Gallup Poll shows major trend toward pro-gun

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Feral Cowboy

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Is this the right thread?
This is really great news. Gallup Poll shows that almost a majority of Americans now favor less strict laws AND 68% of Americans OPPOSE banning the possession of handguns. 30% favor. This to me is great news and it says that all the good guys are winning. Gotta keep on keeping on.
Gallup really tried to make the headline anti favorable.
Will be interesting to see what (and if) the MSM has to say about it. They'' lie.


http://www.galluppoll.com/content/?ci=28978

October 11, 2007
Shrunken Majority Now Favors Stricter Gun Laws
Percentage favoring stricter gun laws has declined in recent years, while most still oppose handgun ban

by Lydia Saad

GALLUP NEWS SERVICE

PRINCETON, NJ -- The gap between the proportion of Americans advocating stricter gun laws and those in favor of maintaining or weakening existing gun laws -- once nearly 60 points in favor of stronger gun control, and registering 14 points a year ago -- is just four points in Gallup's latest poll. According to the Oct. 4-7, 2007, survey, 51% of Americans believe the laws governing the sale of firearms should be more strict. When combined, the percentages saying the laws should either be kept as they are or made less strict is nearly as high (47%).



In numerous measures of this question between 1990 and 2000, no fewer than 60% of Americans favored the "more strict" option, producing a consistently sizeable gap in favor of the more gun-control oriented position.

There was a significant change in October 2001, one month after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In that survey, the percentage favoring stricter gun laws fell to 53%, narrowing the gap between this view and those favoring the status quo or weaker laws to only 7 points. This gap remained low in 2002, but then subsequently swelled to double digits for most of the period from 2003 to 2006, only shrinking again to this year's 4 points. Given that the country is entering a national election year, a time when gun control issues would normally be expected to be debated, the latest results are a notable reversal.



Various localities around the country, including Washington, D.C., have passed bans on the possession of handguns by ordinary citizens. However, since 1975, Gallup has found a solid majority of Americans disagreeing with laws. And, public opposition has expanded in recent years. The current 68% saying handguns should not be banned is similar to the 66% last year, but significantly higher than the 50% in 1987.



Americans' opposition to aggressive gun control is further evident in a question eliciting their attitude about the need to pass new gun laws. Gallup asked respondents whether they would prefer to see the United States enforce current gun laws more strictly and not pass new gun laws, or pass new gun laws in addition to enforcing current laws more strictly. A solid majority of Americans (58%) opt for focusing exclusively on better enforcement of existing laws -- a position similar to that advocated by the National Rifle Association.



A Divisive Issue

Public attitudes on gun laws are far from homogenous. There are sharp differences in support for stricter gun control according to gender, race, region of the country, political ideology, and party identification. Attitudes are also sharply different between gun owners and non-gun owners -- a distinction that, to some degree, overlaps with gender and party ID.

As seen in the accompanying table, a majority of men favor keeping gun laws as they are or making them less strict, while a majority of women favor making them stricter. Whites are closely split over the question, while a solid majority of nonwhites favor stricter laws. A majority of residents in the East and West favor stricter laws, while about half of those in the Midwest and South hold the alternate views. Compared with those in urban and suburban areas, residents of rural areas are also less in favor of stricter laws. Two-thirds of Democrats favor stricter gun laws, while a majority of Republicans and independents would rather they remain as they are or become less strict. Three-quarters of gun owners take one of the two more lenient positions on gun laws, while nearly as many non-gun owners favor stricter laws.


Gun control has not surfaced as a major -- or even a minor -- issue thus far in the 2008 presidential campaign. The most that's been said is that the issue is hardly even being debated. The Gallup trends reviewed help to explain why. With public support for stricter gun laws waning after 9/11, the political climate for championing gun control is indeed different from when the Brady Bill was passed in 1993. Although half of Americans do say they favor stricter gun laws today, this is well below the 70% found in 1993. And when public attitudes about banning guns and enforcement are probed, there appears to be even less public demand for gun control.
 
Thank the internet.

Now that we have a media channel which can carry opposing viewpoints as well as the supporting arguments behind them, our standpoint suddenly makes a lot of sense.
 
Anyone read Reason magazine?
It's not just guns. . .
America is MUCH more Libertarian on a number of issues.
Thank God.
 
60% of gun owners want to keep the current level of gun control?!?!?!

I'm saddened. Where's the "gunnies for gun-control" thread? I didn't realize the huge numbers.
 
All the liberals I know have a gun they don't want you or anyone else to know about. If the Democrats stopped talking about gun restrictions, and the Republicans stopped playing the moral high-ground game (especially with all the closet queens / toilet stall toe tappers in their party) we might be able to get together on a few of the more important issues, like reverting "The" United States back to "These" United States and behaving more like the Republic we were established as instead of the quasi-Democracy we haven't become. I feel that both sides are pretty disgusted with their respective parties mainly because no one is getting an answer anymore, just spin. Americans are sick of the spin.
 
All the defeatists on this board should see polls like this.

I get so sick and tired of members here talking about how in 10, 15 or 20 years we'll be like England, and it'll be 1984 and all that. Can you say self-fulfilling prophecy?

/rant
 
We still have blacks, women, east coasters, west coasters, and Democrats as solidly in favor of more gun control. (I read non white minorities as blacks. I guess the 20 million illegal Mexicans would also be in here as well)

I say good trend; but, holy moly! there are still a lot of people to reach out to and educate.

cavman
 
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