National Geographic TV Takes Aim At Your Guns




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I did a little research on the states calling for a Constitutional Convention (Con Con) and the legislation in Ohio to support a Con Con (two cons because it is such a bad idea). But I received the email below from the Gun Owners of America (GOA) regarding the National Geographic Channel’s airing the program, “Gun in America”, last night. Of course it was totally biased and we must call Nat Geo on this fact. Do not let them get away with airing this tripe, or you will lose your guns.

Oh, BTW, Ohio has decided to not bring the call for a Con Con out of committee this year. But it will be back and where else is this type of legislation being considered? More on this tomorrow.

Here is the email I received via GOA re: Nat Gen’s misrepresentation of your right to keep and bear arms. Fight them on this, regardless on how much you like some of their other programming. Remember, innocent minds see this crap, it takes root, and another anti-gunner is generated. Of course, that is their intent.

From a Gun Owners of America E-Mail Alert dated 12/17/2008:

NGNational Geographic Channel ran a show last night entitled, “Gun In America.” According to the program, there are millions of misguided gun owners across the nation. Why? Because your guns are supposedly more likely to harm you than to help you in an emergency.

“As a society, we’re totally out of control with weapons,” said one Philadelphia cop who was interviewed during the show. “You need to limit access that people have to these type of firearms.”

That was the basic thrust of the program. National Geographic recited the usual worn-out factoids that are peddled by the Brady Campaign. It only cited anti-gun cops. And for every person who was filmed stating he or she believed in a right to own firearms for self-defense, the program would cite “facts” to prove that such a hope was misplaced.

Gun owners should let the President and CEO of National Geographic know that the channel should stick to showing pictures of kangaroos and foliage — images that we normally attribute to National Geographic’s magazine — and keep his personal, anti-gun views to his private conversations around the Christmas dinner table.

The National Geographic Channel presents itself as an educational, unbiased alternative. But “Guns in America” was hardly unbiased, as can be seen by the following agenda items that were pushed during the program:

1. “Guns in America” would have you believe that the guns in your home are 22 times more likely to kill a family member than to protect you. This statistic can (surprise, surprise!) be found on the Brady Campaign website, but its source has been highly discredited. The factoid originates with Arthur Kellerman, who has generated multiple studies claiming that guns are a net liability.(1) But Kellerman has been found guilty of fudging his data, and even the National Academy of Sciences has stated that his “conclusions do not seem to follow” from his data.(2)

The truth of the matter is actually quite encouraging for gun owners. Anti-gun researchers for the Clinton Justice Department found that guns are used 1.5 million times annually for self-defense, which means that each year, firearms are used more than 50 times more often
to protect the lives of honest citizens than to take lives.(3)

Isn’t that strange? You would think anti-gunners wouldn’t mind citing a study that was commissioned by the Clinton Justice Department! Apparently, the results of the study didn’t fit their agenda.

2. “Guns in America” overstates the number of children who die by unintentional gunfire. The program would have viewers believe that a child dies by accidental gunfire, once every two days. But you can only reach that figure if you count violent-prone teens as “children.”

In fact, when you look at the statistics involving younger children (ages 0-14), you see that kids have a greater chance of dying from choking on things like the peanut butter and jelly sandwiches that you feed them.(4) Hmm, why doesn’t National Geographic want to report on those killer peanuts?

3. “Guns in America” portrays twelve times as many negative uses of guns as positive uses — even though in the real world, the truth is quite the opposite (as guns are used at least 50 times more often to save life than take life). The program does start with a dramatization of a legitimate self-defense story with an actual 911 call playing in the background. But after that, every dramatization is about drive-by-shootings or cops being shot or gang-related warfare.

The lesson for the viewer is: Guns are bad.

4. “Guns in America” only quotes anti-gun “authorities,” thus leaving the impression that all law-enforcement support gun control. Never mind the fact that when one looks at polls of the police community, they overwhelmingly hold pro-gun attitudes:

* Should any law-abiding citizen be able to purchase a firearm for sport or self defense? — 93% of law-enforcement said yes.(5)

* Do you believe law-abiding citizens should be limited to the purchase of no more than one firearm per month? — 70.1% of law-enforcement said no.(6)

* Do you agree that a national concealed handgun permit would reduce rates of violent crime as recent studies in some states have already reflected? — 68.2% of law-enforcement said yes.(7)

It’s bad enough that a liberal teacher’s union controls the education of our kids in the public schools, and that many of them are being brainwashed with politically correct thinking. We don’t need supposedly neutral programs like National Geographic peddling the Brady Campaign’s favorite factoids to an unsuspecting public.

ACTION: Please contact Tim T. Kelly, the President and CEO of National Geographic Ventures (which includes their television division), and urge him to steer the NatGeo channel away from politics. If the National Geographic Channel can’t run a balanced program — where they use real statistics — then they just need to stick to filming those cute little animals that helped make their magazine so famous.

