Monday, July 30, 2018

Firearms, lethality, and politically correct surveys


I'm annoyed by the silliness of a recent JAMA article titled "The Association of Firearm Caliber With Likelihood of Death From Gunshot Injury in Criminal Assaults".  Its statement of "meaning" reads:

The findings are foundational to the debate over whether deadly weapons should be better regulated and provide evidence against the common view that whether the victim lives or dies is determined largely by the assailant’s intent and not the type of weapon.

Words in italics are my emphasis.

Frankly, I'd never heard of the "common view" that the article reports.  As far as I'm concerned, the "assailant's intent" is demonstrated pretty conclusively by the fact that he/she shot someone!  I somehow don't see gunfire as an invitation to join the attacker in a non-violent, socially neutral game of tiddlywinks!  Of course, I could be wrong about that . . . I mustn't make assumptions about the customs of other social groups, after all.  That would verge on cultural appropriation, and we can't have that, can we?

Be that as it may, caliber of weapon is obviously a factor in the injuries caused.  The Washington Post summarizes the JAMA article's findings as follows:

Analyzing data on hundreds of shootings in Boston from 2010 to 2014, Anthony Braga of Northeastern University and Philip J. Cook of Duke University found that on a bullet-per-bullet basis, shootings committed with a large-caliber firearm are much more likely to result in a fatality than those with a smaller-caliber gun. Caliber is a measure of the diameter of the bullets fired by a particular gun.

. . .

“Most gunshot victims and survivors were young minority men with prior court arraignments,” Braga and Cook found. “Most attacks occurred in circumstances where gangs or drugs played an important role.” Most occurred outdoors in disadvantaged neighborhoods.

But they found stark differences in shooting outcomes depending on the caliber of gun used.

. . .

They ... found that all else being equal, a person shot with a medium-caliber weapon, such as a common 9mm handgun, were roughly 2.3 times as likely to die of their wounds than someone shot with a small-caliber gun. Large-caliber gunshots were even deadlier, resulting in odds of death 4.5 times that of small-caliber gunshots.

“The implication,” they write, “is that if the medium- and large-caliber guns had been replaced with small caliber (assuming everything else unchanged) the result would have been a 39.5% reduction in gun homicides” in Boston during the study period.

The results undercut the idea that “guns don’t kill people, people kill people.”

. . .

... the JAMA study challenges that notion. Some guns are simply manufactured to be more lethal than others. It suggests that identical shooters with identical intent would kill fewer people if they had access only to less powerful firearms.

“The probability of death is connected to the intrinsic power and lethality of the weapon,” Braga and Cook write. “That suggests that effective regulation of firearms could reduce the homicide rate.”

There's more at the link.

The probability of death has little or nothing to do with the caliber of the weapon, and everything to do with where the bullet strikes the victim.  If I'm shot in the foot with a .44 Magnum, I'm going to be hurt and annoyed, but in almost zero danger of death (except, perhaps, from post-injury infection and poor medical care).  On the other hand, if I'm shot in the brain stem with a lowly .22LR, I'm very likely to die on the spot or soon thereafter.  Hits to the major components of the circulatory system (heart and/or major blood vessels) and/or the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) almost always produce the most serious, if not fatal, injuries.  Hits to other organs and/or body parts may or may not be fatal, but are much less likely to be so, given prompt medical attention.

Nevertheless, if it's fired with reasonable accuracy at a damaging point of aim, a larger-caliber round is more likely to cause damage to vital organs, because it disrupts more flesh and causes a greater wound cavity.  That's why, for literally generations, shooters have known that a larger-caliber handgun round such as a .45 is more likely to cause disabling or lethal injury to a victim than a smaller-diameter round.  (See, for example, the famous Thompson-LaGarde tests of 1904, which followed painful US experience during the Moro Rebellion, where smaller-caliber handguns proved ineffective against fanatical attackers, leading to the reintroduction of older .45 revolvers to deal with the problem.)  It's also why modern smaller-diameter rounds are most commonly used for defensive purposes in expanding bullet form, so that, for example, a 9mm. hollow-point bullet of 0.355" unfired diameter will expand in human flesh to between 0.45" and 0.60" - a greater diameter than an unfired .45 caliber bullet.  Hence, the smaller bullet's capacity to injure is increased, as well as the likelihood that it will remain within the body of its target, rather than over-penetrate to threaten innocent bystanders beyond him/her.

There's also the factor that a larger, heavier bullet will have greater momentum than a smaller, lighter bullet, which will allow it to penetrate deeper and injure tissues and organs further inside the body.  We discussed bullet momentum in an earlier study.

However, the report's conclusion ignores an obvious reality.  Sure, the use of minor-caliber (i.e. small-diameter) bullets is likely to prove less lethal than their bigger cousins.  However, they are also less likely to succeed in stopping a determined attacker, making self-defense more problematic.  If I have to defend myself against a criminal assault, I want the best possible chance to shut down the attacker before he kills or injures me or my loved ones.  Why should I be handicapped by being forced to use less effective firearms and ammunition?  I didn't set out to kill or injure the attacker - he set out to kill or injure me or my family.  If my larger-caliber bullets give me a better chance for survival by causing more harm to him, up to and including killing him, surely that's his fault and his problem, not mine?

