batteryacid said:
It seems you din´t look into this short report , because it simply summarises statistics from sources like the police, the federal trade bureau, national archives, national center for injury prevention and control, the UN Office on drugs and crime, the FBI uniform crime report and scientific reports, to name some - so reliable sources I would say, and not propaganda.
I have looked into that short report, and like pretty much everything else on the Brady Campaign's website (and to be fair, like most everything on the NRA's website), they cherry-pick statistics, use leading terminology, and sidestep counterarguments in their little reports.
But what the heck, I've got a few minutes to kill:
In 2002, nearly 8 children and teenagers, ages 19 and under, were killed with guns everyday
By "killed with guns" they're somewhat counterintuitively including suicides (~3 out of the 8) homicides (~5 out of 8) and accidents (.4 out of 8), and I think most people would think that 17, 18, 19 year olds are a far different circumstance than children under 16 or 15. If you drop it to 14 and under (the stats page only goes in five-year age increments) you get about 1.2 per day for all categories.
For every time a gun is used in a home in a legally-justifiable shooting [note that every self-defense is legally justifiable] there are 22 criminal, intentional, and suicide-related shootings
Possibly apples and oranges - gun used in a home in a legally-justifiable shooting, vs guns used anywhere (not just in homes) in criminal, "intentional" (does 'intentional' include self-defense?), and suicide shootings. Though I note that the author of the study they quote (Kellerman) is the one that originated the fundamentally flawed "43 times more likely to shoot a loved one" study.
The presence of a gun in the home triples the risk of homicide in the home.
We've already discussed this one in this thread. And BradyCampaign's source? That Kellerman fellow again.
The presence of a gun in the home increases the risk of suicide fivefold.
I'm not sure where they're getting this one, the verdict on any link of gun ownership to suicide is still out. In any case, the source for this nugget is our buddy Mr. Kellerman.
From 1999 through 2002, an average of 960 children and teenagers took their own lives with guns each year.
Does "teenagers" still include up through 19 year olds?
But one gets much more context by actually going to CDC's
injury stats site and perusing these numbers in context. As far as accidents go, drownings remain ahead of firearms in all age groups (to say nothing of motor vehicles). In suicides, it looks like firearms make up roughly half the total number, with suffocation next up with a third or thereabouts.