F is for False: Washington Post Fact Check Refutes Leading Gun Control Talking Point

Opinion

NRA Pinocchio
The Washington Post’s own fact-checker has weighed in on the matter and has grudgingly admitted that the statement is only true if “children” include adults. IMG NRA-ILA

It has become practically mandatory for any firearm prohibitionist to preface gun control rhetoric with the assertion: “Gun violence is the leading cause of death of children.”

It’s a favorite of Joe BidenKamala Harris, the White House Briefing Room, and just about every gun control advocate and anti-gun media outlet you could name (for example: herehereherehereherehere, and here, to cite merely a few examples).

As we have pointed out time and time and time again, however, it’s simply not true.

Now, the Washington Post’s own fact-checker has weighed in on the matter and has grudgingly admitted that the statement is only true if “children” include adults. “When you focus only on children – 17 years and younger –,” the Post article states, “motor vehicle deaths (broadly defined) still rank No. 1.”

To paraphrase Bill Clinton, the veracity of the statement depends on the meaning of what a “child” is. Gun control proponents arrive at their statement about “children” by including young adults aged 18 and 19 (and sometimes even older) in their datasets. As the Post article also notes, researchers additionally use different definitions of “motor vehicle death” to examine the issue of child mortality. Some count only crashes involving moving vehicles, while others count all vehicle-involved deaths, including those involving stationary vehicles and vehicles colliding with pedestrians. Only by using a narrow definition of “motor vehicle death,” a definition of “child” that includes young adults, and a broad definition of “gun violence” does the number of “children’s” firearm-related deaths exceed those of vehicle-related deaths.

The Post makes much of the fact that the gap between the two sources of mortality is closing and that the United States is an outlier in the number of young people who die in firearm-related incidents. It also refuses to assign its traditional “Pinocchio” rating to the gun controllers’ claim. But it is unambiguous on the basic point: “When all motor vehicle accidents are counted, then motor vehicle deaths continue to exceed firearm deaths for children — defined as people under age 18 — whether or not infants are included.”

What the Post does not mention, but what bears emphasis, is that firearm prohibitionists do not make declarative statements to educate or enlighten people on the facts but to elicit an emotional response that the prohibitionists hope will increase support for gun control. In the case of “gun deaths” involving “children,” people will naturally think of accidents involving readily accessible guns stored in homes or vehicles or even kids killed in school shootings (thankfully the rarest version of this phenomenon by far). Indeed, the “child gun death” talking point is often used as a justification for so-called “safe storage laws” that seek to impose criminal penalties for storing guns loaded and ready for immediate use.

People may not, however, immediately associate this phrasing with young adult gang members battling over drug turf or using guns to resolve escalating “beefs” that originate on online social media platforms. These events, by contrast, are among the most common scenarios in which one person kills another with a gun in the U.S.

Of course, no decent person wants young people of any age dying by gunfire, no matter what the scenario. But broadly lumping all these incidents together into one category obscures the obvious fact that different approaches are necessary to effectively address each one. We have repeatedly made the same point about gun controllers’ insistence on inflating the number of “mass shootings” by applying that term to highly dissimilar events. Mainstream fact-checkers have called out this tactic, as well.

Needless to say, the Washington Post is not about to relent from its own habitual anti-gun advocacy, a point that is clear even from this fact check (and, ironically, from the paper’s own prior use of the claim its fact check now discredits). But the Post article at least illustrates how manipulating data and recharacterizing common terms to include uncommon meanings creates heat, rather than light, in the gun control debate.

In any case, we expect firearm prohibitionists to continue misleading about “child gun deaths” with abandon.


About NRA-ILA:

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the “lobbying” arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess, and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Visit: www.nra.org

National Rifle Association Institute For Legislative Action (NRA-ILA)

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StLPro2A

Statisticians and Libturds lie. Same old dead horse here, moving on……

Bigfootbob

What is the #1 issue with the dimocRAT party?

What’s their death count since Roe?

Those are rhetorical questions, not really questions either since everyone instinctively knows the answers. That being said, and using the leftards illogic, we should immediately ban the dimocRAT party and place their supporters into deprogramming facilities…FOR THE CHILDREN.

Montana454Casull

These idiots who want to ban guns using false data to promote thier lies need the table turned on them and take thier cars away using the same data they use only the data that provides the truth . Get to walking all you gun grabbing idiots because your car kills more children than anything on earth .

Arizona

There were far more murders committed with firearms per 100,000 people in the USA a hundred years ago than today, when we have added over 300 million firearms to the mix, and added over 200 million additional people to the country, most being immigrants (only half of which are legal). So where is the so-called “epidemic of gun violence”? In fact, even though we had hundreds of millions fewer people and firearms, the total number of murders with firearms 100 years ago and today are almost exactly the same.

Enemy of Democracy

Do the, death by firearms numbers, also include justifiable homicide, ie. those who assumed room temperature as a consequence of committing a violent felony? Just wondering how many percentage points that might be.

Terry

“Of course, no decent person wants young people of any age dying by gunfire, no matter what the scenario.”

Au Contraire I guess that makes me an indecent person!
I’m OK with gang bangers dying any they feel like it, as long as they leave the rest of the world out of it!

Coelacanth

Mark Twain said it all: “Figures lie and liars figure”.

Raconteur

It wasn’t that long ago that the gun control zealots were using 25 years old, as the upper number. That stuck around for several years, until it got thrown back in their face, just like this latest propaganda.