of about three eighths of an inch.

First, the parabellum is just one of a large number of 9mm cartridges that are manufactured. Specifically, it is the 9x19mm that was originally used in the Luger (so it's sometimes called the 9mm Luger).  This is one of many 9mm cartridges around today. This is just sloppy and an excuse to use the term "parabellum" to make it seem more sinister.

A few experts maintain that lower-caliber rounds, such as .22s (about a fifth of an inch in diameter) can be equally deadly. They make a smaller hole, but a .22 'tends to bounce around in the body,' whereas a 9mm round often passes right through, says Fred Starkey, a veteran LAPD officer. But the ones who should know best--the militaries of at least 70 countries, including, since 1985, the United States--have come down in favor of the 9mm sidearm.

First, it's dismissive of the "few experts" talking about the .22. Second, the only reason the United States switched to the 9mm for their standard-issue firearm is because of a desire to standardize munitions with the rest of NATO. That being said, the Marines and Special Forces have continued to use .45 handguns, as have many police and SWAT forces (from the same Wikipedia article).

The next paragraph talks about the infamous FBI Miami shootout in 1986, as well as talking about the higher-capacity magazines for 9mm. While these aren't unique to 9mm handguns, to be sure, I do think the article has a point here; some states already outlaw high-capacity magazines (anything over 10 rounds is illegal in California, anything over 15 in New Jersey according to one seller), and I don't think this is a bad idea at all.

Today it's the gun of choice for the everyday criminal and cop alike, accounting for 263,000 of the roughly 815,000 handguns manufactured in the United States in 2005, according to government figures. The U.S. International Trade Commission tracks imports of handguns, which totaled 878,000 in 2005, but those aren't broken out by type, and so not even the government knows how many 9mm guns are actually sold in this country.

263,000 / 815,000 is about 32%. How is one-third somehow "the gun of choice" then? And the "even the government doesn't know" bit is just sensationalist nonsense.

But it's ubiquitous on the street, from gang-ridden South L.A.--where in one area, patrolled by the LAPD's Southeast Division, it figured in 23 of 58 gun homicides last year--to the ghettos of Philadelphia, where homicide detective John Ramsey estimates that 'about 60 percent of the homicides I work on involve a 9-millimeter.' They have one advantage, from the cops' point of view: they eject telltale shell casings at the scene, to the benefit of investigators. That's why some criminals still prefer revolvers.

23 / 58 is about 40%, which hardly meets my definition of "ubiquitous" (or the dictionary's for that matter). Okay, 60%, that I buy as being a significant portion, but ultimately the question must be asked: so what? The shell casings thing is true of any automatic irrespective of caliber. I'm sure it's true that "some criminals still prefer revolvers" ... doesn't this kinda punch a whole in their "it's the gun of choice for criminals" argument above?

Many ordinary citizens now have 9-millimeters for protection as well, which means, inevitably, that they get used to settle arguments between spouses or friends. Last month, according to police in Ft. Smith, Ark., a feud between next-door neighbors led to a confrontation that ended in gunfire--a bullet from a 9mm Ruger in the head. (Police believe the gun was legally owned.) Or they get picked up by children, who find the trigger much easier to pull than the one on a revolver.

Okay, I'd like to see some statistics here. Furthermore, what does this have to do with 9mm guns specifically? Are the authors suggesting that if we were to ban 9mm handguns, all the people that have them wouldn't go out and buy something else? And the bit about the children is further sensationalism. Easier to pull according to whom? Do they not realize that trigger-pull varies based on the gun? First of all, unless the gun's stored loaded (which is idiotic if kids are around, regardless of what kind of gun it is), you have to pull the slide back to chamber the first round. While this is certainly easier with an automatic than loading a revolver, it still varies dramatically from gun to gun.  This is not to say a child couldn't do it, just that it's not necessarily as easy as the article would have you believe. The simple truth is that it depends on the gun. It would have been much better here to talk about the relative ease of loading an automatic vs. a revolver (and I'm not really sure which would be easier for a child).

