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View Full Version : Media Push Gun-Control Activists’ Misleading School Shooting Count, Includes Window Broken by BB Gun



Teh One Who Knocks
01-26-2018, 12:21 PM
Stephen Gutowski - Washington Free Beacon


https://i.imgur.com/R8jVnCO.jpg

Many in the media have pushed a gun-control group's count of school shootings in the aftermath of Tuesday's shooting at Marshall County High School that left 2 dead and 18 injured.

That count, created by Everytown for Gun Safety, claims there have been 11 school shootings thus far in 2018. However, nearly all of the incidents included alongside the Marshall County shooting bear little or no resemblance to that shooting or other well-publicized school shootings, like those at Sandy Hook Elementary or Columbine High School. None of the other events included in the gun-control group's count feature more than one injury, most featured no injuries at all, and one involved a BB gun being shot at a school bus window.

In its threat assessment on school shooters, developed in the wake of the Columbine shooting, the FBI sought to answer "why would a student bring a weapon to school and without any explicable reason open fire on fellow students and teachers?" Despite its clear focus on violence committed against students and faculty during school events, the assessment did not provide an official definition for what a school shooter or a school shooting is.

Everytown for Gun Safety uses its own definition based on what it said is "expert advice and common sense," which the gun-control group claims is "straightforward, fair, and comprehensive." The group said it counts "any time a firearm discharges a live round inside a school building or on a school campus or grounds."

This broad definition places two separate suicides, a January 9 incident where a man shot a BB gun at a bus window resulting in no injuries; a January 10 incident where a student in a criminal justice club accidentally shot a peace officer's real gun at a target on a classroom wall instead of a training gun resulting in no injuries; a January 9 incident where gun shots were fired from somewhere outside of Cal State San Bernardino, which struck a building on campus without injuries; and other incidents next to the murder of a Winston-Salem State University student at a nightclub on the Wake Forest University campus, the January 22 shooting of a 15-year-old at a Dallas-area high school, and Tuesday's Marshall County High School shooting which left 2 dead and 18 others injured.

In its explanation of its count, Everytown includes an open call for new gun-control measures as a result of the number of school shootings it claims occur each year in the United States.

"How many more before our leaders pass common-sense laws to prevent gun violence and save lives," the group asks in its methodology explanation. "Communities all over the country live in fear of gun violence. That's unacceptable. We should feel secure in sending our children to school—comforted by the knowledge that they're safe."

The group claims to have identified 283 school shootings since 2013 using its methodology.

Reporters from outlets like The New York Times, NPR, CNN, Politico, The Huffington Post, and other major media have unquestioningly forwarded the activists' count on Twitter or in pieces for their publications. Peter Alexander of NBC News used the count without revealing who complied it, their political leanings, or any caution over their methodology when questioning Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders at the White House press briefing on Wednesday.

Many major media outlets have also unquestioningly pushed dubious statistics from gun-control groups in regards to mass shootings. A June 2017 Free Beacon analysis found only 8 of the 154 shootings cited by gun-control activists and major media outlets as mass shootings actually meet the FBI definition of mass murder.

The media's amplification of misleading school shooting counts may be part of the reason a 2017 survey found most parents greatly overestimate the likelihood of a school shooting at their child's school. Thirty-six percent of parents thought it was "highly likely" their local high school would experience a gun incident within the next three years. Only 8.6 percent of the parents, however, said they actually knew of a firearm incident at their local school sometime in the last five years.

Godfather
01-27-2018, 02:32 AM
That's really interesting, thanks for posting. I was skeptical when I kept seeing the '11 shootings in 2018' comments all over the internet. Just more confirmed media fear mongering... and anti-gun agenda driven. Getting two birds stoned at once :thumbsup: Good work guys

KevinD
01-27-2018, 07:27 AM
Tbh, imho, if folks spent the same time talking with their kids as they do arguing this topic, and realized that yes, some kids (why is a different discussion) need not be around guns, then there would be less of this. Imho, these kids that are the shooters in these “mass” shootings are/were very troubled children. Perhaps because they didn’t fit in (as I most assuredly didn’t) perhaps because they were picked on (as I was) perhaps because mammy and daddy didn’t care about them (nope, not an issue for me) perhaps even because Susie Q wouldn’t spread them legs. I dunno. Neither do you. Imho, each of these so called school mass shootings is an isolated event (leaving out the media “glory”)
Think back on your school days. Was there a kid in your class picked on? Was it you, or did you follow along not really knowing why? In my high school years, even being a jock, sometimes I got picked on, and other times I picked on other kids. Not proud of it, but not gonna deny it either. Trust me, I got way more than I ever dealt out. In my freshman year if high school, a kid started shooting his(?) gun at kids on campus. Keep in mind, this was a time where even in Houston, most of us meds had shotguns or rifles in our trucks. My teacher, Mr. Peter Geaubeax went out to his truck, grabbed his .357 and shot the boy dead. The boy (I’ll leave him nameless in respect for his family who I was familiar with, if not close) was always strange. This is again, from me, a kid that did not always fit in. The boy and I went to the same primary (though different middle schools) we weren’t friends though nor were we enemies. I knew him for years before he lost it. Tbh, I wish we had been close. Perhaps I’d have been able to help him.
Shit, this turned into a rant. Oh well, my point is, none of us know why kids do things like this. “Gun Control” is a sorry, weak ass excuse for not dealing with the real issue.

lost in melb.
01-27-2018, 10:15 AM
Kev, that 'real issue' is much harder to deal with than controlling guns - which can be achieved with the swipe of a pen in the rest of the (civilised) world. The only reason that we (say, Aus, for arguments sake) let our high-powered weaponry be controlled and taken away is most of us don't own guns or care much about them in the first place.

Thanks for the story, something like that could only happen in the US. The price of freedom, perhaps?