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America's new gun heartland

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Mon, Aug 5, 2024 11:00 AM

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Plus: The man behind Project 2025, an Antarctic heat wave, and more. August 5, 2024 Welcome to a new

Plus: The man behind Project 2025, an Antarctic heat wave, and more. August 5, 2024 [View in browser]( Welcome to a new week! Today, I have a piece for you all about guns. It's written by Marin Cogan and is a reflective look at a larger work she's created that's [on Vox.com right now](. When you have a chance, please give that a read, but for now, enjoy today's newsletter. —Caroline Houck, senior editor of news   [a group of people attend a concealed-carry class] Sebastián Hidalgo for Vox The new face of gun ownership Did you know that [one in 20 American adults]( bought a gun for the first time during the pandemic? For the last several months, whenever someone asked what I was working on, I couldn't help but respond with that question. Earlier this spring, I spent several weeks talking to experts and digging through the available data about gun ownership in the United States. I learned from [one recent survey]( of new first-time gun buyers that 50 percent were women, 20 percent were Black, and 20 percent were Hispanic — a pronounced shift from previous gun owners, who are mostly white men. What drove so many people to decide they needed a gun for the first time? And what would be the implications of so many additional people deciding they needed to arm themselves, in a country already awash in guns? [Seen from behind, a Black man wearing a bullet proof vest reading FIREARMS INSTRUCTOR stands next to a woman shooting at a target on an indoor firing range.] Sebastián Hidalgo for Vox To really understand what was motivating people to buy their first guns, I traveled to Chicago, a city experiencing a notable rise in gun ownership, and spent a weekend attending a concealed carry course on the South Side. In the evenings, I met with a separate group of women, most of them gun owners, to hear about their experiences with firearms. What emerged was a picture of a city — and country — that was still reeling from the major breakdown of institutions during the pandemic. The United States experienced a [precipitous rise in gun violence]( in 2020 and 2021, but the danger wasn't shared equally. It was highly concentrated in specific neighborhoods that were already struggling with violent crime, exacerbating what the sociologist Patrick Sharkey [refers to]( as "the rigid geography of violence.” The [sharpest increase in gun deaths]( was experienced by Black boys and men ages 10–44. In Chicago, I met so many parents — especially moms — who spoke to me about feeling the need to protect themselves and their children as the violence grew. A sense that everyone else had a gun clearly drove some people to get guns for protection. “Everybody’s got a gun, so it’s only right to have one,” one of the students in the concealed carry class told me. On an instinctive level, I understood it. I grew up in a gun-owning home. But I’ve also spent years interviewing experts and reading research about the personal and societal dangers that come with having so many guns — a major reason why the US gun homicide rate is 28 [times higher]( than that of other high-income countries. As I spoke to researchers, I realized that these new gun owners were just one part of the story. Millions of guns, legal and not, flooded the US during the pandemic. We don’t know exactly how many. At the same time, more Americans are getting their concealed carry licenses so they can bring their guns in public. This has real implications for many aspects of our society, particularly policing and crime. The number of guns stolen from cars has tripled in the last decade — probably an outcome, one expert told me, of more people buying guns and leaving them in their cars. The time from a gun being purchased to ending up on the street has fallen substantially in the last few years, too. And ghost guns — homemade guns that aren’t traceable — have started appearing at crime scenes at a startling rate. Owning a gun comes with real risks for individuals, families, and society writ large. But people don’t make decisions based solely on research. They’re also responding to the realities of where they live, and doing what they believe they need to feel secure. “We haven’t helped people feel safe enough. We need to step up and do more to help people feel like they don't need a gun,” Rep. Robin Kelly, a Democrat whose district includes parts of Chicago’s South Side and suburbs, told me. [A close view of a Black woman's hands with a shiny pink French tip manicure holding a plastic yellow gun, its barrel pointing up. ] Sebastián Hidalgo for Vox There are no easy answers. The United States stands alone when it comes to firearm ownership, in part because of its history, but also because decades of lawmaking have led it to the point that most people who want a gun, and want to carry it in public, can do so without difficulty (legally or not). The rise in the number of new gun-owning households, says John Roman, who published one important survey of first-time gun buyers during the pandemic, “really changes all kinds of policy and political calculations.” I wrote about this fundamental shift in America’s relationship with guns [in a new piece out today](. In the coming months, I will continue to explore the way the pandemic surge in guns and gun violence has affected aspects of American life, including policing, child safety, and more. Writing about guns is controversial. Some people hate guns and don’t want to hear about why someone might want to arm themselves. Others refuse to acknowledge that guns are dangerous — the old saw that “guns don’t kill people, people kill people.” It’s easy, and tempting, to ignore data that doesn’t fit our preconceived beliefs. But the reality is that guns make routine violence much more deadly. Understanding why millions of Americans chose to bring guns into their homes these last few years is critically important for what it tells us about our recent past and for grappling with how this new reality will impact policy and public health in the future. Have you noticed an influx of guns in your community since 2020? If so, I’d like to hear about your experiences. Email me at marin.cogan@voxmedia.com —[Marin Cogan, senior correspondent](   [Listen]( Ecstasy Therapy: How MDMA became medicine Military veterans are unlikely collaborators with the psychedelic counterculture. The two groups’ efforts are being tested this month, when the FDA is poised to announce whether or not it’ll approve MDMA for PTSD. [Listen now](   THE INDIVIDUAL - Ryan Reynolds is Deadpool: “For years, being ‘sexy’ didn’t work for Ryan Reynolds. It took him too long to realize being irritating did.” [[Vulture](] - The man behind Project 2025: Paul Dans, the director of the politically toxic project, may have stepped down last week. But his work lives on — and is, in many ways, already done. [[ProPublica](] - An influencer running for Senate: Yes, you read that right. Professional ski mountaineer and content creator Caroline Gleich is running for US Senate in Utah. Is she just the first of many? [[Vox](] [a vulture!]( Anadolu Agency via Getty Images THE ENVIRONMENT - You’re wrong about: Vultures. These reviled birds of prey literally save people’s lives, my colleague Dylan Scott explains. [[Vox](] - The future of paper could come from gene-edited trees: A team of researchers at North Carolina State University is hoping to build trees “that are better for making paper and other products, requiring less land and producing less pollution than natural varieties.” [[Washington Post](] - Even the Antarctic is sweating right now: Over the last month, a near-record heat wave in the Antarctic has brought temperatures 18 degrees Fahrenheit above average. [[Guardian](]   Ad   Skip the airport. It’s time to plan the perfect road trip. Allie Volpe has five tips about how to have the best road trip ever. [Read more >>]( [The Unexplainable logo: the word, ''explainable'' highlighted in yellow, with an atom, starfish, waveform, eye, and brain around it.](   Are you enjoying the Today, Explained newsletter? Forward it to a friend; they can [sign up for it right here](. And as always, we want to know what you think. Specifically: If there is a topic you want us to explain or a story you’re curious to learn more about, let us know [by filling out this form]( or just replying to this email. Today's edition was produced and edited by Caroline Houck. I hope you had a great weekend, and will have an even better week — see you here tomorrow!   [Become a Vox Member]( Support our journalism — become a Vox Member and you’ll get exclusive access to the newsroom with members-only perks including newsletters, bonus podcasts and videos, and more. [Join our community](   Ad   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( [TikTok]( [WhatsApp]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Manage your [email preferences]( [unsubscribe](param=sentences). If you value Vox’s unique explanatory journalism, support our work with a one-time or recurring [contribution](. View our [Privacy Notice]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1701 Rhode Island. NW, Washington, DC 20036. Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved.

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