To conclude, I do think some changes could be made to gun laws, especially in terms of high-capacity magazines. That being said, the kind of sensationalism and questionable fact-finding employed by Newsweek here is not the way to affect change. All it does is stir things up, which may help sell newspapers but which doesn't actually contribute anything to the debate. As one of my favorite professors is so fond of saying, reasonable people can and do differ. There's enough information available that if they really wanted to, it's very easy to make an informed, rational argument for tighter gun control. That they stooped to misrepresenting their own numbers and appealed to people's prejudices smacks of laziness at best. We wonder why our electorate is so uninformed? Here's a good example of why.

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Re: Guns & Sensationalism

pO157.

Mon Sep 03, 2007 at 05:06:52 PM EST

none

First off, this is one of the better written articles I have seen on TnT. It really should have been dumped into the submissions Q, as I think that would have gotten it much higher visibility. I actually think you should cut & paste it into the Q anyway.

Anyway, my wife was told last night (by a 75 year old Veteran, of all people!) "People with guns will end up getting shot by other people with guns." What prompted this? She mentioned in passing that next month she has to pick up her grandmother's old .22 rifle that she inherited , yet she got a response as if she expressed a desire to go buy a Tec-9 out of some guy's van, or get a Street Sweeper and leave it loaded and unintended with an 8 year old while she goes out drinking.

I think the discussion over Evolution v. Creation (or "Intelligent Design") has similar parallels to the Gun Control/Gun Rights debate. There is often highly technical language dumped into play which leads to a lack of understanding, concepts that may look scary to everyday people, and a debate that is easily ended by an incorrect appeal to emotion. Even the media does a poor job of discussing guns (see my QL image with the Iraqi woman holding two rounds which she claims were fired into her house by Coalition Forces) and this leads to problems like the article you quoted.

I remember growing up in a No-Guns (even realistic water pistols) House, yet my dad had no problem sending me to scout camp were we were expected to shoot .22s  starting at age 12, or signing permission slips for a field trip to shoot with the town police at a makeshift range behind some sketchy asphalt plant. The choice of whether or not to own a weapon at home legally and how to raise your child are important, but he also considered it important that I learn as much as possible about the world around me and other people's viewpoints.

What we need as a country is a serious discussion about firearms without overzealous reporting, not knee-jerk reactions to maniacs who will always exist no matter what we restrict or how illegal certain objects become. But I believe we will not be there for a long time.

Spread it on!

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Re: Guns & Sensationalism

Lou.

Thu Sep 06, 2007 at 11:51:10 AM EST

none

I agree...sadly, unlike you, I don't that day will ever come.  Between the hyperbole of modern reporting and the insatiable appetite of the majority of news "consumers" it will only get worse.  

Seriously...which of the following would most likely keep folks up past their bedtime...

A. "Tonight at 11, we will have a calm reasoned debate about gun ownership in the US"

or

B. "TONIGHT AT 11...CRAZED ASIAN COLLEGE STUDENT SLAUGHTERS CLASSMATES IN BLOODY GUN RAMPAGE.  FOLLOWED BY DISCUSSION FROM NOTED SOCIOLOGIST TRENT BLONDENHEAD ABOUT HOW YOUR CHILDREN ARE IN MUCH GREATER DANGER THAN YOU COULD EVER IMAGINE!" (non-Fox version)

B.a. "TONIGHT AT 11...CRAZED ASIAN COLLEGE STUDENT SLAUGHTERS CLASSMATES IN BLOODY GUN RAMPAGE...FOLLOWED BY DISCUSSION FROM NOTED SOCIOLOGIST TRENT BLONDENHEAD* ABOUT HOW THIS WOULD NOT HAVE HAPPENED IF EVERY SINGLE STUDENT AND STAFF MEMBER WERE ALLOWED TO CARRY GUNS ON CAMPUS. (Fox version)

Repeat after me...ad revenues...ad revenues

*(Yes...Dr. Blondenhead casts a wide stance across both sides of the issue)

It's the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine

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