While "gang-related" certainly is not accurate as he says, I think what is being described is killings tied to criminal activity vs. people snapping. In other words, individuals with substantial criminal histories engaged in crime or various "street beefs" that aren't exactly ganf-related but fit a similar pattern. People for whom illegality is not a major deterrent. You'd really need to look at the breakdown of each case. I think purely "gangland" is a bit narrow for gun crime that is centered around criminal activity.Practically, what I think many RWers mean by that is "Minorities shooting each other", and in their minds such acts are confined to minority neighborhoods and they to some extent or another devalue/deemphasize minority life. Sorry, but just because a shooting of an 8 year-old black child happens in a poor black neighborhood doesn't mean you can just handwave it away as "gang-shooting."Everyone is trying to manipulate the stats to support their respective views.
Well, I agree that's what the thread started out to be about, but that's not the comment i was responding to.You of all people on this forum surely understand how people make tangentially-related (and indeed completely unrelated) points in Waygook threads.
America will never have the fascist gun control that Kyndo and Mr C crave. Gun toting states like new Hampshire and Maine will always have lower murder rates than authoritarian poop holes like... Belgium? Belgium is more violent than peaceful Maine? But... guns... Maine has concealed carry, why isn't everyone dead?
I'm not sure what your point is here--wasn't this about guns?I mean, in Belgium in 2016 (the last year I could easily find) about 108,000 people died, 173 of which were gun-related. That is 0.15% of deaths that year. ( https://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/compareyears/18/total_number_of_gun_deaths , https://www.statista.com/statistics/516846/number-of-deaths-in-belgium/ )In Maine in 2021 (the last year I could easily find), 16,000 people died, and 178 of those deaths were gun-related. That's 1.1% of Mainer's deaths related to guns ( https://legislature.maine.gov/doc/9742 ) So, about the same number of deaths, but Belgium has quite a bit larger population. Did you take that into account?
The thread started like this-Your response was Which didn't address murders, just fatal shootings. Either you are A) The kind of dimwit who mixes up the two or B) As you say, going off on a tangent. Something you pillory me for, but is apparently fine for you because you do not have consistent standards, just arbitrary ones. Hopefully it's the latter, because that's pretty much everyone to some degree!Anyways, thank you for agreeing that even though Maine has more guns, it's safer than Belgium and thus perhaps, that access to guns is not the deciding factor.
I see you bolded the part in shaneberry that wasn't about guns, which i think shows you have still not understood. Let's assume as fact the parts you bolded are correct, "Maine has a lower murder rate" and "Belgium is more violent than peaceful Maine". Then add in BUT GUNS ...? If Belgium is more violent than Maine, but has fewer gun-related deaths than Maine, then surely that suggests having fewer guns decreases gun-related deaths.
But it doesn't decrease murders. A murder by gun or a murder by knife is still a murder and an indicator violence.The goal is to decrease murders and to show a correlation between gun ownership and murder. A murder doesn't become "more violent" because one was done with a gun vs. a knife or bludgeoning.Which is less violent (assuming all other things are equal)- A place with 365 murders, 10 by gun OR a place with 300 murders, 250 by gun?Yes, fewer guns reduces gun-related deaths. It does not necessarily decrease murders.
Dead is dead. You would have to show that those gun-related deaths that are not murder would still have happened if there were no guns available.
You van admit the facts- You don't have to hide from the facts.
The issue is the murder rate relative to gun ownership. That is the measurable. You are demanding an unmeasurable and something that is not part of the issue- That despite higher gun ownership and more liberal gun laws, Maine has a lower homicide rate than Belgium. That is the issue. You have tried to obfuscate by ignoring murders in favor of just shootings. It's okay. You van admit the facts- That despite far more lax gun laws, Maine has a lower murder rate than Belgium. You don't have to hide from the facts.
The more time Venezuelans and Uruguayans spend in any OECD contry except the United States, the much more safer they'll be.
Homicides per 100k:Venezuela: 40.4Uruguay: 11.2USA: 6.5The more time Venezuelans and Uruguayans spend in the United States, the safer they'll be.
Is that really true or are you just taking shanebarry's word for it? I've tried to find some kind of conclusive support for this claim, and everything I can find suggests that Maine's murder rate has been within the 1.6 - 2.9 per 100k range since 1990, averaging out around 1.9. Belgium's highest rate in the same time period was 3.1, with rates in the lowest years around 1.04, averaging out around 1.8. Granted, I haven't done any deep analysis on this, and the numbers may not be perfectly accurate, but it still raises the question of why the hell anyone would take shanebarry's claim at face value. Does he strike you as someone who spends a lot of time picking through the nuances of complex issues?
I am? The Venezuelan and Uruguayan governments issued travel warnings against the United States, citing danger there. Is that really justified? A deeper dive says no.