Local, national and world news stories of interest.
 #103082  by NCC
 
I read about this Pew survey in a blurb on some little known web site yesterday. I prefer to wait until something like this shows up on a older institution's web site before sharing it. That's just me.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/12/us/gu ... urvey.html

Two years after the mass school shooting in Newtown, Conn., a majority of Americans say it is more important to protect the right to own guns than for the government to limit access to firearms, a Pew Research Center survey released this week found.

The center said in a statement that it was the first time in two decades of its surveys on attitudes about firearms that a majority of Americans have expressed more support for gun-ownership rights than for gun control.

Fifty-two percent of respondents said it was more important to protect gun-ownership rights, while 46 percent said the priority should be controlled access to firearms.

In a 2000 Pew survey, 29 percent chose gun rights over gun control, and in a 2013 survey conducted a month after the Newtown shooting, 45 percent favored gun rights.

“To some extent, this is the continuation of a trend,” said Jocelyn Kiley, associate director for research at the Pew Research Center. “It may be that Newtown stunted that trend to some extent."

On Dec. 14, 2012, Adam Lanza, 20, fatally shot 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown before killing himself in one of the deadliest mass shootings in U.S. history.

The Pew poll on firearms, conducted in early December, also found that blacks have become increasingly likely to believe that firearm ownership does more to protect people than it does to threaten an individual’s safety, even as they continue to support gun-control measures.

When asked in 2012, 29 percent of African-Americans said guns offered people protection rather than exposed them to greater danger, but in this year’s survey, the number of blacks who viewed firearms as offering more personal safety nearly doubled, to 54 percent.

By contrast, the views of whites who believe guns are more likely to provide personal protection have changed more modestly — rising to 62 percent this year from 54 percent in 2012, the poll found.

Overall, 57 percent of Americans said gun ownership was more helpful in protecting people from becoming victims of crime, while 38 percent said it does more to endanger one’s safety.

But in the period immediate after Newtown, 48 percent had said firearms do more to protect people, while 37 percent had said guns put people at risk.