Template:Table C-3: Suicide in Canada

From Gunsopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Table C-3: Suicide in Canada, 2000-2007[1]
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Total suicides 3,606 3,692 3,650 3,765 3,613 3,743 3,512 3,611
Change: n/a +2.4% -1.1% +3.2% -4.0% +3.6% -6.2% +2.8%
Suicide by Firearm 685 651 633 618 568 593 586 534
Change: n/a -4.9% -2.8% -2.4% -8.1% +4.4% -1.2% -8.9%
Data from the above table in graph form.
Comparing the changes in rates.
Canadian gun grabbers are fond of trying to justify the existence of the Canada Firearms Act and the long gun registry by trumpeting that "incidents of suicide by firearm are down by (X) percent since the registry came into force," as if that actually meant something. The purpose of this argument is to give the illusion that lives are somehow being saved, presumably because over 75% of all firearm deaths are suicides (see Table C-1: Firearm deaths in Canada). Curiously enough, suicide rarely if ever gets mentioned when they talk about total firearm deaths.

The fact of the matter is that the absence of a firearm does not prevent suicide; it merely changes the method. If this were not so, we would see a corresponding decrease in the total number of suicides but, as the data above shows, there is no such relation.

References

  1. Statistics Canada. Table 102-0551 - Deaths and mortality rate, by selected grouped causes, age group and sex, Canada, annual, CANSIM (database).

Actual terms used in the StatsCan report are "Intentional self-harm (suicide)" and "Intentional self-harm (suicide) by discharge of firearms."

Number Crunching
Ballistic coefficient.png
This page is part of Gunsopedia's number crunching project and as such should be reviewed periodically to make sure that the information contained here is up to date. Nothing should be added to this page without source information.
Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox