That spawned such asinine headlines as:
- One youth shot almost every day in Ontario, study finds – Globe and Mail
- 1 child or youth injured by gunfire nearly every day in Ontario, pediatricians find – CBC
- Despite Stringent Gun Control, One ‘Child or Youth’ Shot Every Day in Ontario – Breitbart.co
A CBC News promo clip screeched,
- “Tonight! Guns in the Home! Shocking statistics reveal that nearly every day injuries are caused by youths with access to guns and many are not accidental!”
The CBC promo clip cuts to one of the researchers, who says, “When I first saw the total number of injuries it was staggering,” before ending with “Learn more tonight, only on the National at 9 and 11!”
- child means a person who is or, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, appears to be less than twelve years old;
- young person means a person who is or, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, appears to be twelve years old or older, but less than eighteen years old;
- adult means a person who is neither a young person nor a child.
In other words, adults are anyone 18 years of age or older. You cannot compare a 24-year-old gang member and criminal with a 7-year-old child and say you’re talking about the same issue. That is absurd.
So why did this study’s researchers include seven years of adult statistics in their study of children and youth firearm injuries?
The answer is a simple as it is deceitful: They started with a preconceived conclusion and kept raising the age of those included until they could “prove” their desired result.
Fake news. Fake researchers too.
Honest researchers with integrity would ask the question and see what conclusion the evidence supports. These people started with their conclusion (guns are bad and hurt children) and kept falsifying the data until it “proved” their preconceived notion.
That’s not research. That’s propaganda. And the media party gleefully spread the fake news.
At no point do the researchers explain what parameters they used to define a gun.
The Ontario Court of Appeal, in R. v. Dunn, determined a firearm is any barrelled device capable of firing a projectile over 214 feet per second. “Barrelled objects shooting a projectile with a velocity of more than 214 ft./s. (or 246 ft./s., using the V50 standard) are firearms, because they are capable of causing serious injury or death…”
Is that the standard used by the researchers? We have no idea. They never say.
At no point do the researchers explain what they considered an “injury.” Did the person cut themselves? Did they drop a firearm on their foot? Did they shoot themselves? We have no idea.
We do know, however, the number one cause of hunting injuries is falling.
If a 21-year-old hunter fell down and broke his leg while carrying a rifle, is he considered part of this study? Good question.
What the study does tell us clearly, in Figure 1, is refugees from Africa and Central America have the highest rates of accidental and assault-related firearm injuries. That same table shows the longer African and Central American refugees are in Canada, the more likely they are to be shot, accidentally or otherwise. This is described in the study’s abstract like this:
The Canadian Paediatric Society possessed rare courage when it revealed “…of all firearm deaths among 15- to 24-year-olds, 94% were in males.”
Criminal gang members, for the most part, although nobody wants to say that out loud.
The Canadian Paediatric Society went on to say,
Shades of the thoroughly discredited Kellerman study! While demonizing guns and gun owners, The Canadian Paediatric Society also expressed stunning ignorance of Canadian gun laws.
Hmmm – First day on the planet? So, can we look forward to a recommendation from our new Firearms Advisory Committee that guns be removed from families with children? Let’s hope the stupid basket doesn’t get that far.
References:
Risk of firearm injuries among children and youth of immigrant families, CMAJ 2017 March 27;189:E452-8. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.160850: http://www.cmaj.ca/content/189/12/E452.full
Youth Criminal Justice Act: http://www.laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/Y-1.5/FullText.html
R. v. Dunn: https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onca/doc/2013/2013onca539/2013onca539.html
Canadian Paediatric Society Position Statement: http://www.cps.ca/en/documents/position/youth-and-firearms
Questions Nobody Asks After Mass Murder With A Firearm