- The US ranks within the 20 countries with the highest rates of gun-related deaths per 100,000 citizens, joining El Salvador, which is one of the world’s most violent places, and Afghanistan, which the Global Peace Index named 2019’s least peaceful country.
- Schools, police, and other institutions are increasingly militarizing their response to mass shootings to counter attackers carrying infantry-style, high-capacity weapons who may wear body armor.
- Active-shooter drills and armed guards in schools have been the response to mass shootings in public places, particularly schools and even day cares.
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Two more horrific mass shootings over the weekend again highlight the gun-related homicides plaguing the US. The problem is so severe, the data suggests, that US gun violence rates are comparable with those in failed states and war zones.
Data compiled by the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation for 2016 shows that the US ranked second in the total number of firearm-related deaths – only Brazil had more. Rounding out the top six were Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, and Guatemala, all of which have been plagued by drug- and gang-related violence or serious political instability. And the US ranks within the 20 countries with the highest rates of gun-related deaths, with 10.6 deaths per 100,000 citizens, joining El Salvador, which is one of the world’s most violent places, and Afghanistan, which the Global Peace Index named 2019’s least peaceful country.
While the US isn’t engaged in active conflict on its own soil, the type of gun violence that causes so much angst and gets so much attention in the US – mass shootings in public places – resembles violent conflict in war zones and failed states, as does the response to it.
Mass shooters often attack civilians, even children, with weapons designed to increase military lethality.
For example, the shooter who terrorized an El Paso, Texas, Walmart over the weekend was armed with a semiautomatic AK-47 variant, the WASR 10. The AK-47 was first used by the Soviet military, and its American cognate is the AR-15. According to The Trace, a manifesto believed to have been released by the shooting suspect also said he attempted to procure 8M3 ammunition, first developed by the Russian military, to enhance the lethality of his weapon. The attack killed 22 civilians as of this writing.
The shooter in Dayton, Ohio, carried an AR-15-style rifle, according to The Washington Post, as well as 100 additional ammunition rounds and body armor. He killed at least eight civilians.
The response to these incidents is becoming more militarized as well; day cares have active-shooter drills, including in their infant rooms. Children as young as 3 respond to active-shooter drills as well, the 21st century version of Cold War-era "duck and cover." And the researchers Frederick P. Rivara, David M. Studdert, and Garen J. Mintemute said in an editorial in the Journal of the American Medical Association "armed guards patrol some schools, and some politicians have advocated allowing teachers to carry guns." Not to mention that militarized police forces respond to all manner of incidents, including mass shootings, and are stocked with overflow gear, including AR-15s, and receive funds from the Department of Defense, The Washington Post reported.
"No other nation on Earth comes close to experiencing the frequency of mass shootings that we see in the United States," former President Barack Obama tweeted on Monday. "No other developed nation tolerates the levels of gun violence that we do."
While statistics regarding homicide by firearms in conflict zones are difficult to come by, the Geneva Declaration on Armed Violence and Development estimated that 90% of gun-related deaths actually occur outside conflict zones. In fact, only one designated conflict zone - Afghanistan - showed up in the data at all. Many other deaths occur in places like Guatemala and Mexico, where gang- and drug-related homicides are prevalent and governments are either powerless to stop them, or complicit in their persistence.
Gun violence is only one terrifying aspect of war zones. Violent deaths can also be caused by weapons like bombs, mines, and chemical agents, and, when factoring these in, these areas are often much more dangerous than the US. For example, more than 150 Syrians out of every 100,000 died a violent death in 2015, according to some estimates.