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saxitoxin wrote: Canada has slightly more police than the U.S. but also a higher crime rate.


One of the dumbest statements ever posted here.barackattack wrote:So, I've read the first few chapters of Freakonomics and would like to regurgitate the information I have absorbed from this endeavour.
Crime in the US was HIGH.
And then it got EVEN HIGHER.
By the early 90s, commentators were predicting RIVERS OF BLOOD as RAPE became SPORT in the inner cities.
But then, crime started to fall (from '91 onwards).
Crime has dropped consistently, year on year. Violent crime has plummeted.
Freakonomics reckons that this is due to more abortion. The people most likely to use abortions are poor, uneducated, black, probably on drugs and poor. These people are most likely to have criminal children (Tupac, Jazzy Jeff etc.). By allowing these people abortions, you are allowing the 'thugs' and 'OGs' of the future to be neutralised before they get their hands on their first 'piece' (gun).
No, not even a decent troll.barackattack wrote:Is this a valid conclusion?
They may only be relative to the loss of IQ points incurred while reading this dribble.barackattack wrote:The poll is a number of events from the year the crime recession began.
Wrong criteria, but yes, the orginal post was not well put.Lootifer wrote:
In other words, put up (a 10 year, big budget, peer reviewed report with objectice results), or shut up.
Well, you are talking to a scientist who has designed more than one successful project. Its not quite as complicated as you indicate.Lootifer wrote:Oh im not saying that abortion doesnt have a genuine causal link to lower crime rates, but is it linear? is it co-dependent? is it an open loop or require iteration (ie abortion => lower crime => effect on abortion)? is there interferance? is it even possible to calcualte statistical significance? is there a risk of another unknown being actual source of effect and abortion is just a co-incidence? etc etc...
I speak from experience in the field: No systems modeller would touch this topic with a fifty foot barge pole.
Some of their reasons for decreased crime seems a little dodgy. I'm talking about the More prisons reason. Here in Canada we saw a similar decrease in crime and yet we didn't increase our prison populations in a similar manner (there was steep, +20 prisoners per 100k Canadians, increase from 1980-85 and then prison populations stayed relatively stable at around 110 per 100k Canadians, from 85-99 ).BigBallinStalin wrote:Which link?
This one? http://pricetheory.uchicago.edu/levitt/ ... me2004.pdf
If you're looking for large budgets over many years with large staffs, then after aggregation, Levitt's overview of a good chunk of the literature should surpass your requirements. =P
It's been well over a year since I've read it, but many of the comments, questions, and criticisms ITT were handled pretty well by Levitt. Of course, I'd be crazy to expect most of the people ITT to value the time spent in reading it. It's so much easier to blindly stumble about and yell at each other.*
*I'm not implying you act like this. You win the award for Most Reasonable Skepticism ITT. Congrats.

IIRC the Nationamaster data is from the UNICJR which converts national statistics to a uniform standard. The UNICJR data is accurate for comparing nation-to-nation crime trends given the 192 different reporting standards in 192 different countries.Baron Von PWN wrote: I will also dispute this and do some basic leg work on wikipedia.
Crime rate: This appears to be a little hazy, due to differences in recording crime rates. For instance the Canada includes vehicular crimes as well as fraud which is not included in the US stats. Then there is the problem of different classifications of crimes (what in the USA is 1 crime "aggravated assault" is three different crimes in Canada).
Randomly selecting two states to evaluate and casting that as a national trend is disingenuous. When I "randomly" selected two states I got opposite results as you.Baron Von PWN wrote: As for point 2. Do you have any evidence to suggest this is the case?
I decided to grab some crime stats from two states. 1 with 3 strikes and one without. For no particular reason I chose Texas and New York.
Texas (three strikes law)
Crime rate Index 1990 78.27/ 100,000 residents
2010 42.33/ 100,000
Change over ten yrs :-35.94/ 100,000
Sauce: http://www.disastercenter.com/crime/txcrime.htm
New York State (no three strikes)
Crime rate index. 1990 63.36/ 100,000 residents
2010 23.33/ 100,000
Change over 10 years -40.03/100,000
So crime has actually fallen at a more rapid rate in the non- three strikes state than the three strikes state.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
It's complex; there's very likely to be more than 2 forces which play on the crime rates of Canada.Baron Von PWN wrote:Some of their reasons for decreased crime seems a little dodgy. I'm talking about the More prisons reason. Here in Canada we saw a similar decrease in crime and yet we didn't increase our prison populations in a similar manner (there was steep, +20 prisoners per 100k Canadians, increase from 1980-85 and then prison populations stayed relatively stable at around 110 per 100k Canadians, from 85-99 ).BigBallinStalin wrote:Which link?
This one? http://pricetheory.uchicago.edu/levitt/ ... me2004.pdf
If you're looking for large budgets over many years with large staffs, then after aggregation, Levitt's overview of a good chunk of the literature should surpass your requirements. =P
It's been well over a year since I've read it, but many of the comments, questions, and criticisms ITT were handled pretty well by Levitt. Of course, I'd be crazy to expect most of the people ITT to value the time spent in reading it. It's so much easier to blindly stumble about and yell at each other.*
*I'm not implying you act like this. You win the award for Most Reasonable Skepticism ITT. Congrats.
Actually the increased police conclusion seems suspect as well since in Canada we actually decreased the number of police per capita over the same period and saw similar crime reductions.
They aggregated the crime data across 192 countries???? Yeesh...saxitoxin wrote:IIRC the Nationamaster data is from the UNICJR which converts national statistics to a uniform standard. The UNICJR data is accurate for comparing nation-to-nation crime trends given the 192 different reporting standards in 192 different countries.Baron Von PWN wrote: I will also dispute this and do some basic leg work on wikipedia.
Crime rate: This appears to be a little hazy, due to differences in recording crime rates. For instance the Canada includes vehicular crimes as well as fraud which is not included in the US stats. Then there is the problem of different classifications of crimes (what in the USA is 1 crime "aggravated assault" is three different crimes in Canada).
no credits to your account
- That said, I understand it's core to the worldview of many people to imagine their nations are paradises of tranquility relative to the U.S. and so, when statistics to the contrary are presented, all sorts of caveats and exemptions and conditionals are applied to the statistics to discount them as invalid. U.S. crime rates have consistently been the lowest in the industrial world in almost every category, outside of the glaring but rare category of homicide. Colloquially, Vancouver has always struck me as horrifyingly unsafe relative to San Francisco.* A real shithole with a fanatically policed tourist core (kind-of a rug covering the dirt). So I have no observational reason to believe the data doesn't mirror street-reality.
* Granted, this may be impacted by my own frame of reference as I'm well-liked in The Tenderloin where I regularly enjoy sauntering about with confidence in my short-shorts and mesh tank-top accompanied by my girlfriends enjoying the various clubs and bars and am often greeted with humorous catcalls from homosexual Latino gangsters like "Hey Saxi! Nice legs!"
I said from the beginning that barack's conclusions were bogus. That said, he is hinting at some things that are real and that have been legitimately studied.Lootifer wrote:Heh, you dont get to design diddly though. The experiment's already been carried out and you (the analyst) have to deal with the data.
You're prob right, lack of a clear and concise analysis into the situation is likely far more due to moral politics and selection bias (of sorts).
However having read the report Barrack linked made me think that noone had bothered to do a decent job (not that that reports not decent, just incomplete) because if they had it would have been sourced in that report.
You never stated where you got your numbers just put out the statement. If that is where you are getting your statement I will accept that Canada has more non violent crime.saxitoxin wrote:IIRC the Nationamaster data is from the UNICJR which converts national statistics to a uniform standard. The UNICJR data is accurate for comparing nation-to-nation crime trends given the 192 different reporting standards in 192 different countries.Baron Von PWN wrote: I will also dispute this and do some basic leg work on wikipedia.
