gun ownership by state

zmf

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Interesting map I stumbled across today. Living in eastern MA, I'm surprised to see such a low number when just about everyone I know owns a gun. Yes, I know I'm not a good representation of the whole state - it just seems low.

What's up with NH? VT and ME are kicking your ass! I figured AK and TX would be closer to 100%.

The other one I can't figure out is Illinois - I always hear about MA, CA, NY/NJ, but I guess they have similar issues there?

I am, of course, assuming the data is accurate. It's probably close enough to reality to argue about.
 

Interesting map I stumbled across today. Living in eastern MA, I'm surprised to see such a low number when just about everyone I know owns a gun. Yes, I know I'm not a good representation of the whole state - it just seems low.

What's up with NH? VT and ME are kicking your ass! I figured AK and TX would be closer to 100%.

The other one I can't figure out is Illinois - I always hear about MA, CA, NY/NJ, but I guess they have similar issues there?

I am, of course, assuming the data is accurate. It's probably close enough to reality to argue about.

The map does not show ghost guns. New Hampshire is closer to 120% gun ownership here, counting those in.

And Mass. Mass has at least 17 (ghost) guns per person. They're off the ghostly charts.
 
Is this self reported like when your doctor asks you if you have any guns in your home? Just trying to get an idea of where they got these numbers from? Not NICS apparently which would be the only somewhat accurate representation.
 
Well crap - I completely glossed over that part. Total BS data then.....
If I'm self reporting it goes one of two ways:

A) I don't own shit
B) I have a private military grade armory in a bunker under my house and I need a golf cart to drive between the full size and sub compact handgun sections.

There is no in between.
 
funny how sucky VT became with its policies and this factual ownership. well, it will not last too long now.
the ownership, of course.
 
This. Polls were showing that Trump was going to lose.....some by alot. That's how good polls are.
all those polls became propaganda tools, solely intended to make a false impression of the proposed outcome.
not a single info source is interested anymore to provide a non-affiliated info with no agenda attached.
 
1. Ill Annoid is a liberal playground around Chicago. So gun ownership is low compared to surrouding states.

2. NH/ME/VT - statistical change. How do you track gun ownership in 3 Con-Carry states in teh first place?????

3. I'm more surprised at the relatively high level of gun ownership in CT. MA 14, RI,14, NJ 14, NYS 20 (lots of upstaters). CT - 23%?????? Wow.
 
As always, any poll that measure gun ownership is meaningless in states that have no form of registry (that's a good thing).
What is this registry you speak of?
Some of these maps use the federal NFA registry. These tend to rank NH high (we have the highest count of registered machine guns per capita).
As it mentions, "self reported" gun owners. How many of us here would NOT answer that kind of question? IMO, better to fly under the radar.
This uses The Pew Research Center,survey from 2023:
Pew said:
The Pew Research Center survey conducted June 5-11, 2023, on the Center’s American Trends Panel, used two separate questions to measure personal and household ownership. About a third of adults (32%) say they own a gun, while another 10% say they do not personally own a gun but someone else in their household does. These shares have changed little from surveys conducted in 2021 and 2017. In each of those surveys, 30% reported they owned a gun
....
The American Trends Panel (ATP), created by Pew Research Center, is a nationally representative panel of randomly selected U.S. adults. Panelists participate via self-administered web surveys. Panelists who do not have internet access at home are provided with a tablet and wireless internet connection. Interviews are conducted in both English and Spanish. The panel is being managed by Ipsos.
...
In August 2018, the ATP switched from telephone to address-based recruitment. Invitations were sent to a stratified, random sample of households selected from the U.S. Postal Service’s Delivery Sequence File. Sampled households receive mailings asking a randomly selected adult to complete a survey online. A question at the end of the survey asks if the respondent is willing to join the ATP. In 2020 and 2021 another stage was added to the recruitment. Households that did not respond to the online survey were sent a paper version of the questionnaire, $5 and a postage-paid return envelope. A subset of the adults who returned the paper version of the survey were invited to join the ATP.
So for the most part, panelists are self-selecting, people who respond to unknown phone callers, postal junk mail, etc.
 
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Interesting map I stumbled across today. Living in eastern MA, I'm surprised to see such a low number when just about everyone I know owns a gun. Yes, I know I'm not a good representation of the whole state - it just seems low.

///
Know many long time Boston residents who think it’s crazy to pay the government for a gun license, but keep a gun at home. Mostly .38 revolvers and the like purchased many years ago. They may have had an FID at one point but gave up.

Of course if they are stolen they aren't reported.
 
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