There are a couple of issues that I would raise with the article Howey copied from.
First of all, the basis of it is "In 2008, 2,947 children and teens died from guns in the United States and 2,793 died in 2009 for a total of 5,740—one child or teen every three hours, eight every day, 55 every week for two years. In The 5,740 children and teens killed by guns in 2008 and 2009"
Now the way that sentence is written makes a great emotional plea to save our children. Except it neglects to say that this same age group has quite a few "teens" serving in the military. They also vote, drive and generally act like adults. The statistics for the "teen" age group killed by gunfire are heavily populated by the upper end, namely 17-19 years of age.
Second of all, this sort of study does not take into account whether the guns were legal or even whether the gunfire that killed the teen was from law enforcement. When you say "The leading cause of death among Black teens ages 15 to 19 in 2008 and 2009 was gun
homicide." sounds horrific, and it is. But the overwhelming majority of those deaths were from gang-related incidents or by law enforcement. Gun control would have little or no effect on those numbers.
Third of all, when you include suicide rates in these numbers you slant them towards a certain side. There has never been any reasonable study that I have seen (please link if there is one) the inavailability of guns to effect the suicide rates. If a teen makes teh decision to thake their own life, they will find a way to do it.
And lastly, I would like to see the source documentation for the comment "And the U.S. gun homicide rate for teens and young adults 15 to 24 was 42.7 times higher than the combined gun homicide rate for that same age group in the other countries". Because, as of Sept 2008, 4,432 "kids" in that age bracket have died serving in the US Military in Afganistant and Iraq. Were they included in these numbers?