Our society has formed its own beliefs about the group based on the taste of only a few people in a group. They rarely see popular stereotypes. Our society will judge something based on their initial experience. If a person is bitten by a dog, they may feel uncomfortable for the dog for the simple reason that they are afraid of what they have experienced and do not want to repeat their experiences. Unfortunately, this is the case for gun owners who need a better understanding.
Most Americans believe that society tends to be negative to the perception that gun owners, gun owners, are more common among non-gun owners than gun owners . Approximately one-sixth (61%) of Americans who do not have guns say that society is taking a negative attitude toward gun owners, but 38% say that social views are generally I think that it is positive. Opinions among gun owners are more complicated: 54% think that society tends to be negative, 45% say that it has a positive view of most gun owners think. Americans are evaluating differently about how people in their community think about gun owners. Most people (61%) stated that local residents generally think that gun owners are aggressive, especially for rural residents. Approximately one-eighth (79%) of adults living in rural areas stated that local residents generally have a positive attitude toward gun owners, and in urban areas, the same as community people Only 47% answered.
When it comes to their social circle, about half (49%) of gun owners say that all or most of their friends are gun owners, and 38% say how many of their friends But the owner who said only 13% of the gun said that only a few friends possessed guns, and most gun owners (less than 1%) said their friends would not. By contrast, only one out of ten adults who do not have a gun say that all or most of their friends are gun owners, 37% some of their friends have guns He said he owned it. With a gun, 21% said their friends did not have their gun.
Nearly a third of Americans have guns. However, only 5 million people belong to the NRA. And it is often portrayed as the voice of hunters, skate shooters and other gun owners. Advocates of gun control say that, if they gain traction, the majority of oppressed people may become a powerful force in gun control discussions - if so. Mr. Daniel Webster, a gun expert at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Public Health Graduate School, is receiving financial support from gun control advocate Michael Bloomberg, but the country has always to have the best gun in the world I said not. The incidence of violence is "Many of the measures we need are supported by the owner of most guns"