In 2019, with the horrors of the Parkland mass shooting still fresh in most Americans’ minds, the gun industry funded a study to “determine the most effective ways of communicating with the American public about the benefits of firearm ownership,” reported The Trace/Rolling Stone.
Its findings, which were not shared with the public, indicated that Americans who support gun ownership could be persuaded by the value of reforms that are vigorously opposed by the gun industry, gun rights groups, and Republican lawmakers. Those reforms include universal background checks, red flag laws, and even a gun registry, which vocal gun rights advocates have falsely claimed made the Holocaust possible.
The study, titled “Communicating With The American Public
About Firearm Ownership,” was commissioned by the National Shooting Sports
Foundation, a nonprofit that serves as the gun industry’s trade group, founded
to ensure the survival of its dues-paying members, which include firearms
manufacturers, retailers, and ranges. An online survey administered to more
than 4,000 Americans tested the power of 24 pro-gun and 24 anti-gun messages.
The respondents were divided into multiple categories, including those who had
a “positive feeling” about gun ownership.
While the study does not cite Parkland or any mass shooting
as a reason for its undertaking, it was conducted at a moment when substantial
reforms seemed possible. The indiscriminate killing of students at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School had galvanized the nation in a manner not seen
since Newtown, and the pressure for regulation and accountability was high.
Many young Americans, in particular, who had come of age as mass shootings
became commonplace, held a negative view of firearms, according to industry
research, and that posed a problem for future business. There was a need,
it seemed, to find the most resonant ways to convey the value of gun
ownership.
“While the sports shooting industry devotes substantial
funding and effort to communications initiatives to boost participation in and
support for sport shooting and firearms,” the study notes, “little reliable
data exists indicating which messages and communications themes work
best.”
The Trace and Rolling Stone obtained a copy of the
study for an ongoing series that
seeks to unearth what the gun industry conceals about its customers and
practices from public view. The NSSF declined to provide a comment for this
story.
On Wednesday, August 27, a 23-year-old shooter, who legally
purchased three firearms recovered by law enforcement, opened fire at a
Catholic school in Minneapolis, murdering two children and injuring 14 more before
taking their own life. The setting and the ages of the victims evoked the 2022
massacre in Uvalde, Texas. That year, President Joe Biden signed the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act into law,
a gun bill that contained politically safe reforms, such as the allocation of
funds for mental health resources and school safety.
After decades of congressional gridlock on the issue, the
package was hailed as an epic breakthrough, a valiant example of bipartisan
compromise that still mostly relied on Democrats for passage. The NSSF study,
then, raises a key question: Why have Republican lawmakers largely stood
against more significant reforms, let alone any reform at all? As the study
indicates, many people with a favorable view of gun ownership appear open to
going further than the lawmakers and special interests who represent them.
For people who the study says have a “positive feeling”
about gun ownership, the study ranks the top five arguments for and against it.
The top arguments in favor almost all revolve around rights, beginning with
“Self-defense is a basic right,” followed by “Americans have the right to own a
gun,” “It’s people’s right as Americans to own a gun,” and “Gun ownership is
protected by the Constitution.” The remaining argument, which came in at No. 3,
states, “Owning and training with a firearm teaches important skills, including
responsibility, accuracy, safe gun handling, self-defense, and strategies to
avoid dangerous situations.”
When told to rank the “most effective arguments against
firearm ownership,” these same respondents chose policies that the gun industry
and Republican lawmakers actively oppose. The argument the group found to be
most effective is: “Universal background checks for gun sales and transactions
are supported by approximately 85 percent of Americans.”
Other statements deemed highly effective by these
respondents included “Guns should be licensed just like cars,” “State red flag
laws to remove guns from those who show warning signs of violence keep guns out
of the hands of those who would harm themselves or others,” “Gun violence is an
epidemic in the U.S.,” and “Common sense gun laws to close loopholes in current
gun laws will save lives and prevent gun violence.”
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