Students Demand Action

The gun industry is a killer business that claims to sell you safety.

In reality, your safety is for sale.

Are You Good With That?

Find out how key industry players value profits over people.

Gun Industry Players

The GreedyGunmaker

Greedy Gunmakers

As gun violence soars, so do the profits of gunmakers. But rather than investing in lifesaving gun safety features, they pour funds into developing deadlier weapons that fire faster, hold more ammo, and are easier to shoot and conceal. All while hiding behind broad protections that shield them from accountability. Truly, their upside is our downfall.

The TrickyMarketer

Tricky Marketers

Gun marketers exploit violent tragedies to stoke fear and pitch guns as the only solution to the very problem they helped create. Dangerously deceptive advertising practices glorify assault weapons, appeal to young men’s inner Captain Price and even lure in kids with cartoonish imagery and video game tie-ins.

The RogueSeller

Rogue Sellers

The last link in the chain, gun dealers compound the problem by allowing guns to fall into the wrong hands. Shockingly, nearly a third of inspected dealers violate the law and rarely face consequences. Problematic sellers receive a steady stream of guns from manufacturers and then disavow their role in the gun violence they help create.

The Gun Industry is Playing You

  • Guns are the leading cause of death for children and teens.1
  • Owning a gun makes it 2x more likely that someone in your house will die from homicide.2
  • Police recovered over 1.9 million crime guns between 2017 and 2021, with over 130,000 showing up at crime scenes just three months after being sold by a gun dealer.3

Fact or Fiction?

Fact Fiction Next Question See Your Score Learn More

The gun industry has a perverse interest in preserving gun violence.

They’re not selling you safety. Your safety is for sale.

Are You Good With That?

If not, let’s hold the gun industry accountable.

Text Industry to 644-33

By texting, you agree to receive communications to your phone number from Everytown organizations. Msg freq varies. STOP to quit. Msg & data rates may apply. everytown.org/terms.

By signing up, you agree to receive email updates from Everytown organizations. You may unsubscribe at any time.

Join the Conversation

#KILLERBUSINESS

  1. Everytown Research analysis of CDC, WONDER, Underlying Cause of Death, 2018–2022; Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) nonfatal firearm injury data, 2020; and SurveyUSA Market Research Study #26602, 2022. Last updated: 5.7.2024
  2. Studdert, D. M., Zhang, Y., Swanson, S. A., Prince, L., Rodden, J. A., Holsinger, E. E., & Wintemute, G. J. (2022). Homicide deaths among adult cohabitants of handgun owners in California, 2004 to 2016: A cohort study. Annals of Internal Medicine, 175(6), 804–811.
  3. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. National firearms commerce and trafficking assessment (NFCTA): Volume II, part III: Crime guns recovered and traced in the United States. U.S. Department of Justice.

The GreedyGunmaker

“I don’t care who does the shooting. My profits soar when bullets fly.”
Destruction
Indifference
Manipulation
Greed
Accountability

For gunmakers, big shootings mean big money. It’s like their “thoughts & prayers” are for more violence.

“Every time there’s a shooting somewhere, sales spike like crazy.”

- Former Glock Executive5

The Cost of Doing Business

Gun violence costs our country $557 billion every year.1

While we’re paying the price, the gun industry rakes in $9 billion annually.2 And Gunmakers still claim they don’t “have the means”3 to track deaths, injuries, or crimes that involve their weapons.

What other business cares so little about how its products are used and abused?

Twice as many people are killed when mass shootings involve an assault weapon.4

But instead of gunmakers acknowledging the mass shootings committed with assault weapons like AR-15s, they’ve doubled down on them – producing deadlier guns that fire faster and hold more rounds.

Who are they making weapons for?

Gun manufacturers mass produce guns that are prone to theft, illegal modification, and shootings by children.

It would be easy for gunmakers to make guns that can only be fired by the rightful owner, or that can’t be easily turned into machine guns, or that can’t be fired by a 3-year-old.

Why don’t gunmakers make basic design changes to protect our lives?

The Safety is Off

Unlike other consumer businesses, gunmakers play by a special set of rules that allows them to avoid legal responsibility for the predictable harms caused by their guns – and lack the moral responsibility necessary to keep us safe.

It's a Killer Business

As gun violence soars, so do the profits of gunmakers. But rather than invest in gun safety, they pour funds into developing deadlier weapons. Our downfall is their upside.

Are You Good With That?

Here’s what gunmakers could do today:

Are You Good With That?

If not, let’s hold the gun industry accountable.

Text Industry to 644-33

By texting, you agree to receive communications to your phone number from Everytown organizations. Msg freq varies. STOP to quit. Msg & data rates may apply. everytown.org/terms.

By signing up, you agree to receive email updates from Everytown organizations. You may unsubscribe at any time.

Join the Conversation

#KILLERBUSINESS

  1. Everytown Research. (2022). The economic cost of gun violence.
  2. Shahool Al Bari, Guns & Ammunition Manufacturing in the US, IBISWorld, December 2021, 19-20. Note: Civilian and law enforcement sales accounted for 46.9% of the gun industry’s total estimated revenue of $18.4 billion for 2021.
  3. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. (2019). Exhibit 99.1 [Form 8-K]. https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/95029/000117494719000142/ex99-1.htm
  4. Everytown Research. (2023). Mass shootings in the United States.
  5. Taibbi, M. (2016). After Orlando: Examining the gun business. The New Yorker.
  • Note: The character of Don is fictionalized and not intended to represent any specific person.

