By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
The GenerationThe GenerationThe Generation
  • USA
    USA
    Show More
    Top News
    Dad charged with murder after 10-year-old son dies in rollover crash, TX officials say
    September 4, 2023
    Claudia Goldin wins 2023 Nobel economics prize
    October 11, 2023
    Marijuana Smoke May be Harmful to Health, Can Affect Your Heart
    November 2, 2023
    Latest News
    Columbus Day: A Reflection Through History, Controversy, and New Perspectives
    October 13, 2025
    Trump Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize — Sparks Global Debate and Divided Reactions
    October 13, 2025
    Hope for Israeli Hostages’ Release Through Trump Mediation, Expected by Monday
    October 9, 2025
    Government Shutdown Hits air Travel, Closing a Control Tower and Causing Delays Across the Country
    October 12, 2025
  • New York
    New York
    Show More
    Top News
    Bangladeshi Actor achieve international in US
    October 26, 2023
    NY District Cancels Classes After Multiple Fights Break out at Same Time at High School
    November 24, 2023
    Winter Weather Arrives As NYC Migrant Crisis Worsens
    December 20, 2023
    Latest News
    Controversy Erupts: Zohran Mamdani Faces Backlash Over Ties with Brooklyn Imam Linked to ‘Jihad’ Remarks
    October 19, 2025
    New York’s Future at Stake: Mamdani vs. Cuomo vs. Sliwa
    October 17, 2025
    A New Political Wind in New York: Zohran Mamdani Emerges at the Center of Attention
    October 17, 2025
    New York’s Food Crisis: Humans and Pets Struggle to Survive Together
    October 15, 2025
  • Politics
    Politics
    Show More
    Top News
    Joe Biden Plans To Ban Logging In US Old-growth Forests In 2025
    December 26, 2023
    Donald Trump Ranked As Worst US President In History, With Joe Biden 14th
    February 29, 2024
    Lawmakers Say They Should Analyze Protests Response
    May 31, 2024
    Latest News
    Rudy Giuliani Endorses Curtis Sliwa for Mayor of New York City
    October 8, 2025
    States To End Nutrition Education Programs After Trump Cuts
    October 6, 2025
    Pentagon Chief Announces More Leadership Firings, Orders Sweeping Cultural, Fitness Changes
    October 6, 2025
    Trump Announces 100% Tariff on Foreign-Made Movies
    October 6, 2025
  • World
    World
    Show More
    Top News
    Arab League slams Israel siege of Gaza, demands aid for Gazans
    October 12, 2023
    Bangladesh hands over humanitarian aid to Palestine
    October 31, 2023
    Hezbollah’s anti-ship missiles bolster its threat to US navy
    November 9, 2023
    Latest News
    Possible Nobel Leak was Likely Espionage, Committee Secretary Says
    October 15, 2025
    UN Aid For Rohingya Refugee Children Faces ‘Funding Cliff’
    October 15, 2025
    UNICEF Urges ‘Safe And Secure Humanitarian Access’ For Haitian Children
    October 15, 2025
    Madagascar’s Military Takes Power, President Impeached
    October 15, 2025
  • Finance & Business
    Finance & Business
    Show More
    Top News
    How Banks And The Fed Are Preparing For A US Default – And Chaos To Follow
    September 3, 2023
    Corporate Greed is not to Blame for High Inflation, SF Fed Says
    June 16, 2024
    Latest News
    Corporate Greed is not to Blame for High Inflation, SF Fed Says
    June 16, 2024
    How Banks And The Fed Are Preparing For A US Default – And Chaos To Follow
    September 3, 2023
  • EpaperNew
Search
  • About Us
  • Our Awards
  • My Bookmarks
  • Opinion
  • Crime
  • Science & Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Economy
  • Fashion
  • Election
  • Feature
  • Charity
  • Literature
  • Security
  • US & Canada
  • Nature
  • Cooking
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.
Reading: US companies push guns as blithely and murderously as they once did tobacco
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
The GenerationThe Generation
  • USA
  • New York
  • Politics
  • World
  • EpaperNew
Search
  • Crime
  • Economy
  • Election
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • US & Canada
  • Finance & Business
  • Charity
  • Cooking
  • Fashion
  • Feature
  • Literature
  • Nature
  • Science & Technology
  • Security
  • Sports
Follow US
  • About Us
  • My Bookmarks
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.
Illustration by Anusuzzaman Muhammad
OpinionUSA

US companies push guns as blithely and murderously as they once did tobacco

Published November 8, 2023
Share
7 Min Read
SHARE


By Rebecca Solnit

The gunman who a week ago killed 18 people in Lewiston, Maine, finished his bloodbath by shooting himself. Like many mass shootings, his rampage appears to have been a suicide that took others with him. Mass shootings draw deserved media attention, but they are a small percentage of all gun deaths in the US; suicide is the most common way people die by gun. That is, if you own or have access to a gun, the person you’re most likely to kill is yourself. Fifty-four per cent of US gun deaths are suicides, which means access to a gun is a major risk factor for dying this way.

This fact, often cited but rarely examined, means the gun industry is pushing guns the same way the tobacco industry pushed cigarettes: their intentions toward their customers are blithely murderous. It also undermines the advertisements and arguments claiming that guns provide safety and protection. Of the 48,117 reported gun deaths in the US in 2022, 26,993 were suicides – a stunning number, a gun death every 11 minutes, the equivalent to a mid-sized town being wiped out annually.

