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Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 4:19:49 AM   
KenDckey


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Makes one wonder if we have been lied to

http://oag.ca.gov/crime - Shows dropping crime rate since 1983

http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/firearms/forms/dros_chart.pdf - Shows increase in gun purchases

Still the crime rate isn't what we'd like to see, however....
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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 7:06:59 AM   
MercTech


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Fanatics really get bent out of shape when they do studies and don't get the results they wanted.

I'm reminded of when several environmental groups funded a study of populations with chronic exposure to low levels of radiation. What was wanted was to prove the bad health effects on the public of nuclear power plants. They compared health statistics from areas that receive up to five times more radiation due to location (Reading, Pa and Denver, Co were a couple) with the average for the general public. To their chagrin; they found extra radiation in low doses over decades gave a health benefit. See "radiation hormesis" for the details. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiation_hormesis.

(in reply to KenDckey)
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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 7:48:55 AM   
KenDckey


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ROFLMAO You mean that the scientists that did the original study got it wroing? LOL

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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 11:28:50 AM   
kdsub


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Considering that the second leading cause of death of children and young men an women in this country is firearms I am not sure a reduction of crime, that could be from other factors rather than guns, is worth their deaths.

Butch

_____________________________

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I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 1:31:11 PM   
joether


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Joined: 7/24/2005
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quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey
Makes one wonder if we have been lied to

http://oag.ca.gov/crime - Shows dropping crime rate since 1983

http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/firearms/forms/dros_chart.pdf - Shows increase in gun purchases

Still the crime rate isn't what we'd like to see, however....


While it could be a contributing factor to the decline of crime in a state, it is however, not the sole concept. Likewise, measuring its effectiveness is also questionable given the number of states that border it that hold, 'rather loose firearm laws'. There are many factors to consider as to why crime is declining. Could be better police powers, better laws, tougher penalties, more 'government structure' that helps the homeless and poor handle life's many gruelling challenges, better education system, more access to healthcare, etc.

You would have to eliminate all other variables, and show on its own that firearms are directly lowering the crime rate. I suspect it, like other things, together, are lowering the crime rate. A low crime rate is a good thing. Means people are less likely to go to deep extremes at 'protecting themselves and their families'. Allows gun owners to relax too, since the crazy gun controllers are kept in check!

(in reply to KenDckey)
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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 2:56:58 PM   
PeonForHer


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There's bound to be less crime if there are more guns around because guns are lovely and lovely things make people happy.

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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 3:14:39 PM   
CreativeDominant


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I think I may faint.

You would have to eliminate all other variables, and show on its own that firearms are directly lowering the crime rate. I suspect it, like other things, together, are lowering the crime rate. (Joether)

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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 4:39:35 PM   
BamaD


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Joined: 2/27/2005
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quote:

ORIGINAL: joether

quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey
Makes one wonder if we have been lied to

http://oag.ca.gov/crime - Shows dropping crime rate since 1983

http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/firearms/forms/dros_chart.pdf - Shows increase in gun purchases

Still the crime rate isn't what we'd like to see, however....


While it could be a contributing factor to the decline of crime in a state, it is however, not the sole concept. Likewise, measuring its effectiveness is also questionable given the number of states that border it that hold, 'rather loose firearm laws'. There are many factors to consider as to why crime is declining. Could be better police powers, better laws, tougher penalties, more 'government structure' that helps the homeless and poor handle life's many gruelling challenges, better education system, more access to healthcare, etc.

You would have to eliminate all other variables, and show on its own that firearms are directly lowering the crime rate. I suspect it, like other things, together, are lowering the crime rate. A low crime rate is a good thing. Means people are less likely to go to deep extremes at 'protecting themselves and their families'. Allows gun owners to relax too, since the crazy gun controllers are kept in check!

So you finally admit that private ownership of firearms is a positive in reducing crime.

_____________________________

Government ranges from a necessary evil to an intolerable one. Thomas Paine

People don't believe they can defend themselves because they have guns, they have guns because they believe they can defend themselves.

(in reply to joether)
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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 4:51:03 PM   
tweakabelle


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Crime rates are falling across the board both inside the US and internationally. No one has yet come up with a definitive analysis showing why crime rates are falling.

Rates are falling in countries where there are restrictive gun ownership laws and countries with lax gun ownership laws. Therefore it seems that crime rates are falling independently of whatever gun ownership laws are in operation in any given society. It is rash and premature to claim that "private ownership of firearms is a positive in reducing crime" on the basis of the falling crime rates evidence.

< Message edited by tweakabelle -- 3/17/2015 4:53:37 PM >


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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 4:59:31 PM   
Politesub53


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Seems to me the reduction in gun homicides was reduced not by more guns, but by less guns. Just sayin

http://www.msnbc.com/all/california-did-tough-gun-control-laws-cut

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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 6:08:48 PM   
DesideriScuri


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quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey
Makes one wonder if we have been lied to
http://oag.ca.gov/crime - Shows dropping crime rate since 1983
http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/firearms/forms/dros_chart.pdf - Shows increase in gun purchases
Still the crime rate isn't what we'd like to see, however....


Correlation does not necessarily mean causation.




_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 6:11:34 PM   
BamaD


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quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle

Crime rates are falling across the board both inside the US and internationally. No one has yet come up with a definitive analysis showing why crime rates are falling.

Rates are falling in countries where there are restrictive gun ownership laws and countries with lax gun ownership laws. Therefore it seems that crime rates are falling independently of whatever gun ownership laws are in operation in any given society. It is rash and premature to claim that "private ownership of firearms is a positive in reducing crime" on the basis of the falling crime rates evidence.

He said it was a factor, not me.
All I have said on this is that this does not prove that more guns equal less crime, but with the number of firearms in private hands corresponding to the rapid drop in crime it blows the idea that crime is cause by those firearms. And you are wrong, as I have pointed out before, the primary cause in the drop in crime is demographics, the population is getting older, at least the big bulge, so the crime rate is going down.
Your own statement condemns the idea of gun con ms the control stopping as much as it does gun ownership.

_____________________________

Government ranges from a necessary evil to an intolerable one. Thomas Paine

People don't believe they can defend themselves because they have guns, they have guns because they believe they can defend themselves.

(in reply to tweakabelle)
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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 9:21:21 PM   
Kirata


Posts: 15477
Joined: 2/11/2006
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quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle

Crime rates are falling across the board both inside the US and internationally.

I would very much appreciate a link to your source(s) for this claim. I don't have anything current at my fingertips, but that was certainly not the case during the two decades between 1980 and 2000.

Total recorded crime for all the countries on which the United Nations surveys of crime trends have yielded data shows a steady increase from 2,300 incidents per 100,000 people in 1980 to just over 3,000 in 2000. Worldwide, problems of crime have become worse over the past two decades...

The most striking declines in overall levels of recorded crime have occurred in North America; since the early 1990s, the total volume of crime per 100,000 citizens has declined steadily in both Canada and the United States of America, although the decline was more pronounced in the United States...

The data for the European Union present a less clear picture. A close examination of the data shows that in some countries within the European Union there has been a decline in the overall crime level. The overall trend, having increased noticeably in the early 1980s, has stabilized at just over 6,000 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. Data for the late 1990s do, however, suggest an increase more recently.

What is, perhaps, most remarkable is that the overall volumes of crime recorded in the European Union countries surpassed those for North America in the late 1990s, as confirmed by other sources; overall levels of crime are no longer necessarily higher in the United States than in the European Union.
~UNODC

More recent data has found homicide rates in Central America unusually high and climbing.

Indeed the number of people killed by organized criminal violence in Mexico in 2011 was greater than the death toll from combat in Afghanistan, or in Sudan, or in Iraq -- the three deadliest armed conflicts in the world that year. Gang murders in Mexico, most of them drug related, increased six-fold from 2006 to 2011. ~Human Security Report


Image source

K.




Attachment (1)

< Message edited by Kirata -- 3/17/2015 9:27:21 PM >

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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/17/2015 11:51:07 PM   
joether


Posts: 5195
Joined: 7/24/2005
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quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD
quote:

ORIGINAL: joether
quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey
Makes one wonder if we have been lied to

http://oag.ca.gov/crime - Shows dropping crime rate since 1983

http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/firearms/forms/dros_chart.pdf - Shows increase in gun purchases

Still the crime rate isn't what we'd like to see, however....


While it could be a contributing factor to the decline of crime in a state, it is however, not the sole concept. Likewise, measuring its effectiveness is also questionable given the number of states that border it that hold, 'rather loose firearm laws'. There are many factors to consider as to why crime is declining. Could be better police powers, better laws, tougher penalties, more 'government structure' that helps the homeless and poor handle life's many gruelling challenges, better education system, more access to healthcare, etc.

You would have to eliminate all other variables, and show on its own that firearms are directly lowering the crime rate. I suspect it, like other things, together, are lowering the crime rate. A low crime rate is a good thing. Means people are less likely to go to deep extremes at 'protecting themselves and their families'. Allows gun owners to relax too, since the crazy gun controllers are kept in check!

So you finally admit that private ownership of firearms is a positive in reducing crime.


No, that based on evidence, it remains inconclusive that private ownership of firearms, by itself, has any real effect on the overall crime rate. There are quite a number of things that could be effecting this decline that have nothing to do with firearms. One would have to show evidence that firearm ownership, minus all other variables, is having this effect. That evidence is not being shown here.

(in reply to BamaD)
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RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/18/2015 2:49:19 AM   
BamaD


Posts: 20687
Joined: 2/27/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: joether

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD
quote:

ORIGINAL: joether
quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey
Makes one wonder if we have been lied to

http://oag.ca.gov/crime - Shows dropping crime rate since 1983

http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/firearms/forms/dros_chart.pdf - Shows increase in gun purchases

Still the crime rate isn't what we'd like to see, however....


While it could be a contributing factor to the decline of crime in a state, it is however, not the sole concept. Likewise, measuring its effectiveness is also questionable given the number of states that border it that hold, 'rather loose firearm laws'. There are many factors to consider as to why crime is declining. Could be better police powers, better laws, tougher penalties, more 'government structure' that helps the homeless and poor handle life's many gruelling challenges, better education system, more access to healthcare, etc.

You would have to eliminate all other variables, and show on its own that firearms are directly lowering the crime rate. I suspect it, like other things, together, are lowering the crime rate. A low crime rate is a good thing. Means people are less likely to go to deep extremes at 'protecting themselves and their families'. Allows gun owners to relax too, since the crazy gun controllers are kept in check!

So you finally admit that private ownership of firearms is a positive in reducing crime.


No, that based on evidence, it remains inconclusive that private ownership of firearms, by itself, has any real effect on the overall crime rate. There are quite a number of things that could be effecting this decline that have nothing to do with firearms. One would have to show evidence that firearm ownership, minus all other variables, is having this effect. That evidence is not being shown here.

At least you admit that it is a possible factor. I have never said it was the only reason. Demographics are the main reason but statistics do show that loosening of gun laws tends to have a faster than those places that tighten them up.

And you are right, it undermines those who wish to sacrifice our rights for many reasons, not all of which are pure as the driven snow.

_____________________________

Government ranges from a necessary evil to an intolerable one. Thomas Paine

People don't believe they can defend themselves because they have guns, they have guns because they believe they can defend themselves.

(in reply to joether)
Profile   Post #: 15
RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/18/2015 10:40:08 AM   
joether


Posts: 5195
Joined: 7/24/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD


quote:

ORIGINAL: joether

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD
quote:

ORIGINAL: joether
quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey
Makes one wonder if we have been lied to

http://oag.ca.gov/crime - Shows dropping crime rate since 1983

http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/firearms/forms/dros_chart.pdf - Shows increase in gun purchases

Still the crime rate isn't what we'd like to see, however....


While it could be a contributing factor to the decline of crime in a state, it is however, not the sole concept. Likewise, measuring its effectiveness is also questionable given the number of states that border it that hold, 'rather loose firearm laws'. There are many factors to consider as to why crime is declining. Could be better police powers, better laws, tougher penalties, more 'government structure' that helps the homeless and poor handle life's many gruelling challenges, better education system, more access to healthcare, etc.

You would have to eliminate all other variables, and show on its own that firearms are directly lowering the crime rate. I suspect it, like other things, together, are lowering the crime rate. A low crime rate is a good thing. Means people are less likely to go to deep extremes at 'protecting themselves and their families'. Allows gun owners to relax too, since the crazy gun controllers are kept in check!

So you finally admit that private ownership of firearms is a positive in reducing crime.


No, that based on evidence, it remains inconclusive that private ownership of firearms, by itself, has any real effect on the overall crime rate. There are quite a number of things that could be effecting this decline that have nothing to do with firearms. One would have to show evidence that firearm ownership, minus all other variables, is having this effect. That evidence is not being shown here.

At least you admit that it is a possible factor. I have never said it was the only reason. Demographics are the main reason but statistics do show that loosening of gun laws tends to have a faster than those places that tighten them up.

And you are right, it undermines those who wish to sacrifice our rights for many reasons, not all of which are pure as the driven snow.


Its as possible a factor good and bad. That firearms used in crimes as easily as they are used for personal/home security. There have been many examples of a 'honest and law abiding' gun citizens being found guilty of one or more crimes with their firearm. So having a firearm does not mean one is instantly 'the good guy' or that it magically wards someone from doing bad. This forum has seen many examples of people having good intentions and ended doing one or more horrible wrongs.

I'm open to the possibility that private firearm ownership has a positive effect on the crime rate (meaning its less than current). Like anything, I would require evidence that comes from legitimate sources that shows the concept to have merit.

(in reply to BamaD)
Profile   Post #: 16
RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/18/2015 10:57:41 AM   
BamaD


Posts: 20687
Joined: 2/27/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: joether


quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD


quote:

ORIGINAL: joether

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD
quote:

ORIGINAL: joether
quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey
Makes one wonder if we have been lied to

http://oag.ca.gov/crime - Shows dropping crime rate since 1983

http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/firearms/forms/dros_chart.pdf - Shows increase in gun purchases

Still the crime rate isn't what we'd like to see, however....


While it could be a contributing factor to the decline of crime in a state, it is however, not the sole concept. Likewise, measuring its effectiveness is also questionable given the number of states that border it that hold, 'rather loose firearm laws'. There are many factors to consider as to why crime is declining. Could be better police powers, better laws, tougher penalties, more 'government structure' that helps the homeless and poor handle life's many gruelling challenges, better education system, more access to healthcare, etc.

You would have to eliminate all other variables, and show on its own that firearms are directly lowering the crime rate. I suspect it, like other things, together, are lowering the crime rate. A low crime rate is a good thing. Means people are less likely to go to deep extremes at 'protecting themselves and their families'. Allows gun owners to relax too, since the crazy gun controllers are kept in check!

So you finally admit that private ownership of firearms is a positive in reducing crime.


No, that based on evidence, it remains inconclusive that private ownership of firearms, by itself, has any real effect on the overall crime rate. There are quite a number of things that could be effecting this decline that have nothing to do with firearms. One would have to show evidence that firearm ownership, minus all other variables, is having this effect. That evidence is not being shown here.

At least you admit that it is a possible factor. I have never said it was the only reason. Demographics are the main reason but statistics do show that loosening of gun laws tends to have a faster than those places that tighten them up.

And you are right, it undermines those who wish to sacrifice our rights for many reasons, not all of which are pure as the driven snow.


Its as possible a factor good and bad. That firearms used in crimes as easily as they are used for personal/home security. There have been many examples of a 'honest and law abiding' gun citizens being found guilty of one or more crimes with their firearm. So having a firearm does not mean one is instantly 'the good guy' or that it magically wards someone from doing bad. This forum has seen many examples of people having good intentions and ended doing one or more horrible wrongs.

I'm open to the possibility that private firearm ownership has a positive effect on the crime rate (meaning its less than current). Like anything, I would require evidence that comes from legitimate sources that shows the concept to have merit.

Of the 20 some odd studies done on this all but about 7 show that things like cc have a positive effect on crime rates. Not the massive drop we have seen but positive none the less. About 5 show no effect, no effect busts the argument to destroy a right when it does no good. Two show increased ownership and cc increase crime. While they are most likely the two sources you would accept as legitimate they come from Bloomberg, a proven liar who makes up his numbers. And even he admitted at one time to half a million legitimate uses of firearms to stop crimes, it has since been removed from his site. The other comes from handgun control who unlike the ones that showed a positive effect refused to reveal either their sources or methodology. We have told you about this repeatedly and you dismiss everything that doesn't fit your view as a illegitimate source so there is no point in wasting my time giving them to you again. I will note that the FBI estimates over 650,000 legitimate defensive uses of firearms a month. Before you say but we have more murder and mayhem than Europe remember that Mexico has more than the US and Europe combined and draconian gun laws. I know, I have heard it repeatedly Mexico has sociological differences from the US and Europe. To take that into account you also have to accept that there are major sociological differences between the US and Europe. If that negates the crime in Mexico, it negates it in the US.

_____________________________

Government ranges from a necessary evil to an intolerable one. Thomas Paine

People don't believe they can defend themselves because they have guns, they have guns because they believe they can defend themselves.

(in reply to joether)
Profile   Post #: 17
RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/18/2015 12:30:24 PM   
joether


Posts: 5195
Joined: 7/24/2005
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD
Of the 20 some odd studies done on this all but about 7 show that things like cc have a positive effect on crime rates. Not the massive drop we have seen but positive none the less. About 5 show no effect, no effect busts the argument to destroy a right when it does no good. Two show increased ownership and cc increase crime. While they are most likely the two sources you would accept as legitimate they come from Bloomberg, a proven liar who makes up his numbers. And even he admitted at one time to half a million legitimate uses of firearms to stop crimes, it has since been removed from his site. The other comes from handgun control who unlike the ones that showed a positive effect refused to reveal either their sources or methodology. We have told you about this repeatedly and you dismiss everything that doesn't fit your view as a illegitimate source so there is no point in wasting my time giving them to you again. I will note that the FBI estimates over 650,000 legitimate defensive uses of firearms a month. Before you say but we have more murder and mayhem than Europe remember that Mexico has more than the US and Europe combined and draconian gun laws. I know, I have heard it repeatedly Mexico has sociological differences from the US and Europe. To take that into account you also have to accept that there are major sociological differences between the US and Europe. If that negates the crime in Mexico, it negates it in the US.


I think you understand that I've refrain from not using politics into this. That I've kept away from that aspect and simply looked at the OP's perspective in an objective viewpoint.

When it comes to actual studies, and not merely studies based on statistics only; the pool of information is not even a billionth the knowledge we have access to when compared to automobiles. Yes, many people die in car accidents each year. Yet, its how those cars are designed. How the roadways are designed. How laws have been crafted. How regulation and enforcement have come into play. All these concepts have had an effect on reducing the number of fatalities. At the end of the day, most Americans want safe roads to travel on.

Looking at actual firearm studies (i.e. non heavily or moderately based on statistics), is very slim. There was the study with CBS and the Philadelphia (or is that Pittsburg) PD. And those 2nd amendment guys whom tried to find ways for a sole gun owner to survive the Charlie Harbo attacks. Beyound that, the amount of evidence is very slim to none in many areas.

I bring this up, in all honesty, that the level of information on this subject matter is abysmal! If we wanted to find out what happens to an SUV that is T-boned by a sports car; we could find that information out. Easily I might add! If we wanted to find out what happens when specific cars roll over (end to end, or side to side), we can find that information. Easily! If we wanted to find out that 'x' parts were defective, we could find this information out. Usually tied to a recall by the manufacture. And usually makes head lines. When was the last time we hard a firearm or one or more parts on that firearm might be defective per the manufacture on national news?

And, I am stressing, I'm not pushing a political viewpoint on firearms. I'm open if someone makes a good argument with solid evidence to back their viewpoints up. But right now, the available evidence on firearm ownership with private citizens, when confronted by crime, is surprisingly tiny. We do a heavy amount of research on....EVERYTHING....in this nation From soil and water contamination, to air quality in cities, to even how to handle a rail car fire. But when it comes to firearms, the amount of knowledge is very low, if not extremely low.

I point out the CBS and the 2nd amendment guys as two examples in which the studies find the myth pushed by gun nuts (whom are mentally/emotionally unstable compared to firearm owners) that the opposite is true. Science has shown a few million myths and superstitions to be absolutely false. Hell, there is a TV show about it: Mythbusters. Yet, when it comes to firearms, we Americans are squeamish on facing facts and reality. Why is that? If what the gun nuts state is true, then there should be no problem in having it tested.

Unless they feel their views would not hold up well to scientific scrutiny. I've said it before, that we should test things. Find funding for the research from as political neutral sources as possible. Find researchers whom are pretty credible individuals to put together a series of experiments to test various hypothesis. That the evidence is clearly and cleanly gathered to which one or more conclusions would be based upon. All of this is done, because the study's findings...WILL BE...scrutinized. By all sides in the political spectrum.

Why is it we can find a huge amount of money from the government (and other sources) to figure out how to make cars and roads safer, but not a penny for firearms research? Doesn't that strike you as a bit odd?

(in reply to BamaD)
Profile   Post #: 18
RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/18/2015 12:54:17 PM   
Kirata


Posts: 15477
Joined: 2/11/2006
From: USA
Status: offline

Indeed. You often refrain from not dragging politics into things.

K.












< Message edited by Kirata -- 3/18/2015 1:07:45 PM >

(in reply to joether)
Profile   Post #: 19
RE: Gun sales vs crime stats in CA - 3/18/2015 1:57:19 PM   
BamaD


Posts: 20687
Joined: 2/27/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: joether

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD
Of the 20 some odd studies done on this all but about 7 show that things like cc have a positive effect on crime rates. Not the massive drop we have seen but positive none the less. About 5 show no effect, no effect busts the argument to destroy a right when it does no good. Two show increased ownership and cc increase crime. While they are most likely the two sources you would accept as legitimate they come from Bloomberg, a proven liar who makes up his numbers. And even he admitted at one time to half a million legitimate uses of firearms to stop crimes, it has since been removed from his site. The other comes from handgun control who unlike the ones that showed a positive effect refused to reveal either their sources or methodology. We have told you about this repeatedly and you dismiss everything that doesn't fit your view as a illegitimate source so there is no point in wasting my time giving them to you again. I will note that the FBI estimates over 650,000 legitimate defensive uses of firearms a month. Before you say but we have more murder and mayhem than Europe remember that Mexico has more than the US and Europe combined and draconian gun laws. I know, I have heard it repeatedly Mexico has sociological differences from the US and Europe. To take that into account you also have to accept that there are major sociological differences between the US and Europe. If that negates the crime in Mexico, it negates it in the US.


I think you understand that I've refrain from not using politics into this. That I've kept away from that aspect and simply looked at the OP's perspective in an objective viewpoint.

When it comes to actual studies, and not merely studies based on statistics only; the pool of information is not even a billionth the knowledge we have access to when compared to automobiles. Yes, many people die in car accidents each year. Yet, its how those cars are designed. How the roadways are designed. How laws have been crafted. How regulation and enforcement have come into play. All these concepts have had an effect on reducing the number of fatalities. At the end of the day, most Americans want safe roads to travel on.

Looking at actual firearm studies (i.e. non heavily or moderately based on statistics), is very slim. There was the study with CBS and the Philadelphia (or is that Pittsburg) PD. And those 2nd amendment guys whom tried to find ways for a sole gun owner to survive the Charlie Harbo attacks. Beyound that, the amount of evidence is very slim to none in many areas.

I bring this up, in all honesty, that the level of information on this subject matter is abysmal! If we wanted to find out what happens to an SUV that is T-boned by a sports car; we could find that information out. Easily I might add! If we wanted to find out what happens when specific cars roll over (end to end, or side to side), we can find that information. Easily! If we wanted to find out that 'x' parts were defective, we could find this information out. Usually tied to a recall by the manufacture. And usually makes head lines. When was the last time we hard a firearm or one or more parts on that firearm might be defective per the manufacture on national news?

And, I am stressing, I'm not pushing a political viewpoint on firearms. I'm open if someone makes a good argument with solid evidence to back their viewpoints up. But right now, the available evidence on firearm ownership with private citizens, when confronted by crime, is surprisingly tiny. We do a heavy amount of research on....EVERYTHING....in this nation From soil and water contamination, to air quality in cities, to even how to handle a rail car fire. But when it comes to firearms, the amount of knowledge is very low, if not extremely low.

I point out the CBS and the 2nd amendment guys as two examples in which the studies find the myth pushed by gun nuts (whom are mentally/emotionally unstable compared to firearm owners) that the opposite is true. Science has shown a few million myths and superstitions to be absolutely false. Hell, there is a TV show about it: Mythbusters. Yet, when it comes to firearms, we Americans are squeamish on facing facts and reality. Why is that? If what the gun nuts state is true, then there should be no problem in having it tested.

Unless they feel their views would not hold up well to scientific scrutiny. I've said it before, that we should test things. Find funding for the research from as political neutral sources as possible. Find researchers whom are pretty credible individuals to put together a series of experiments to test various hypothesis. That the evidence is clearly and cleanly gathered to which one or more conclusions would be based upon. All of this is done, because the study's findings...WILL BE...scrutinized. By all sides in the political spectrum.

Why is it we can find a huge amount of money from the government (and other sources) to figure out how to make cars and roads safer, but not a penny for firearms research? Doesn't that strike you as a bit odd?

So anything leading to a conclusion you don't like is either illegitimate or covers the wrong information.
Since the last time the government funded a study on firearms it came out like something Bloomberg would have published no it is not at all odd. Why pay someone to lie?

_____________________________

Government ranges from a necessary evil to an intolerable one. Thomas Paine

People don't believe they can defend themselves because they have guns, they have guns because they believe they can defend themselves.

(in reply to joether)
Profile   Post #: 20
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