A new study documents what the researchers call “gun culture 3.0,” a third mentality to accompany recreational use and self-defense.
This third mentality is made up of people who view the defense of the Second Amendment as necessary to freedom in the United States.
The study, which Boston University School of Public Health researchers led, finds that this “gun culture 3.0” has increased the most in states that have strengthened their gun laws to the greatest degree, suggesting that perceived threats on individual liberty by the government may trigger it.
“No longer can we speak about gun culture as if it is a single entity.”
“The NRA [National Rifle Association] has been spreading insurrectionist rhetoric for the past few decades, undermining Americans’ trust in their legislators and the federal government, while passing for a patriotic organization,” says lead author Claire Boine, a research scholar in community health sciences. “The result is a few million people who are convinced that any genuine firearm violence prevention effort is the first step in a scheme to take away all of their rights and disenfranchise them.”
Using data on gun-related behaviors, including hunting, NRA membership, gun-related magazine subscriptions, handgun and long gun purchases, and certain gun laws, the researchers discovered that American gun owners vary widely in the symbolic meaning they find in firearms and how they use them. Over the last 20 years, at the national level, firearm recreation has dwindled and self-defense has expanded, while a distinct subculture of Second Amendment political advocacy has sprung up, the researchers find.
They also identified wide variation between states. Certain states, such as New York and Massachusetts, have very low recreational and self-defense gun cultures but very high Second Amendment activism. In contrast, states such as South Dakota have high recreational and self-defense cultures and low Second Amendment activism. Other states, such as Florida, have a high degree of self-defense gun culture and a lesser degree of recreational and Second Amendment gun culture.
“No longer can we speak about gun culture as if it is a single entity. There are positive aspects to gun culture that bring recreation, enjoyment, or a feeling of security to many people, and there are also some negative elements,” says Michael Siegel, a professor of community health sciences and coauthor of the study in the journal Humanities and Social Sciences Communications.
The researchers found more emphasis on recreation in politically conservative states with large rural areas, little racial diversity, and few firearm regulations, while emphasis on self-defense is more common in politically conservative states that have enacted few new firearm laws in the last 20 years, have large rural areas, and are experiencing higher unemployment levels.
The Second Amendment-focused gun subculture is most common in liberal states—states where more of the population lives in an urban setting or is Hispanic, and states with stronger firearm regulations.
The researchers explain that the study shows only a marginal part of American gun culture is political, and the ability to measure gun culture empirically, as demonstrated by this study, will help better account for this variation in future studies of how gun policy affects gun use and violence.
“Those of us in public health must acknowledge the positive aspects of that culture and stop blaming law-abiding gun owners for the problem of firearm violence,” Siegel says. “Instead, we need to address one very specific aspect of gun culture that the NRA has created that does not represent the overwhelming number of gun owners in this country.”
Coauthors are from Boston University, Harvard Medical School, and Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation supported the work.
Source: Boston University