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Why Gun Sales Spiked On Black Friday


 

[TWG NOTE:  (hat-tip, Gary Marbut for the forward. Thanks Gary!)

My favorite part?   THIS ONE…

Caroline Brewer, director of communications at the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, called the Black Friday surge a “one-time event.” She said any increase in gun purchases “may be the result of marketing.”

Wrong again, Ms. Brewer.   You and your gun-grabbing bunch had better bone up on WHY our Second Amendment was written.  You are dangerously misguided and naive.]

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Ready, aim … buy? Why gun sales spiked on Black Friday

SOURCE:  MSNBC

Imagine finding one of these under the Christmas tree? A record number of background checks for gun purchases were performed over the Black Friday weekend, the FBI says.

By Martha C. White

Americans spent some $52 billion on Black Friday weekend. In addition to sweaters and iPods, though, shoppers were scooping up something else in large numbers: guns.

According to the FBI, which processes requests for background checks of prospective gun buyers, 129,166 such checks were performed on Black Friday, Nov. 25, breaking the previous single-day record — set on Black Friday 2008 — by nearly a third. The surge in gun sales was initially reported by USA Today.

Analysts who focus on firearms say this increase is part of a years-long trend toward increasing gun ownership. In a recent Gallup poll, 47 percent of respondents said there was a gun in the household, up from 41 percent just one year ago. 

More people are buying guns these days, particularly handguns, said Cai von Rumohr, managing director at investment company Cowen & Co. For all of November, the number of background checks processed by the FBI rose by around 16 percent vs. year-ago levels.

“These numbers have been relatively strong, and I think more of it has been the trend towards lower-priced, smaller weapons,” von Rumohr said. For the most part, it’s unlikely these weapons are being bought to wrap up and put under a Christmas tree; many states have laws that prohibit buying a gun for someone else.  

The number of first-time buyers and women buying guns has been on the rise for a few years, which may have contributed to the high numbers on Black Friday. Data from the National Sporting Goods Association show an increase in the number of female gun consumers, including a nine percentage point jump from last year to this year. Also, every state except for Illinois now lets residents carry concealed weapons.

“Retailers tell us 25 percent of customers are first-time buyers,” said Larry Keane, vice president and general counsel at the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a firearms industry trade association. Many gun dealers that enroll firearm novices in safety and training courses report that their classes are full or wait-listed, another indication of growth in the number of new gun owners, he said. 

Caroline Brewer, director of communications at the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, called the Black Friday surge a “one-time event.” She said any increase in gun purchases “may be the result of marketing.”

If marketing is the cause, it appears to be successful.

“Whereas five years ago it was politically incorrect (to own guns), … what seems to be changing is social acceptance,” said Bret Jordan, analyst at investment firm Avondale Partners. “I think there might be a changing view of firearms.” 

Jordan said the industry saw a surge in gun purchases around the time of the last presidential election, apparently because hunters and other enthusiasts feared President Barack Obama would push for more gun-control laws or stronger restrictions.

“When Obama was elected, I think people rushed out and stocked up on their tactical rifles,” Jordan said, referring to military-style weapons that were potential targets of legislative restrictions.

More recently, though, the focus has switched to handguns. In spite of the economic downturn, “The category of firearm that has continued to sell very well is something one would have if they were concerned about their personal safety,” Jordan said.

“The general trend is it’s more socially acceptable to own a gun in the United States than it was five to six years ago,” he said. 

IN MONTANA……

SOURCE: Big Sky Press – Missoula News

Guns were the hot item on Black Friday

Posted by Skylar Browning on Mon, Dec 5, 2011 at 4:15 PM

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USA Today reports nearly 130,000 Americans purchased firearms on Black Friday, a new record. The paper tracked the sales through an unprecedented amount of background checks that flooded the FBI. In all, the Black Friday sales surpassed the previous all-time high by 32%, according to bureau records. The FBI performed 129,166 background checks this year compared to 97,848 in 2008. The story adds: 

The actual number of firearms sold last Friday is likely higher because multiple firearms can be included in a transaction by a single buyer. And the FBI does not track actual gun sales.

So, what gives? Why so many gun purchases this year?

A spokesman for the National Shooting Sports Foundation told USA Today it may have something to do with a surge in first-time buyers, including many women. The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence suggested it’s no big deal and told the paper gun shops may simply be catching on to the draw of Black Friday deals.

Gary Marbut of the Montana Shooting Sports Association adds his own two cents to the speculation. In a conversation this morning about the Black Friday numbers, he points out that gun sales have hit record after record since Barack Obama was elected president.

“Every month the numbers are up,” he says, noting the long-held concern of Obama’s administration chipping away at the right to bear arms. “There’s a fear, and there has been a fear, that things will change.”

Marbut also echos the reasons offered by the National Shooting Sports Foundation. Since he started a firearm safety and training class in 1995 he’s graduated 3,500 students, more than half of which are women, he says. Demand for the class has increased over the last three years.

“A lot of us in the gun community are impressed with these soaring numbers,” he says. “There doesn’t seem to be an end to it.”

Categories: Miscellaneous
  1. December 6, 2011 at 11:30

    It sounds like a dangerous trend…
    more guns = more accidents involving guns…
    I hope those who buy them at least are VERY careful with them…

    • December 6, 2011 at 11:31

      Wrong, W.R. Woolf.

      More Guns = LESS CRIME

      Facts are stubborn things.

  2. Larry
    December 18, 2011 at 12:10

    W.R. Woolf: Yes, more guns means more accidents, just like more cars mean more car accidents. What’s your point? If you bother checking, accidental shootings are a fairly infrequent event. Did you know that more people die in swimming pools than of accidental shootings? And firearms are far more common than swimming pools and hot tubs.

    • December 18, 2011 at 18:12

      ….and they never take under consideration how many of those shootings are the result of a law-abiding citizen, protecting themselves and their property from harm.

      They consider an injured/dead rapists and pedophiles on equal ground with the injured/dead accidental shooting victim. Facts don’t matter to them, as long as they can manipulate the data for their desired outcome.

  1. January 7, 2012 at 09:12
  2. February 29, 2016 at 10:56
  3. March 2, 2016 at 18:24

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