Crime rate: This appears to be a little hazy, due to differences in recording crime rates. For instance the Canada includes vehicular crimes as well as fraud which is not included in the US stats. Then there is the problem of different classifications of crimes (what in the USA is 1 crime "aggravated assault" is three different crimes in Canada).
no credits to your account
- That said, I understand it's core to the worldview of many people to imagine their nations are paradises of tranquility relative to the U.S. and so, when statistics to the contrary are presented, all sorts of caveats and exemptions and conditionals are applied to the statistics to discount them as invalid. U.S. crime rates have consistently been the lowest in the industrial world in almost every category, outside of the glaring but rare category of homicide. Colloquially, Vancouver has always struck me as horrifyingly unsafe relative to San Francisco.* A real shithole with a fanatically policed tourist core (kind-of a rug covering the dirt). So I have no observational reason to believe the data doesn't mirror street-reality.
* Granted, this may be impacted by my own frame of reference as I'm well-liked in The Tenderloin where I regularly enjoy sauntering about with confidence in my short-shorts and mesh tank-top accompanied by my girlfriends enjoying the various clubs and bars and am often greeted with humorous catcalls from homosexual Latino gangsters like "Hey Saxi! Nice legs!"
Randomly selecting two states to evaluate and casting that as a national trend is disingenuous. When I "randomly" selected two states I got opposite results as you.Baron Von PWN wrote: As for point 2. Do you have any evidence to suggest this is the case?
I decided to grab some crime stats from two states. 1 with 3 strikes and one without. For no particular reason I chose Texas and New York.
Texas (three strikes law)
Crime rate Index 1990 78.27/ 100,000 residents
2010 42.33/ 100,000
Change over ten yrs :-35.94/ 100,000
Sauce: http://www.disastercenter.com/crime/txcrime.htm
New York State (no three strikes)
Crime rate index. 1990 63.36/ 100,000 residents
2010 23.33/ 100,000
Change over 10 years -40.03/100,000
So crime has actually fallen at a more rapid rate in the non- three strikes state than the three strikes state.
Washington
1993: 312,793 / 5,225,000 --> year of adoption of habitual offender law
2003: 312,814 / 6,131,298
Oregon
1993: 174,812 / 3,032,000
2003: 180,369 / 3,564,330

True I don't claim my breife analysis has anything resembling the weight of the study. It's simply curious that these supposedly strong factors are absent from Canada when Canada has seen a crime reduction as well.BigBallinStalin wrote:It's complex; there's very likely to be more than 2 forces which play on the crime rates of Canada.Baron Von PWN wrote:Some of their reasons for decreased crime seems a little dodgy. I'm talking about the More prisons reason. Here in Canada we saw a similar decrease in crime and yet we didn't increase our prison populations in a similar manner (there was steep, +20 prisoners per 100k Canadians, increase from 1980-85 and then prison populations stayed relatively stable at around 110 per 100k Canadians, from 85-99 ).BigBallinStalin wrote:Which link?
This one? http://pricetheory.uchicago.edu/levitt/ ... me2004.pdf
If you're looking for large budgets over many years with large staffs, then after aggregation, Levitt's overview of a good chunk of the literature should surpass your requirements. =P
It's been well over a year since I've read it, but many of the comments, questions, and criticisms ITT were handled pretty well by Levitt. Of course, I'd be crazy to expect most of the people ITT to value the time spent in reading it. It's so much easier to blindly stumble about and yell at each other.*
*I'm not implying you act like this. You win the award for Most Reasonable Skepticism ITT. Congrats.
Actually the increased police conclusion seems suspect as well since in Canada we actually decreased the number of police per capita over the same period and saw similar crime reductions.
Also, cross-country analysis becomes difficult as crimes are categorized differently, policing strategies may be different, and there's that ambiguous culture factor which is difficult to mathematically model to show its particular effects on crime.
