Good WSJ Article - Gun owners richer and happier than non-gun owners

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Slappy McGee

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Did a search and did not see this posted.

Trigger Happy
By ARTHUR C. BROOKS
April 19, 2008; Page A10

In words that he has come to regret, Barack Obama opined as to why he was having a hard time winning over many blue-collar voters: "They get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or antitrade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations."

It was a throwaway line to a private audience at a San Francisco fund-raiser. And it was made public on a liberal Internet blog, not by right-wing commentators. But Mr. Obama's opponents seized on the quote. It was evidence, they claimed, that he is "elitist," caricaturing middle Americans as gun-toting, immigrant-despising, religious rednecks – who are also deeply unhappy people. And as a contrite Mr. Obama admitted, "I am the first to admit that some of the words I chose, I chose badly."

The comment may or may not be an indication of Mr. Obama's real views about those ordinary Americans who've not enjoyed the full fruits of economic growth over the past decades. Yet his casual portrayal no doubt had heads nodding vigorously in assent among his supporters, and probably among many others.

That anybody would find this portrayal realistic illustrates how little some Americans know about their neighbors. And nothing reveals the truth better than the data on guns.

According to the 2006 General Social Survey, which has tracked gun ownership since 1973, 34% of American homes have guns in them. This statistic is sure to surprise many people in cities like San Francisco – as it did me when I first encountered it. (Growing up in Seattle, I knew nobody who owned a gun.)

Who are all these gun owners? Are they the uneducated poor, left behind? It turns out they have the same level of formal education as nongun owners, on average. Furthermore, they earn 32% more per year than nonowners. Americans with guns are neither a small nor downtrodden group.

Nor are they "bitter." In 2006, 36% of gun owners said they were "very happy," while 9% were "not too happy." Meanwhile, only 30% of people without guns were very happy, and 16% were not too happy.

In 1996, gun owners spent about 15% less of their time than nonowners feeling "outraged at something somebody had done." It's easy enough in certain precincts to caricature armed Americans as an angry and miserable fringe group. But it just isn't true. The data say that the people in the approximately 40 million American households with guns are generally happier than those people in households that don't have guns.

The gun-owning happiness gap exists on both sides of the political aisle. Gun-owning Republicans are more likely than nonowning Republicans to be very happy (46% to 37%). Democrats with guns are slightly likelier than Democrats without guns to be very happy as well (32% to 29%). Similarly, holding income constant, one still finds that gun owners are happiest.

Why are gun owners so happy? One plausible reason is a sense of self-reliance, in terms of self-defense or even in terms of the ability to hunt their own dinner.

Many studies over the years have shown that a belief in one's control over the environment dramatically adds to happiness. Example: a famous study of elderly nursing home patients in the 1970s. It showed dramatic improvements in life satisfaction from elements of control as seemingly insignificant as being able to care for one's plants.

A bit of evidence that self-reliance is at work among gun owners comes from the General Social Survey. It asked whether one agrees with the statement, "Those in need have to take care of themselves." In 2004, gun owners were 10 percentage points more likely than nonowners to agree (60% to 50%).

That response is not evidence that gun owners only care about themselves, however. In 2002, they were more likely to give money to charity than people without guns (83% to 75%). This charity gap doesn't reflect their somewhat higher incomes. Gun owners were also more likely to give in other ways, such as donating blood. Are gun owners unsentimental? In 2004, they were more likely than those without guns to strongly agree that they would "endure all things" for the one they loved (45% to 37%).

None of this is to dictate what gun policy should be in our nation and its communities, let alone whether gun owners deserve to be happier than those of us without firearms. Guns are an important area of debate about freedom and security, not to mention constitutionality. What we do know, however, is that contrary to the implication of Mr. Obama's comments, for many Americans, happiness often does indeed involve a warm gun.

Mr. Brooks, a professor at Syracuse University's Maxwell School and a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of the just-published "Gross National Happiness" (Basic Books).
 
I'd like to read the study. According to this editorial, the data shows a correlation between gun ownership and happiness and contentment. The study then goes on to claim that the gun ownership caused the happiness and contentment. It's interesting that the study found not just correlation, but causation between gun ownership and happiness and contentment. For example, what if people who have more money are more likely to have guns and also to be happy and content? Finding causation is tricky.

Great article. Thanks for posting it.

Edited to add: ClickClickD'oh has a more accurate read of it, probably. See below.
 
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While I agree that correlation does not equal causation, it would be interesting to see the numbers for Class III firearm owners and for people who hold concealed handgun licenses.

Happiness is a hot, smoking machine gun... :D
 
I'm happy knowing I have the tools and skills it would take to defend me and mine... the unenlightened sheeple will always have that nagging self doubt ..."Baaa-aaa What will I do if someone wants to hurt me baa-aaa?"
 
The study then goes on to claim that the gun ownership caused the happiness and contentment.
I read the article differently. To me it said that the result wasn't directly linked to the ownership of a firearm but was most likely because people likely to own a firearm were more likely to be self motivated, self reliant people.
 
Its been a long time falacy promoted by the main stream media that gun owners are redneck neanderthals that are uneducated, poor, and dangerous. Good for the WSJ for printing this article.
 
IMHO the statement about the "self reliant" attitude of gun owners is right on the money. In my experience we understand that we can't control things and that we are more inclined to be people who hope for the best but prepare for the worst. I have had anti's tell me that my gun would not "save" me, and they very well may be right, but if I am ever in the position then I plan to at least be able to put up a good argument on the matter.
 
if I am ever in the position then I plan to at least be able to put up a good argument on the matter.

Reminds me of one of my favorite lines from a song (an Irish pub song from the seventies or so):

"If you've been a man of action
though you're lying there in traction
you may gain some satisfaction
thinking, 'Jesus at least I tried.'"
 
I have a disturbing thing to add:

If 34% of people in the US own guns, and in 2005 there are 17002 suicides by gun (all of them gun owners), and 15635 non-firearm suicides, then firearm suicides would remove a proportionally larger unhappy bit of the gun owners than the non-gun owners.

So of course gun owners are happier. The unhappy ones successfully kill themselves at higher rates.
 
There's also the possibility that gun owners are more emotionally stabile and mature. Gun owners seem to be more likely to be ruled by logic rather than emotion.
 
Gun owners seem to be more likely to be ruled by logic rather than emotion.

heh

have you read any of the threads here? :D

if that were true, we wouldn't have all those AK threads :neener:
 
Come on, man. Not only is this political, which isn't allowed here anymore, it's been posted and locked THREE TIMES ALREADY.

Please, for the love of all that is good, can we stop posting political threads? Or at least not re-post the same ones over and over and over and over?
 
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