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This magnet pushes back on the lazy shortcut that blames objects while ignoring the conditions that reliably produce violence. When you follow the data over time, it keeps pointing to the same pressures concentrating in the same places. Chronic poverty, unstable housing, underfunded schools, untreated mental health needs, and aggressive or inconsistent policing strategies do not simply exist alongside violence — they compound one another, narrowing options and escalating conflict long before a trigger ever gets pulled.

Guns exist across every income level and political culture, but serious harm clusters where inequality is allowed to harden into policy choices and long-term neglect. If the goal is fewer people getting hurt, focusing on root causes matters more than repeating comforting slogans — and that starts with acknowledging systemic inequality as the variable we keep refusing to confront.

Feel free to send this argument to anyone who asks. Sources below.

Sources:

  1. Inequities in Community Exposure to Deadly Gun Violence by Race/Ethnicity, Poverty, and Neighborhood Disadvantage — Poverty and neighborhood disadvantage strongly predict youth exposure to gun violence. (PubMed Central)
  2. Social Determinants of Health in Relation to Firearm-Related Homicides in the U.S. — Links firearm homicide rates to income inequality, social mobility, and economic opportunity. (PLOS Medicine)
  3. Neighborhood Disadvantage and Firearm Injury — Significant association between socioeconomic disadvantage and firearm assault injuries. (PubMed Central)
  4. Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Continue to Bear the Burden of Gun Violence — Firearm injuries remain concentrated in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods, with disparities growing over time. (PubMed)
  5. Income Support Policies and Firearm Violence Prevention — Connects poverty and inequality to firearm violence; income support policies can reduce risk. (PubMed Central)
  6. Gun Violence Exposure and Population Health Inequality — Gun violence exposure deepens health disparities across socioeconomic and racial lines. (BMJ Injury Prevention)
  7. Gun Violence Exposure Across Neighborhood Networks Increased by Racial Segregation — Higher exposure in disadvantaged, segregated neighborhoods shaped by structural factors. (UC Davis)

 

Product Specifications:

Vinyl magnet

Weatherproof

10 x 3 inches

Guns Don't Kill People Bumper Magnet

$14.99Price
Quantity
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