A day after yet another tragic school shooting, I had just finished teaching a criminology class about gun violence and how to reduce it in the United States. I found that my students have many misconceptions about the scope and nature of the problem.
I believe they are not alone and that these misconceptions that many others may hold work against the development of thoughtful and effective policy. Although whole volumes can and have been written about this, I would like to share a few observations.
First, many have no idea how many people are injured or killed by gun violence in the U.S. annually. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), more than 45,000 people were killed by gun violence in the U.S. in 2020, an increase in recent decades.
This is an average of more than 120 gun-related deaths each day and is a 30-percent increase in homicides over 2019 data. Between 2015 and 2019 police-related shootings accounted for 2,606 gun deaths. These numbers should be shocking, with U.S. gun-related homicide rates 25 times greater than other wealthy nations.
Second, most are unaware that the biggest percentage of gun-related fatalities come from suicide. Nearly two-thirds of deaths by gun are suicides, an average of approximately 64 per day.