I like to feel safe.
This is one aspect of myself that you could classify as “normal”. I don’t want to die a horrific death. I hope my death won’t hurt at all. I don’t like owies.
Image courtesy of kerttu at Pixabay.com |
In order to feel safe in the world today, many of us are
going through Active Shooter Training. Preparedness
would make me feel safe they said. This
training could help me help others they said.
It was necessary they said. What
they didn’t say is that the training may result in crying, shortness of breath,
and an overall desire to crawl under a bed and hide. But hey if school kids can brave this training
and worse, I felt capable and furthermore, obligated.
Well, this video that was supposedly going to make me feel
safe opened with “you are more likely to be struck by lightning than to
encounter an active shooter”.
Really? Okay. At first I felt better. Then I started thinking more critically. (This is where I usually get into
trouble.) There have been shootings in both
a mall I shop in, a school in the town I work in, and a campus in my state. Twelve people died in those shootings, not
including the shooters themselves. There
have only been 2 fatal lightning strikes in Oregon since 1990.
Okay, okay I know statistics don’t quite work that way. I admit I failed Statistics in college, but I
do know how they don’t work. The word
statistic should be understood as ‘sciencey sounding number digits or
percentages that can be both true and used to tell lies’. That’s right, I took the red pill.
But think about how many times you’ve heard that you’re more
likely to get struck by lightning than ___________”. (Fill in the blank with whatever is pushing
your panic button at the time.)
Image courtesy of WKIDESIGN at Pixabay.com |
So how true is it that you are more likely to be struck by
lightning than to encounter an active shooter?
Let’s assume we are talking about civilian shooters in
public places in the United States, and we are comparing that to the number of fatalities by lightning strike. After all, according to the NOAA, only 10% of
people struck by lightning actually die from it. I guess that’s why no one is truly afraid of
being struck by lightning.
Whether or not lightning strikes twice, the average number
of deaths by lightning strike in the U.S. from 2004 to 2013 is 33; or it could
be 49 depending on where your numbers come from. According to the NWS Storm Data,
over the last 30 years (1984-2013) the U.S. has averaged 49 reported lightning
fatalities per year.
The number of strikes varies from year to year. Lightning is hard to count, but according to
the National Lightning Detection Network (yes, that’s a real thing) there are
approximately 20 million cloud-to-ground lightning strikes per year in the
U.S. So yeah, even if 49 whole people
die from 20 million lightning bolts, those odds are actually pretty good!
However, according to Scientific American global warming is
expected to increase America’s annual lightning strikes by about 12% per degree
Celsius. Scared now? Don’t be.
One degree Celsius is like 33.8 good ole American degrees so it will be
awhile before we notice the extra 10 million annual lightning strikes they’re
predicting by the year 2100.
I’m totally not scared of lightning anymore, and the only
training I needed was Google!
So, If I’m more likely to get struck by cuddly lightning
than encounter an active shooter, I can sleep easy.
Just to cover all bases though, I read the FBI ‘s “Study of
Active Shooter Incidents” report that reports neat statistics like 486
Americans lost their lives in active shooter events from 2000 to 2013. That’s approximately 37 deaths a year.
However, if we recalculate the data to
reflect only those shootings from ’04 to ’13, the annual number of deaths decreases
to 427, thereby increasing our deathtimate to 47 deaths a year.
The FBI report also showed that incidents from 2007 to 2013
increased by 150% over the previous six years.
These statistics don’t even include San Bernardino, Charleston,
Roseburg, or any events that happened prior to 2000, ie Columbine.
To clarify, there were 138 active shooter events from 2004 to
2013 according to the FBI and only 427 people died. In that same timespan there were 180 million
lightning strikes, give or take, and 297 people died. Or maybe 441 people died. That’s 37 or 47 dead people vs 33 or 49
people a year dying from bullets or lightning bolts. Maybe we should get better people counters?
So, according to my research and training, 49 people may be
less than 37 people but 33 people is more than 37 people. These odds are so
good I’m going to wait out the next storm on the golf course. Who’s with me?!