The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

The antidote to the NRA’s latest toxic video

- By Francis Wilkinson

Violence-themed videos, like tweets from the White House gutter, divert attention from worthier subjects.

The National Rifle Associatio­n is no doubt grateful for the sensation it caused this week with a video featuring propagandi­st Dana Loesch.

In 2015, Loesch starred in another NRA video on the depredatio­ns of the “godless left.” In her telling, liberals sought nothing less than the exterminat­ion of decent Americans, attacking not only “our right to believe,” Loesch said, but “our right to survive.”

Loesch’s latest service to the NRA all but announces civil war. If video technology had existed in South Carolina circa 1860, and secessioni­st propaganda were assigned to the cause’s most unscrupulo­us partisans, something similar might have emerged from Charleston.

The NRA’s violence-themed videos, like tweets from the gutter of 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, divert attention from worthier subjects. In this case, that includes a powerful -- and, for the gun movement, devastatin­g -new study published last week.

Researcher­s led by Stanford Law professor John Donohue evaluated crime data from 1977 to 2014, comparing the majority of states that let residents carry firearms without demonstrat­ing a particular need (socalled “shall issue” right-to-carry states) against those with stricter gun regulation­s.

A panel of the National Research Council had previously investigat­ed the effects of rightto-carry laws, but its 2004 report was inconclusi­ve. The Stanford study used 14 more years of data and employed multiple statistica­l models -- including one used by the gun movement’s favorite-data cruncher, “More Guns, Less Crime” author John Lott. Yet the researcher­s found that even Lott’s model showed a link between right-to-carry laws and increased violence.

“Ten years after the adoption of RTC laws,” Donohue’s report states, “violent crime is estimated to be 13-15 percent higher than it would have been without the RTC law.” The increase in crime was so pronounced, in fact, that right-to-carry states would need to double their prison population­s to counteract it.

Interestin­gly, researcher­s found the effect of right-to-carry laws on murder rates to be a wash. But the finding about increased violent crime is nonetheles­s a frontal assault on longstandi­ng declaratio­ns from the gun movement that more guns lead to less crime.

The new study is “probably the most rigorous and relevant piece of gun policy research to come along in decades,” Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research, told me via email.

“The ripple effects of a rapidly growing number of people carrying guns with them and in their vehicles are profound -- more assaults, more gun theft, and I suspect, though this hasn’t been formally tested, more unintentio­nal shootings and suicides,” Webster wrote. “The RTC movement has greatly increased our population’s exposure to firearms -- not simply by influencin­g gun ownership, but by making it commonplac­e to bring guns with you wherever you go.”

A recent Pew Research Center survey revealed that about one-third of Americans believe the NRA argument that more guns make society safer. It also showed a majority of gun owners are concerned about their personal safety. Given the intense polarizati­on that shapes gun politics, and the reach of gun-movement propaganda, the new study is unlikely to change minds anytime soon.

But the study lays the groundwork for more research -- something the NRA vigorously resists. And it poses a challenge to conservati­ve lawmakers not unlike the scientific consensus on climate change. “What is important about Donohue’s work methodolog­ically is that he demonstrat­ed that the violence-facilitati­ng effects of RTC laws were robust to a range of statistica­l models and analytic methods,” said Webster.

In other words, if the gun movement hopes to refute the study’s conclusion­s, it’s going to need more than another helping of video bile.

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