The TrickyMarketer

“Whatever your fears are, I’ll convince you guns are the solution.”
Destruction
Indifference
Manipulation
Greed
Accountability

Gun marketers prey on insecurities, pitching guns as the cure-all fix. But really, they’re just peddling a cycle of more violence.

“Consider Your Man Card Reissued”

- Real Bushmaster AR-15 Ad5

The Cost of Doing Business

Gun marketers use fear of violence to sell more guns, but Americans already own about 120 firearms per 100 people, the highest rate in the world.1

Americans are also 26x more likely to be killed by a gun than people in other high-income countries.2

Coincidence?

Gun industry marketing targets kids and teens using social media, video games, and promises that guns can give you purpose and valor.

There was a 50% increase in firearm deaths among children and teens between 2019 and 2021 alone.3 We don’t allow companies to market cigarettes or alcohol to kids.

Why is it OK to market guns to them?

Marketers claim guns keep people safe, but a gun in the home triples the risk of death by suicide.4

Tripling your odds might feel like a win in a casino, but it’s a different story when you’re gambling with your life.

Care to roll the dice?

Selling You Your Safety

Gun marketers advertise guns in increasingly deceptive and manipulative ways to make you think guns make us, and you, safer. But they don’t.

It's a Killer Business

Marketers cynically exploit gun violence tragedies to stoke fear, and then create fear-mongering ads to push more guns.

Are You Good With That?

Here’s what gun marketers could do today:

Are You Good With That?

If not, let’s hold the gun industry accountable.

Text Industry to 644-33

By texting, you agree to receive communications to your phone number from Everytown organizations. Msg freq varies. STOP to quit. Msg & data rates may apply. everytown.org/terms.

By signing up, you agree to receive email updates from Everytown organizations. You may unsubscribe at any time.

Join the Conversation

#KILLERBUSINESS

  1. Gilligan, C. (2023). How the U.S. compares to the world on guns. U.S. News & World Report.
  2. Erin Grinshteyn and David Hemenway. (2019). Violent Death Rates in the US Compared to Those of the Other High-Income Countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine 123, (2019): 20–26.
  3. Sandy Hook Promise. UnTargeting Kids: Protecting Children from Harmful Firearm Marketing.
  4. Anglemyer, A., Horvath, T., & Rutherford, G. (2014). The accessibility of firearms and risk for suicide and homicide victimization among household members: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of Internal Medicine 160, no. 2 (2014): 101–10.
  5. McIntire, M., Thrush, G., & Lipton, E. (2022, June 22). Gun sellers’ message to Americans: Man up. The New York Times.
  • Note: The character of Leslie is fictionalized and not intended to represent any specific person.

The RogueSeller

“Right hands? Wrong hands?
They’re all just customers to me.”
Destruction
Indifference
Manipulation
Greed
Accountability

The irresponsible practices of problematic gun sellers allow a steady stream of guns to flow into the hands of criminals.

“I am busy.
I don’t give a sh*t.”

- Gun Seller in Yakima, Washington, when asked about incomplete records.5

The Cost of Doing Business

A third of gun dealer inspections between 2010 and 2019 uncovered violations.1

That’s 35,500 dealers who broke the law. And most of them were allowed to remain in business. One was cited for 45 violations and still able to sell a shotgun to a man who would later kill four family members.

Where else can you get 45 slaps on the wrist?

Over 84,000 firearms were lost or stolen from gun dealers between 2016 and 2020.

Everyday, on average, 45 guns are lost or stolen from gun stores2, who fail to properly secure firearms both while open and after hours. These guns head straight to the criminal marketplace.

Do you still believe gun sellers care about safety?

Between 2017 and 2021, nearly 100,000 crime guns were unable to be traced by police because dealer records were simply missing.3

Shoddy record keeping is just part of the issue with rogue gun dealers. One gun shop sold more than 6,000 guns that were later recovered at crime scenes.4

Should that seller still be in business today?

A Few Really Bad Apples

Just 5% of dealers account for 90% of the hundreds of thousands of guns that are recovered in crimes every year.6

It's a Killer Business

We expect dealers to ensure that guns only end up in the right hands, but all too often, that’s not what happens. Many gun sellers are failing at their responsibility while our communities pay the price for their profits.

Are You Good With That?

Here’s what gun sellers could do today:

Are You Good With That?

If not, let’s hold the gun industry accountable.

Text Industry to 644-33

By texting, you agree to receive communications to your phone number from Everytown organizations. Msg freq varies. STOP to quit. Msg & data rates may apply. everytown.org/terms.

By signing up, you agree to receive email updates from Everytown organizations. You may unsubscribe at any time.

Join the Conversation

#KILLERBUSINESS

  1. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. National firearms commerce and trafficking assessment: Firearms commerce in the United States, volume I. U.S. Department of Justice.
  2. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. (2022). Federal firearms licensee theft/loss report 2022. U.S. Department of Justice.
  3. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. National firearms commerce and trafficking assessment (NFCTA): Volume II, part III: Crime guns recovered and traced in the United States. U.S. Department of Justice.
  4. U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Reform. (2022). Analysis of crime guns recovered and traced to dealers.
  5. Sweeney, K. (2021, May 26). Gun dealers let off the hook when ATF inspections find violations. USA Today.
  6. Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, The Truth About Gun Dealers in America, 4.
  • Note: The character of Gary is fictionalized and not intended to represent any specific person.