I haven't looked at the links provided, but I expect
this is quite right:
IWF's Gayle Trotter testified at today's Senate hearing on gun safety, and unsurprisingly claimed that guns make women safer. She apparently seems to believe most violence against women resembles Buffy the Vampire Slayer facing down a gang of vampires:
“Guns make women safer,” Trotter argued, because they
eliminate the advantage violent criminals might have in size and
strength. “Using a firearm with a magazine holding more than 10 rounds
of ammunition, a woman would have a fighting chance even against
multiple attackers.”
The conservative claim, made by Trotter, that guns are an "equalizer"
is about as serious a misrepresentation as you can muster when it comes
to violence against women. Most violence against women is perpetrated
by men the victim knows in situations that are intimate or social, where
guns aren't usually out. If someone during a domestic violence incident
scrambles for the gun, it's rarely going to be the person who doesn't want this situation to get more violent....
The fact of the matter is that more guns put women in danger. The Harvard Injury Control Research Center has found that states with more guns have more female violent deaths. Their research also found that batterers who owned guns liked to use them
to scare and control their victims, and would often use the gun to
threaten the victim, threaten her pets or loved ones, clean them
menacingly during arguments, or even fire them to scare her. The
Violence Policy Center's research showed that in 1998, the year they
studied, 83 women were killed by an intimate partner for every woman who used a gun in self-defense. Futures Without Violence compiled the statistics
and found that guns generally make domestic violence worse, both by
increasing the likelihood of murder and also by creating situations
where abuse is more violent, controlling, and traumatic.
People convicted of domestic violence aren't allowed to buy guns, a
sensible reaction to the realities of domestic violence and guns.
Unfortunately, the private sale loophole
makes it easy enough for a man who wants to stalk or control a woman to
get the weapon to do so. If Trotter were truly concerned about
preventing violence against women, she would be demanding an immediate
closure of this loophole that allows batterers to avoid background
checks when trying to buy guns. But she's too busy imagining that women
might have to fend off the zombie apocalypse to worry about the real
dangers that ordinary women face in this country every day.
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