Gun sales went up in Maine after the mass shooting and the two days the public feared a killer on the loose. The desire for protection is understandable but guns rarely provide it. Cases in which guns really are used to protect against harm are far, far, far rarer than the gun lobby and the macho fantasies of skillful gun use fed by films and video games suggest. Guns are rarely actually used in such situations, and when used, are seldom as effective as the fantasies suggest (and sometimes kill bystanders or are used against the gun owner). Even police, who are trained in marksmanship, mostly miss their intended targets in conflicts. The publication the Trace, noting that 16 million Americans who own AR-15 assault rifles say they are for self-defense, was able to find only 51 verified cases of owners using them in self-defense over an almost 10-year period.

Eighty-one per cent of AR-15 owners are male; 74% are white. There’s a kind of nightmarish illogic to the fact that people buy guns for protection when the people they are most likely to turn the guns on are themselves. According to the New England Journal of Medicine, “the evidence indicates that the risk of suicide is three times as high when there is firearm access as when there is not”. White men, who make up less than a third of the US population, make up more than two-thirds of suicides by guns, and run higher risks of suicide overall. As the Washington Post recently put it, “White men are six times as likely to die by suicide as other Americans.”

This is in part because white men own guns at higher rates than any other demographic. (Other factors, including social isolation and the masculine ideal of self-reliance, also matter.) An attempt to take your own life is usually born of desperation, by those who feel they have no other exit from an unbearable situation or state of mind. If these attempts are last, desperate pleas for help or change, death is not necessarily the real or only goal, and not dying is not failure. But with a gun, survival is much less likely. Addressing the underlying crises of despair and isolation matters for both suicide and homicides, including mass shootings; so does making guns far less available to those likely to use them to take lives.

If the left were pushing guns, you could imagine the right arguing that it’s a conspiracy against white men. But of course it’s the right that has built a cult around guns, the right that has pushed for lax gun laws, the right that has sought to make guns available to domestic abuse perpetrators, mentally ill people and people under 21 – such as the mass shooter who last year murdered 18 children and teachers in an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, with an AR-15-style rifle purchased the day after his 18th birthday.

While the frontier rhetoric of protecting women is often invoked, male gun owners can and do turn these weapons on female partners and former partners at horrific rates. Half of all female murder victims are killed by intimate partners or family members, and most of these are gun deaths.

There are, of course, a lot of other people who die of gun violence and accidents. The gun industry’s monumental success in peddling their lethal products has well-known consequences: a Johns Hopkins School of Public Health study notes: “Guns remained the leading cause of death for children and teens in 2022. The rate of gun deaths among this group climbed 87% in the last decade (2013-2022).” The same Johns Hopkins study notes: “From 2019 to 2021, the gun suicide rate increased 10% while the non-gun suicide rate decreased by 8%,” meaning guns themselves were a major factor in who died by their own hand.

These deaths should be included in the national conversation about what kinds of threats guns pose and to whom. To do so would be to recognize that guns make us less, not more, safe – including from ourselves.

Author Is A The Guardian US columnist, Source: The Guardian.

You Might Also Like

Columbus Day: A Reflection Through History, Controversy, and New Perspectives

When Journalism is Sold, Society Holds Its Breath: The Pen of Truth, the Voice of Justice

Trump Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize — Sparks Global Debate and Divided Reactions

Hope for Israeli Hostages’ Release Through Trump Mediation, Expected by Monday

Government Shutdown Hits air Travel, Closing a Control Tower and Causing Delays Across the Country

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp Copy Link Print
Previous Article Hochul and Adams must make Big Apple biz districts great again
Next Article The economic beneficiaries of the Israel-Hamas war

Stay Connected

1.2kFollowersLike
13kFollowersFollow
1.2kFollowersFollow
1.4kSubscribersSubscribe

Latest News

Controversy Erupts: Zohran Mamdani Faces Backlash Over Ties with Brooklyn Imam Linked to ‘Jihad’ Remarks
New York October 19, 2025
New York’s Future at Stake: Mamdani vs. Cuomo vs. Sliwa
New York October 17, 2025
A New Political Wind in New York: Zohran Mamdani Emerges at the Center of Attention
New York October 17, 2025
Possible Nobel Leak was Likely Espionage, Committee Secretary Says
World October 14, 2025
UN Aid For Rohingya Refugee Children Faces ‘Funding Cliff’
World October 14, 2025

Quick links

  • About Us
  • Our Awards
  • My Bookmarks

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Editor
Sadia J. Choudhury
Executive Editor
Shah J. Choudhury, Mubin Khan & Salman J. Choudhury
Member of Editor’s Board
Husneara Choudhury, Fauzia J. Choudhury, Santa Islam & DevRaj A. Nath.

A Ruposhi Bangla Entertainment Network

By

Office Address
New York Office:
70-52 Broadway 1A, Jackson Heights, NY-11372, United States.
Contact
Tel: +1 (718) 496-5000
Email: info@thegenerationus.com
newsthegeneration@gmail.com
The GenerationThe Generation
Follow US
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.