You can go to http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/channel/contact to cut-and-paste the sample letter below into their webform. Since you will need to select a Topic, please choose “I have a complaint.” And for “Department,” we would suggest selecting “Factual Questions”
or “General.”

—- Pre-written letter —-

Dear Mr. Kelly:

I will think twice before ordering the National Geographic magazine, because I don’t want to help you fund any more anti-gun propaganda. Your Explorer show entitled “Guns In America” — which has run several times this month — was heavily slanted to the gun control position. The show used fallacious statistics without rebutting them, all in an effort to demonize firearms.

For example, “Guns in America” falsely claimed that guns in the home are 22 times more likely to kill a family member than to serve as protection. That is simply not true. The author of this study,
Arthur Kellerman, has been discredited many times (by groups such as the National Academy of Sciences), so it’s shameful that your channel would even cite his work.

Second, “Guns in America” overstates the number of children who die by unintentional gunfire. In fact, when you look at the statistics involving younger children (ages 0-14), you see that kids have a greater chance of dying from choking on things like the peanut butter and jelly sandwiches that you feed them. Can I expect to see a show in the near future highlighting the danger of feeding children?

Third, “Guns in America” portrays twelve times as many negative uses of guns as positive uses — even though in the real world, the truth is quite the opposite. According to statistics from the Clinton Justice Department in 2007, guns are used at least 50 times more often to save life than take life.

Finally, “Guns in America” only quotes anti-gun “authorities,” thus leaving the impression that all law-enforcement support gun control. Never mind the fact that when one looks at polls of the police community, they overwhelmingly hold pro-gun attitudes. (Please see the poll results on the website for the National Association of Chiefs of Police.) Why were none of these authorities ever cited?

The National Geographic Society’s purpose is “to increase and diffuse geographic knowledge while promoting the conservation of the world’s cultural, historical, and natural resources.” I would submit to you that pushing gun control is far afield from your stated purpose.

Sincerely,

Your Name

ENDNOTES:

(1) Arthur Kellerman has generated multiple studies that claim gun owners are more likely to be injured by their guns than to use those guns in self-defense. His results range from 3 to 22 to 43 times more likely to be injured by a gun in the home. His methodology has been debunked, however, many times over. (See endnote 2.)

(2) See http://www.gunowners.org/sk0701.htm . Also, see Charles F. Wellford, John Pepper, Carol Petrie, Firearms and Violence: A Critical Review (National Research Council of the National Academies, 2004), p. 118.

(3) See http://www.gunowners.org/sk0802.htm

(4) See “Children Accidental Death Rates (Ages 0-14),” Gun Control Fact Sheet (2004) at http://www.gunowners.org/fs0404.htm

(5) National Association of Chiefs of Police, 20th Annual Survey Results (Survey questions sent to Chiefs of Police and Sheriffs in the United States: 2008).

(6) National Association of Chiefs of Police, 15th Annual Survey Results (Survey questions sent to Chiefs of Police and Sheriffs in the United States).

(7) Ibid.

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The image used in this post was obtained from HERE and is basically unaltered. This article, excluding the material cited or the material which is included herein but written by other authors or material covered by other copyrights, is copyright © 2008, by Gary Shumway. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce and distribute it electronically and in print, other than as part of a book and provided that mention of the author’s web site www.redpills.org is included. (Email notification is requested.) All other rights reserved.
Gary Shumway is the author of Winging Through America and SCUBA Scoop.

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2 Responses to “National Geographic TV Takes Aim At Your Guns”

  1. Jerry Frady says:

    I instinctively knew that the main things I liked about National Geographic were the colorful photos and the maps. I also knew its
    philosophical basis always has been atheistic and evolutionarian. So I cherry-picked the two
    items which provided me information consistent
    with my Christian worldview. But now “the sour
    cream” has risen to the top as the thorough-going materialists have made the leap from “no
    god” to “playing gods themselves.” They who
    have staked their reputations on Darwinian
    evolutionary theory have suddenly and despotically catapulted themselves into the
    position of “the judges of the rest of all mankind,” possessing infinite wisdom about societal, law and order issues, expecially
    gun control. I must confess I have been unable
    to garner any evidence that those “god-playing
    pretenders” possess any significant special knowledge and skills in that regard. Too, I see their audacious attempt to eliminate or to limit our Second Amendment Right to Self Defense as merely “Wrong Replicating Itself.” Since they are wrong about where we came from, can we truly expect them to be correct about
    anything else that really matters? Note the
    recent “atheistic activists” attempt to
    denigrate the Christmas Creche in the Washington State Capitol. Remember, if they are
    brazen enough to dishonor Christ, they will also decimate the First Amendment if we are craven enough to let them. I trust those of us who believe in the Second Amendment will band together and fight to preserve all of our freedoms. One last thought. The atheist and the communist are both thorough-going materialsts to whom “nothing is sacred.”

  2. Gary Shumway says:

    Jerry,
    Thank you for your comment.
    It is interesting that those who do not believe in God are often those who do not believe in the God given right of the individual to defend themselves. You suppose they are setting themselves up as judge and jury?
    Gary

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