I said I’d do a thread on the Docs thread of alleged evidence supporting Bill C21 and it’s gun bans.
Here we go.
First, a vague 20 year old statement that I somewhat agree with. I support some gun laws that Canada has had for decades.
Their cited link takes us nowhere though.
Next they cited two Canadian studies on firearm legislation and suicide. Of special note: their links are just to the main page at NIH, not any actual study. Sloppy at best, incompetent more likely.
The first explored the after effects of Bill C-17 in 1991. It found firearm homicide and suicide rates fell after the bill.
It also reinforced the “displacement” phenomenon in Canada, where firearm suicides dropped, but overall suicides did not. The method of suicide changed.
Nothing in this paper is relevant to firearm bans or Bill C21 that I can see.
The second paper is more of the same. It found firearm suicides dropped after Bill C51, but that the suicides were displaced by other methods.
Again, zero to do with C21 here.
Next is something about Bill C68 saving 300 lives, but again their link is wrong. Honestly whoever did this thread is incompetent or drunk. (both?)
I managed to find the link with the Google machine:
It’s far from a peer reviewed study with solid findings. In fact, the 300 number comes after they discussed several studies, but used a citation to their own work to support the claim.
Even if it were true (it’s likely not), it also has no bearing on the discussion on C21.
Next is a study that, again, has no bearing on C21. I’ll just attach part of the abstract.
Usually their go-to paper, this 2016 paper does support good effective gun control measures like licensing and safe storage.
What does it say about assault weapon bans?
“In contrast, evidence suggests that laws restricting the sales of certain firearms are not associated with variations in all or firearm homicides.” Also check the screenshot.
Huh. Well that does help inform the discussion on C21, but against bans not for them.
Of course no discussion on gun bans is complete without mentioning Australia.
I recommend the below 3 papers (screenshots added in order):
Also of note, the two authors most cited for supporting the Australian NFA also lobbied the government for the NFA… a conflict of interest.
Also, even Public Safety Canada agrees there is no evidence supporting the NFA.
Holy cow… another broken link. How do they expect to be taken seriously?
Anywho, I know the paper they attempted to link. It looked at news reports to form the basis of how many mass shooting fatalities there’ve been in the US. Yes. Media reports as a dataset.
It wasn’t hard to find numbers contradicting the paper.
Regardless, here’s a study published in The Lancet that found an increased risk of firearm homicide during the US AWB. Add this to the paper posted 4 tweets above:
So of the 20 studies listed, only two support anything they call for in letters to ministers and interviews to the public. Those two studies found the US AWB was effective.
Those two are on shaky ground, as there’s plenty of research that contradicts it.
That includes several papers that used to be on their website, and were removed.
One paper that remains in the 20 completely contradicts the effectiveness of the AWB, having actually found an increase in firearm mortality associated with it. 🤷♂️
So in conclusion, the supporting evidence provided by the Docs just does not hold up the recommendations being made.
Just more strong evidence supporting laws we already have. There’s absolutely nothing indicating a handgun ban is necessary or evidence based.
Their previous page included dozens and dozens of papers and references, while the new website only had 20. I used the way back machine to find the previous pages, which had over 160 citations.
I had previously read and reviewed all of these (maybe a year and a half ago), and that’s where I found many papers actually contradicted the things the Docs stated to the public.
Only one or so papers previously posted supported gun bans, while several others did not.
To continue, Najma sources a study of gun legislation in Europe specifically Austria. The gun legislation found to be effective are laws we already have.
It also states Canada has a suicide switching phenomenon after new gun legislation
Last in this section is a link to a paper about US states and gun legislation.
Let me be clear. This is a massive red herring. Canada would rank at the top of the charts when these papers compare gun legislation and ownership in US States.
I address the commonly used phrase “more guns = more death” in the first few pages of this document I put together earlier. It’s a Google drive document so give it time to load: