HapSmo19 wrote:Lootifer wrote:What are you seeing?
The correlation between blacks and guns and crime.
if we can abort to reduce crime, why not kill people who are more likely than fetuses to commit crimes?
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HapSmo19 wrote:Lootifer wrote:What are you seeing?
The correlation between blacks and guns and crime.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
john9blue wrote:HapSmo19 wrote:Lootifer wrote:What are you seeing?
The correlation between blacks and guns and crime.
if we can abort to reduce crime, why not kill people who are more likely than fetuses to commit crimes?
HapSmo19 wrote:CreepersWiener wrote:GabonX wrote: There is, in fact, no correlation between guns and crime. At all . . .
Are you guys seeing what I'm seeing?
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.
GreecePwns wrote:HapSmo19 wrote:CreepersWiener wrote:GabonX wrote: There is, in fact, no correlation between guns and crime. At all . . .
Are you guys seeing what I'm seeing?
If you're seeing that black people are disproportionately poor, and that poor people are disproportionately incentivized toward crimes, then yes.
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.
GreecePwns wrote:Because until as recently as a generation ago, they were denied basic equal rights to the foundations of economic prosperity and were subjected to frequent and varied intimidation tactics, and they are slowly recovering from the end of these practices.
GreecePwns wrote:HapSmo19 wrote:CreepersWiener wrote:GabonX wrote: There is, in fact, no correlation between guns and crime. At all . . .
Are you guys seeing what I'm seeing?
If you're seeing that black people are disproportionately poor, and that poor people are disproportionately incentivized toward crimes, then yes.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Phatscotty wrote:I think crime is also a product of greed. Some people I have known in the past were definitely not poor, they just wanted more.
Funkyterrance wrote:Phatscotty wrote:I think crime is also a product of greed. Some people I have known in the past were definitely not poor, they just wanted more.
I'll buy that.
However, the variables remain more or less the same.
HapSmo19 wrote:HOUSTON, Texas (AP) -- A 22-year-old Houston-area man shot by robbers who wanted his new Air Jordan tennis shoes has died of his wounds.
The Houston Chronicle reports (http://bit.ly/WRDIBm ) Wednesday that Joshua Wood died at Houston Northwest Hospital. Authorities say no arrests have been made.
The Harris County Sheriff's Office says Wood was shot Friday as he tried to escape armed robbers who wanted the newly released Air Jordan XI "Bred" sneakers he had purchased earlier in the day. The shoes retail for about $185.
It doesn't say if the shooter was barefoot, but, how can you fault him?
FUCKING AIR JORDANS HOMIE!
Phatscotty wrote:I understand down in the city, there might be someone starving who was begging all day but came up short for a double cheesburger and Mcdonalds closes in 7 minutes getting rough with someone or overly aggressive or feigned threats, but I would assume most of the crime and violence is drug/gang related and self esteem motivated (showing off). And what is poor anyways? why make excuses for those kind of people? They have just as much money as anyone else (drug dealers have more) but it's what they do with their money, blowing it all at the casino or the strip club. Easy money goes easy, because they don't understand the value or what it takes to earn it honestly. So I think the poverty line, while partially true, is overhyped and meant mostly to pull on people heart strings, which conveniently turns off the thinking cap.
It comes down to making poor choices. I don't look at it monetarily. I do, but there is more too it, a lot more.
Funkyterrance wrote:Phatscotty wrote:I understand down in the city, there might be someone starving who was begging all day but came up short for a double cheesburger and Mcdonalds closes in 7 minutes getting rough with someone or overly aggressive or feigned threats, but I would assume most of the crime and violence is drug/gang related and self esteem motivated (showing off). And what is poor anyways? why make excuses for those kind of people? They have just as much money as anyone else (drug dealers have more) but it's what they do with their money, blowing it all at the casino or the strip club. Easy money goes easy, because they don't understand the value or what it takes to earn it honestly. So I think the poverty line, while partially true, is overhyped and meant mostly to pull on people heart strings, which conveniently turns off the thinking cap.
It comes down to making poor choices. I don't look at it monetarily. I do, but there is more too it, a lot more.
This isn't at all the direction I was heading but I'll bite.
While people who are financially secure will of course dabble in crime I think it's relatively rare that these individuals will make a long term habit of it. Crime, as a way of life, is certainly correlated to poverty. I'm not making excuses, it's just what I have experienced. I'm not from the city, I'm from the country, but I think that in this day and age poor people in the city act more or less like those from the city and commit crimes because they are lacking in means to get the products of crime that they might otherwise get from lawful actions. The fact of the matter is that people of lower income simply have less options and less opportunities. It's just mathematics, less odds of success due to background/lack of privilege equals an increased chance that a poor individual will end up embracing a life of crime. The poorer you are, the narrower the bottleneck, so to speak.
Phatscotty wrote:I understand the crime poverty relation, I don't dispute it. I just am trying to envision an example of your display. You say the poverty aspect drives people to commit crimes to get things because they have less, but I just want to tangently ask "who says they need it?" I can understand starvation driving one to commit an act of crime, but especially at the poverty level, and reinforced by the reality that many to most of those people are in poverty because they constantly repeat bad/harmful choices, are also the ones most impacted by greed. That is, I speculate most of the crime is driven by something someone "wants" but does not neccesarily "need". I don't think you are making excuses, but again I think that angle is way overblown. I think the need aspect of crime is in the minority when compared to the want aspect of crime.
[/quote]Funkyterrance wrote:
I agree that people don't necessarily need the things they get from crime but it may as well be so. I honesty blame the media. Everyone, I mean everyone, has a television and even the poorest of people are inundated with media showing them what more well off people have and they don't. Again I feel it's just a combination of human nature and circumstance. I wish it were a tidier thing that could be solved with good old-fashioned fortitude but the superficiality that runs rampant in our and other societies is oh so powerful and stronger than ever.
Phatscotty wrote:GreecePwns wrote:Because until as recently as a generation ago, they were denied basic equal rights to the foundations of economic prosperity and were subjected to frequent and varied intimidation tactics, and they are slowly recovering from the end of these practices.
so why has the homicide rate exploded during the progress? I'm not doubting what you are saying, but something isn't adding up with the implications.
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.
john9blue wrote:
if we can abort to reduce crime, why not kill people who are more likely than fetuses to commit crimes?
saxitoxin wrote:also ... countries with most mass shooting fatalities per 1 million people ...
http://www.rampageshooting.com/
#1 - Norway
#2 - Finland
#3 - Slovakia
#4 - Israel
#5 - Belgium
#6 - USA
#7 - Dutchland
#8 - Germany
#9 - UK
#10 - Canada
#18(T) - New Zealand (congratulations, Lootifer!)
HapSmo19 wrote:What's the most they can earn before you'll no longer back them up for going around killing everybody?
Lootifer wrote:What are you seeing?
Also doing a linear regression on the first table yields:
- Equation: Murder rate = -0.00018(Gun Ownership)+6.76
- Standard Error on terms: Gun Ownership SE = 0.00011, constant = 2.43
- R-squared: 0.20
Implies theres a tiny correlation in favour of more relaxed gun laws; however the error is so very high that making policy on it would be boardering on idiocy.
Incidently outliers are not great for regression so its often best to leave them out as some other huge and powerful factor is likely at play (this is in this case not gun laws in the case of Russia and Luxembourg). If we remove these and retest (while acknowledging that they are anecdotes in favour of relaxed gun laws) the regression becomes:
- Equation: Murder rate = -0.0000091(Gun Ownership)+1.58
- Standard Error on terms: Gun Ownership SE = 0.0000132, constant = 0.31
- R-squared: 0.05
Uh oh, the standard error on the Gun Ownership statistic is bigger than the coefficient... You know what that means?Also R2 of 0.05, game over, theres nothing in it; guns are meaningless unless further information is supplied.
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