Anti-gun Research Tries to Tie Deer Hunting to Crime

EOTECH Vudu 3.5-18x50 SFP Rifle Scope is the Top Choice for Big Game Hunters
EOTECH Vudu 3.5-18×50 SFP Rifle Scope is the Top Choice for Big Game Hunters

On August 14, 2024, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) published an article about research done exploring the relationship between the opening of deer hunting season and “shootings.” The article found that there was a significant increase in “shootings” in rural counties associated with the opening of deer season.

At first glance, the premise appears to be one of establishing by statistics of the obvious. Of course, there are more “shootings” when deer season opens. The entire point of deer season is to harvest deer by shooting them.

More shooting is done prior to deer season because many hunters use this time to ensure their firearms are functioning and are sighted in properly. They do this by shooting them at targets.

As a noted author, writer, publisher, and my friend of decades, Alan Korwin, has stated: Shooting is a sport. Murder is a crime. I would add that suicide is a volitional act.

“Shootings” has been put in quotes because the article does not define what they determine to be a “shooting.” An important part of any research is to define the terms you are using. It appears, by inference, that the article defines “shooting” as the same as the Gun Violence Archive because they rely extensively on the Gun Violence Archive for most of their data.

The Gun Violence Archives (GVA) collects data from a variety of public sources. They include most publicly recorded incidents where a firearm is fired and a human is injured or killed, although they include some reported instances where firearms were used defensively, and no one was injured or killed.  This use of the term “shooting” is designed to push people to associate shooting with illegitimate violence. Because the paper uses location data in its analysis and the GVA does not provide location data for suicides, it seems likely the paper does not include suicides in its analysis, but it is not certain.

There is significant bias in the use of the term “gun violence.” “Gun violence” is an Orwellian term designed to associate the use of guns with illegitimate violence. The term “gun violence” frames problems of suicide, murder, assault, and criminal violence as a gun problem instead of behavioral problems.

In essence, the term “gun violence” is a proxy for the assumption that guns are bad. More guns mean more bad things happen.

The paper recognizes this assumption as the basis for its research. The footnotes include articles by academics who wish for a disarmed citizenry and who attempt to make this point.  From the introduction of the article, bold added:

This research has been predicated on the premise that the prevalence of guns in a given home, community, or nation is likely to make violent incidents more injurious and more deadly.7-12

As AmmoLand has repeatedly shown, this assumption is hotly contested, dubious, and contains significant policy bias. It is irrational to prioritize reducing murders, suicides, and assaults performed only with guns if such policies do not reduce the overall number of murders, suicides, and assaults. The purpose of such policies appears to be to disarm the public, not to reduce murders, suicides, or assaults.

The authors of the study claim little research has been done to show the actual prevalence of guns in private and public settings increases public harm. From the introduction to the article:

However, to our knowledge, few studies have been designed to exploit plausibly exogenous variation in the prevalence of firearms in public and private settings to generate evidence on the association between firearm prevalence and shootings.

Numerous studies done by Professor John Lott and others show the increased legal carry of firearms reduces violent crime (public harm), none of those papers is referenced in this paper’s footnotes. The increase in firearms carry permits is at least as significant an indicator of more firearms availability as the start of deer season. The footnotes in the paper include articles criticizing Lott but not papers by Lott or others who support his premise about carry permits.

The results of the study are done in a model. Using models to depict reality is inherently risky because models depend entirely on the researcher’s use of various assumptions about the nature of reality. Those assumptions can result in selection bias, confirmation bias, and outcome bias. Models, because they manipulate data more than non-model methods, are subject to the biases of the persons creating the model and choosing what models are valid and what is not.

One of the ways models are used to distort reality is in the substitution of percentages and probabilities for absolute numbers.  When you are dealing with very small numbers, a few cases can be used to make extravagant claims. It would have been helpful to know how many incidents the models in the paper are based on. Was the increase in incidents over the years of the study 10,000? 1,000? 100? 10? 1? We do not know. Absolute numbers are not reported. The study notes most incidents in the study, where the type of firearm is known, involve handguns. While handguns are sometimes used to hunt deer, long guns are used in far greater numbers.

When you do this sort of study, using data bases, without intimate knowledge of the facts on the ground, you obtain some strange results. This useful figure from the article, shows the geographical location of the counties used in the model.  The Big Island of Hawaii is included.

There is a small problem with including the big island of Hawaii. There are no deer on the big island of Hawaii. It is difficult to see how the start of a deer season could have much effect in a county which is isolated from others and has no deer. No effect probably means it had little effect on the statistics of the model used in the paper. It is difficult to be certain. It is included to show how reality and models are not the same. An email sent to lead author Patrick Sharkey, PhD, has not received a reply as of the time of this writing.

As Gun Writer Lee Williams has noted, the principal author of the study receives significant funding from billionaires with radical anti-gun views. From Liberty Park Press:

According to the Laura and John Arnold Foundation’s 2022 IRS form 990, the couple spent $1.7 million on anti-gun research, including $1,065,933 to Sharkey’s employer, Princeton University, “to develop a research infrastructure that helps cities better understand and respond to waves of gun violence.”

Nearly all papers in the “public health” arena approach the subject of firearms with the same prejudiced assumption: Guns are bad.

They fail to take into account positive contributions to society that come from the ownership, possession, and use of guns because they assume such positive contributions do not exist or are minimal. Not once did they consider hard-to-measure benefits, such as crime deterrence, but widely accepted benefits. They never consider political power balances, such as deterring government misconduct.  For these reasons, such papers and their results should be viewed with a critical eye. They are closer to political advocacy than they are to science.


About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

Dean Weingarten

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DIYinSTL

Correlation is not causation and using correlation to imply causation is as academically unsound as it is repugnant. This is one more disgrace to further stain the reputation of the politically left JAMA. From statitisticeasily.com: Correlation, the statistical measure that describes the degree to which two variables move about each other, often serves as a preliminary indicator of a potential relationship. However, the concept of causation, the assertion that a change in one variable is responsible for a change in another, encapsulates the essence of cause-and-effect dynamics. The conflation of these two concepts can lead to erroneous conclusions, misguiding policy,… Read more »

Boz

When the Founding Fathers wrote the 2nd Amendment they were not just returning from a deer hunting trip, they had just liberated a nation!

Wass

An outstanding article. One to refer back to, for clear rhetoric.

Montana454Casull

No such thing as ” gun violence” and I believe we should tie the rise in crime to Democrats . The same clowns that coined the phrase ” gun violence ” .

Vietvet68-69

Stupid azz article…………