BACKFIRE: As
Activists Attack NRA, Interest In NRA Memberships Smashes Google Records
ByRyan Saavedra
@RealSaavedra
Over this past weekend, thousands of activists marched in
Washington D.C. demanding radical gun control measures and vilifying the NRA
and Republicans. However, if Google search trends are any indication, the
efforts of the activists maybe backfiring.
As The Daily Caller
first noted, Google searches for the term "NRA membership" spiked
during the March For Our Lives gun control rally.
Data for the search term "NRA membership"
dating back to 2004 reveals that searches for the phrase spiked higher over the
weekend than it did even in response to the gun control push and campaign
against the NRA after Sandy Hook.
As can be seen in the graph, the baseline interest in the
NRA elevated at the start of the Obama-era and has remained at about the same
level since, except after major school shootings.
The first major school shooting that pops up on the graph
is the Sandy Hook massacre, which happened after former President Barack Obama
was re-elected and the Democrats controlled both chambers of Congress.
The second major school shooting that shows up on the
graph is the Parkland shooting, and, as can be seen, searches for the term
"NRA membership" smashed Google's all-time records for searches for
that specific term.
It's worth noting that the deadliest school shooting in
U.S. history, the Virginia Tech massacre, occurred in 2007, but as can be seen
on the graph, there is no spike for the search term "NRA membership."
This is likely because the shooter used two hand guns rather than an
"assault-style rifle" when he murdered 32 people, discouraging the
Democrats and leftwing activists from mounting much of a gun control campaign.
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