If the general public relies entirely on the main stream media as it's only source of information, they will never have the proper tools to make rational decisions to debate the financial or social problems that confront us today. Lacking the access to information for daily living limits the individuals ability to confront the 'facts' that are produced by the media as being less then accurate.
As this article points out the 'facts', 40% of gun sales do not have back ground checks are managed to meet the needs of an agenda, they do not represent the truth. But then it's not about the truth for progressives, it's really about controlling outcomes by any means necessary.
Dispelling a Common Gun-Control Myth
February 1, 2013
Source: John Lott, "The '40 Percent' Myth," National Review, January 29, 2013.
Gun-control advocates in the wake of the Sandyhook school shooting have used a particular statistic over and over again: "As many as 40 percent of guns are purchased without a background check." While President Obama, Vice President Biden, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, USA Today and many others have used the "fact" repeatedly, it is false, says economist John Lott in the National Review.
- The Brady Act requires background checks to prevent someone from buying a gun from a federally licensed dealer if he or she has a felony, some misdemeanor convictions or has been involuntarily committed for mental illness. Before the Brady Act, simply a waiver needed to be signed.
- The "40 percent" claim misrepresents the actual number that was reported -- 36 percent -- which is still almost 25 percent above the accurate number, says Lott.
- The number 36 percent actually comes from a Clinton-era survey of 251 gun sales that occurred before the Brady Act required mandatory background checks. The survey asked buyers if they thought they were buying from a licensed dealer; many buyers who did not believe the seller was licensed actually bought from small dealers and did not know they were licensed.
- President Obama claimed that background checks have kept 1.5 million people from purchasing a weapon in the last 14 years but failed to explain that number reflected only initial denials.
- According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, 94 percent of those initial denials were dropped after preliminary reviews, almost all of the rest were dropped after extended reviews and only 62 people, or just 0.1 percent, were prosecuted for attempting to purchase a weapon.
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