At Townhall.com: The Push to Demonize Private Gun Ownership Never Stops

Apr 10, 2019 | Featured

Dr. John Lott has a new piece on how television shows are so biased against gun ownership. The piece starts this way.

The push to demonize private gun ownership never stops. Michael Bloomberg and other gun control advocates are continuing to pour hundreds of millions of dollars into research that the news media uncritically disseminates.

Entertainment television shows are no less one-sided.

Americans use guns defensively about 2 million times a year — about 5 times more frequently than guns are used to commit crimes. But don’t expect to see gun owners saving the day on television. Instead, gun owners are bigoted, hotheaded, and dangerous.

ABC’s The Rookie has a scene where an armed neighborhood watch group is patrolling its neighborhood. One man wears a red baseball cap and picks up a Hispanic-looking man who is trimming a hedge in his yard because he “looks guilty as hell to me.” The police arrive and tell the patrol members to put away their guns because protecting the neighborhood is a “job for law enforcement.”

CBS’s SWAT had a similar theme. After a hit-and-run driver injures gay men, and others are threatened, a gay “gun rights group” tries arming itself for protection (February 21, 2019, Season 2, episode 16). The police explain that the job of protecting people is their own, and that the gay men are just “amateurs.” Letting people defend themselves is described as “shooting up the streets.”

An April 1st episode of CBS’s Bull begins with a man shooting his wife in the back and then successfully persuading a jury that he thought that she was an intruder (Season 3, episode 18). The stereotypical Texan is also attacked as the jury is only too gullible to believe that the shooting was an accident. The show hits all the misleading rhetoric from gun control groups about spousal violence, and makes it look like anyone can just snap and kill someone else.

In a recent episode of Chicago PD, a criminal leaves a gun at a crime scene and the gun registration system allows the police to eventually trace the gun back to him (March 27, 2019, Season 6, episode 17). It is nice in theory, but reality never works this way. Registration is just a lazy way for writers to solve crimes, as we’ve seen for many years on NBC’s Law & Order.

In real life, crime guns are very rarely left at the scene of incidents, and the only exceptions occur when criminals have been seriously injured or killed. Also, crime guns are very rarely registered. In the exceedingly rare instances that they are, they aren’t registered to the person who committed the crime. That’s why police in Chicago, Hawaii, DC, Pennsylvania, or Canada can’t point to any crimes that have been solved as a result of registration.

In “The Rookie,” police discuss how valuable gun registration and gun buybacks are to making Los Angeles safer (January 21, 2019, Season 1, episode 11). PoliceOne, the largest private organization of police officers in the US, recently asked its 450,000 members, “Do you believe gun buyback or turn-in programs can be or have been effective in reducing the level of gun violence?” Only 11.2% of police answered “yes,” whereas 81.5% said “no.” In just a minute and a half, the program hit on people’s fears about guns, including the risks of having guns in homes with children.

In NBC’s Chicago MED, doctor Natalie (played by Torrey DeVitto) asks Will (Nick Gehlfuss) to move back in with her. But she has a condition: he must give up his handgun. Will’s handgun has been a major stumbling block in their relationship, and Natalie has frequently warned him about the dangers of owning a gun. This time, Will finally relents and promises to turn in his gun to the police. But Will fails to follow through and has his gun stolen shortly afterward. The criminal shoots a young man, seriously injuring him. . . .

The rest of the piece is available here.

johnrlott

2 Comments

  1. Tom Campbell

    Entertainment media want “to have their cake and eat it, too.” In this PC, anti-gun age, new shows try to act virtuous in convincing viewers of the dangers of gun ownership and use. Likewise, the acting community is over-populated with the most hypocritical people on this part of the Planet, pontificating on matters about which they have no clue and less knowledge. On the other hand, entertainment violence involving gun use still sells big time, all too often featuring the USA’S biggest hypocrites. The entire entertainment and gaming communities fail to acknowledge any role or responsibility in creating the environment for much of the violence we experience or read about.

  2. Michael Fallon

    More bias on CBS. NCIS episode on April 9th, has an eighteen year old active shooter at a Naval hospital. In an operating room, doctors and nurses hear gunfire, obviously in full automatic bursts, but not seen. Later the medical examiner character, Palmer states a witness unidentified the rifle as an AR-15. Two problems here. One, most eye witnesses, will say an automatic weapon, or black long gun. Most are not that familiar enough to know the difference. With the described “automatic fire,” heard in the operating room, an AR-15, is of course semiautomatic. Slip up by the writers, ignorance, or planned, to promote anti-gun bias?

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