That's what happens when you concentrate on only one aspect of a problem, or approach it with a blinkered ideological perspective.  If you start from the premise that guns are bad/evil, you'll come up with findings to render them less bad or evil, even if that means putting innocent persons and/or law enforcement officers at greater risk.

Sorry.  Not buying it . . . and I'm going to keep on carrying a .45 whenever possible, thank you very much!  When I can't, you can bet my lesser-caliber handguns will be loaded with hollow-point ammunition, to emulate the performance of larger-caliber rounds as far as possible.  I feel safer that way - even if anyone who attacks me might not share that feeling.

Peter

12 comments:

  1. Good grief.

    Look folks, if I hit you with a big rock instead of a little rock, it's going to hurt more.

    The idea that some apparently low IQ citizens need a study to realize that is a sure sign intelligence is fast becoming a vanishing asset.

    Did some of our tax money funded that inane report?

    in·ane:

    iˈnān/Submit
    adjective
    silly; stupid.
    "don't constantly badger people with inane reports"

    synonyms: silly, foolish, stupid, fatuous, idiotic, ridiculous, ludicrous, absurd, senseless, asinine, frivolous, vapid

    I need some fresh air.

    ReplyDelete
  2. “Most gunshot victims and survivors were young minority men with prior court arraignments,” Braga and Cook found. “Most attacks occurred in circumstances where gangs or drugs played an important role.” Most occurred outdoors in disadvantaged neighborhoods.

    And yet their focus is on reducing lethality.

    If their goal is reducing overall lethal violence via policy, they might look at drug legalization or anti-gang enforcement, or border control. But no, it's the big evil guns that are the problem.

    Sheesh. And people wonder why I don't respect doctors.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Just ignore all the prior circumstances-I'm not sayin' it's the bullet.
    But...it's the bullet.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It's rather worse than your summary.

    Their conclusion is based on caliber, but their groupings are odd. Like the group a 7.62x39 rifle round with a .45 ACP, despite the first being .30 caliber. There are more absurdities in there. Miguel at Gun Free Zone has a better fisking of the study Here.

    It's just the worst kind of junk science.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I'll load my heavy , large caliber, flat nosed bullets around the homestead because the most likely threat is a bear. I switch to hollow points when I go to town. By the way I seem to remember reading that the .38 special didn't work too well on stopping the Moro because they tended to be drugged up. All the more reason to carry an effective round in a drug ridden city.

    ReplyDelete
  6. As folks who read blogs like yours know, a good shot with a .22 will probably kill more people than a bad shot with a .44. Bigger is better, but shot placement is everything.

    ReplyDelete
  7. The .38 special was introduced in 1898 in response to the failures of performance with the .38 Long Colt experienced by the U.S. Army in the Moro insurrection. At that point in time black powder was still the common propellant for cartridges so it was practically impossible to achieve supersonic velocities in a handgun.
    The Thompson-LaGarde tests conducted on live animals and human cadavers resulted in a determination that for military purposes a handgun caliber of .45 was the most effective. Thus the recommendation that a new cartridge be developed in that caliber suitable for a semi automatic firearm. Fortunately John M. Browning was at the peak of his career at the time and developed the .45 acp cartridge along with a prototype handgun which after military trials was transformed into the 1911 pistol.
    Regarding hollow point bullets, which are standard issue for law enforcement other than our military, not only do they offer superior stopping power, but they reduce the danger of through and through shots that endanger innocent bystanders behind the target.

    ReplyDelete
  8. The only reason I haven't pulled the trigger (so to speak) on a Maxim 9 is that I keep hoping against hope that they'll make a Maxim 45 some time soon.

    ReplyDelete
  9. So, ah, a study proves that bigger, more powerful handguns kill better than weak, less powerful guns?

    Why, it's almost like the gun designers purposely designed bigger, more powerful guns in order to... kill better.

    Oh, my, the vapors, I must (looks for a convenient couch) feel faint (right hand to the forehead, artful plop on couch after making sure nothings in the way...)

    Okay, what's next? One is most likely to die in a small car when small car impacts semi?

    Eating glass shards is bad for you?

    The stupid, it burns...

    ReplyDelete
  10. So, using their logic- an AR-15 is less lethal than a .38SPL?

    So the next time some gun grabber starts talking about banning AR's- we can point to this article and say they're not "that" deadly :-)

    ReplyDelete
  11. If you substitute 22 caliber, with 45 caliber; and 45 caliber with 155 howitzer, the ridiculous nature of this study becomes even more apparent.

    ReplyDelete
  12. " . . . a larger-caliber round is more likely to cause damage to vital organs,. . . "

    Like the Hammond B3. We can't afford damage to any of them; they don't make 'em anymore.

    ReplyDelete

ALL COMMENTS ARE MODERATED. THEY WILL APPEAR AFTER OWNER APPROVAL, WHICH MAY BE DELAYED.