Lott: On Military Base Carry, Mass Shootings, and Gun Control

in News

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

When John Lott talks gun policy, he doesn’t deal in vibes. He deals in numbers. And in his recent interview on Alaska’s Michael Dukes Show, he laid out several data points that directly challenge some of the most common claims in the gun control debate.

One of the first areas he touched on was the concept of “gun-free zones,” particularly on military bases, where he pointed to a clear pattern in how attackers select targets.

“These murderers time after time… write about how they pick these targets precisely because they want to go to a gun-free zone,” Lott explained. “Their goal is to kill as many people as possible… and they know if they go to a place where people are banned from having guns… they’re going to be able to kill more people.”

That idea ties directly into his broader argument about deterrence and who actually bears the burden of these policies. But where Lott really digs in is the data behind crime and mass shootings.

On the topic of mass public shootings, he pushed back hard on the commonly repeated narrative about who is responsible for these attacks, citing his own compiled dataset:

“If you look at all the mass public shootings in the United States from 1998 through the end of last year… about 70% of these shooters are individuals who are suicidal,” he said. “Only about 7% are classified as racist or anti-immigrant or white supremacist of any type.”

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That alone cuts against a major talking point but he didn’t stop there. Lott also broke down demographic representation in ways that rarely make headlines:

“Whites make up about 54% of the mass public shooters… but they make up about 64% of the population. So if anything, they’re underrepresented.”

He contrasted that with other groups he says are statistically overrepresented in the data:

“Muslims are overrepresented compared to their share of the population… by a factor of 18.2,” he said, adding that individuals of Middle Eastern descent are overrepresented by about eight times, while trans individuals are overrepresented by roughly six times.

Whether people agree with those interpretations or not, Lott’s broader point is about what gets reported and what doesn’t.

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“You would never know this from the media coverage that’s out there,” he said, arguing that selective framing plays a major role in shaping public perception.

He also leaned on international comparisons, but with a warning against oversimplifying them. Using the United Kingdom as an example, Lott pointed to historical data that challenges modern assumptions:

“You go back to 1900… London… over 8 million people… they had a total of two firearm murders,” he noted, emphasizing that this occurred before modern gun control laws were implemented.

And when looking at modern crime patterns, he highlighted behavioral differences that may be tied to defensive capability:

“In the UK, about 60% of burglaries occur when people are at home. In the United States, it’s about 13%,” he said. “And in the UK they break in at 9 at night… because they want to force people to tell them where their valuables are.”

That’s a stark contrast—and one Lott argues shouldn’t be ignored. Zooming out, his argument isn’t that one policy solves everything. It’s that the conversation often starts from the wrong assumptions.

Data gets simplified. Narratives get locked in. And policies follow.

But as Lott keeps pointing out, when you actually dig into the numbers… the story gets a lot more complicated.

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