irishScott
Lifer
- Oct 10, 2006
- 21,562
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..and that "Study" is very weak.
I meant the study supporting your side.
..and that "Study" is very weak.
This is still incorrect. It shows that CC has not made things worse, but it does not show that Strict Gun Control would not be significantly better.
This is still incorrect. It shows that CC has not made things worse, but it does not show that Strict Gun Control would not be significantly better.
Actually that's EXACTLY what it all shows when taken together, as the NAS study did. It shows absolutely NO positive impact from ANY form of gun control EVER.
It doesn't say prolific gun possession or cc make things better, but it ABSOLUTELY says there's no evidence it makes anything worse.
Therefore gun control does not help period, and gun ownership doesn't hurt period. It can't be made any plainer than that.
I meant the study supporting your side.
"Hemenway said that the most definitive review to date — a 2004 look at research on the topic by the National Research Council — “found no credible evidence that passage of right-to-carry laws increases or decreases violent crime.”
Also of note, there is no official Data collection concerning whether CC carriers are involved in Crimes, but there is at least one Anti-CC group claiming to have Data on it and that quite a few Crimes are perpetrated by CC carriers.
Concealed carry=100x less firearm deaths. It's common sense.
If you are interested in a quick overview of the information, the most non-biased source I know of would be the book "FIREARMS AND VIOLENCE" from the National Acadamies of the Sciences.
http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=10881&page=R1 (this is a free online version of the book from their website, the review is rather short, but it helps to be familiar with stats to understand the debate.)
Lott is covered in Chapter 6, appendix A, B, and D.
Brief overview of their findings, they can confirm Lott's basic findings from his data, several other studies also find similiar effects, but other studies find no effect or even an opposite effect. Furthermore, while almost every test shows a reduction in crime, the effects are almost all statistically insignificant at the 5% level. His original paper covered 1977-1992. The effects he published held true with new data from 1992-2000, but the effects were less pronounced.
However, they do not cover any of the other studies that have found a connection between concealed carry and violent crime.
How about I throw my wallet in first to see if there's a snake?You're a criminal. Now stick your hand in this box. It may or may not contain the most poisonous snake on the planet. Your choice - do stick your hand in or not?
I don't believe I ever did.
However, we can look at comparisons over time for one country, rather than the more difficult attempt to compare two different countries.
What has changed in the US in the last 30 years? Drugs still out of control, social programs still lacking, violence in all media forms increasing, church affiliation stagnant or decreasing in most areas, more hatred among demographic groups, higher population, more diversity, higher unemployment, less benefits, higher costs of living...and yet even with ALL of that crime is dropping despite widespread increases in firearm ownership and concealed carry prevalence.
Did CC CAUSE the crime reduction? Maybe, or maybe not...but we can be basically 100% assured that it in no way inhibited it...hence there is no appreciable danger/down side of properly implemented private firearm ownership/use.
Wait, so church affiliation decreasing should cause more violence? AHAHAHAHA!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_intentional_homicide_rateWell by that logic:
Population of Canada: 33,311,389
Population of the US: 307,006,550
US population / Canadian population ~= 9.22
So multiply Canadian murders by 9.22, and you'd get Canadian murders if Canada had the population of the US (read: it would be much larger). I would again like to emphasize by that logic.
Stuff like that is just one of the reasons I more-or-less ignore the international comparison arguments (even some that work in my favor, although I will bring in the latter if my opponent persists with international comparisons). There are simply too many additional variables to account for.
Over the past thirty years, the crime rate rose throughout the 1980s, reached its peak in 1993 and then began to decrease throughout the 1990s and 2000s. One hypothesis suggests there is a causal link between legalized abortion and this drop. Another possibility is the introduction of the Three Strikes Law in 1993 by state governments which saw felony offenders who committed a third offence receive life imprisonment.
No, even the studies that find a reduction in crime find a small effect, therefore it would not be cited as a cause for a major shift in crime. Also, note that according to your last two posts, the murder rate in russia is three times as large as it is in America, when Russia has much more strict gun control.Isn't it interesting that the increase in concealed carry permits isn't mentioned?