saxitoxin wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:saxitoxin wrote: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).
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.
- 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.
no credits to your account
* 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!"
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.
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.
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
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.
I referenced it in my subsequent post addressed to natty_dread to which I thought you were replying. The U.S. has a 4% incidence of crime versus Canada's 12% incidence of crime, New Zealand's 10% incidence of crime, Finland's 10% incidence of crime or the UK's 11% incidence of crime. This data is from the eighth survey - 2002 - but is mirrored in the tenth survey of 2006, the most recent date for which data is available (
http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-and- ... stems.html). This is accordingly shocking to non-Americans who note unusually high levels of homicide in the U.S. without reference to other crime categories or acceptance of the fact that homicide is a statistically anomalous crime, even in countries with high levels of it.
If broken down by type, this data also shows Canada has higher incidences of violent assault. The United Kingdom also - not surprisingly given the pandemic levels of knifings - has a rate of assault 2 1/2 times that of the United States. New Zealand has higher incidences of rape, which is not surprising as it's common knowledge that country has culturally de-stigmatized rape to the point that getting raped has become a rite-of-passage for Zealanders.
Baron Von PWN wrote:
On your second point with the two states. I'm not sure what you think this proves as both state's crime rates per capita have decreased at similar rates. Washington shedding 1 crime a year more than Oregon is hardly conclusive. (washington 59 per 100,00 in 93- 51 per 100 000 in 03, Oregon 57 per 100000 in 93 - 50 per 100 000 in 03). I remain unconvinced that repeat offender laws are an effective means of crime reduction and that this is not some broader national change.
It doesn't prove - nor was intended to prove - anything except that randomly selecting two states and using data from that selection to make an affirmative statement "So crime has actually fallen at a more rapid rate in the non- three strikes state than the three strikes state." to infer that habitual offender laws actually increase crime is a sophistry.
I didin't make that inference you have made it. I was just pointing out that a non-repeat offender state saw its crime rate drop faster than the state with the repeat offender laws. This seems to draw into question your assertion that repeat offender laws were responsible for the decrease in crime. So far I've seen no evidence to back up that claim you made earlier.
If repeat offender laws reduce crime we should see that in the stats. States with such laws should be consistently outperforming states without them. Yet the states we have looked at have comparable decreases in crime over the same period. If I felt like wasting allot of time I could go and punch in the data for all states with Repeat offender laws and without repeat offender laws and give you an average. Though really the onus is on you to provide something resembling evidence.
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.
This isn't really true. The UNICJR has done little analysis of the data they have simply collected the responses of the participating nations. All they have done is ask the nations whether their laws are consistent with the UN definition and then double checked to ensure data is internally consistent. So their data is little more than a survey. They haven't, nor do they claim to, gone through the data and ensured the responses are comparable. In fact they have this warning for people using the data.
. Users should note that the statistics cannot take into account the differences that exist between the legal definitions of offences in countries, or the different methods of offence counting and recording. Consequently, the figures in these statistics, and their use in particular as a basis for cross-national comparison, must be approached with some caution.
There is a perfect example of this if you look at the comments in the meta data as to what is considered assault in the Canada and USA entries.
Canada lists these crimes as being counted for assault.
Total Assault includes (simple) assault, assault with a
weapon/causing bodily harm, aggravated assault, unlawfully causing
bodily harm, discharge firearm with intent, assault against peace
public officer, criminal negligence causing bodily harm and other
assaults. Major Assault includes assault with a weapon/causing bodily
harm and aggravated assault. Simple Assault is the least serious form
of assault and includes pushing, slapping, punching and face‐to‐face
verbal threats. Aggravated Assault involves wounding, maiming,
disfiguring or endangering the life of someone
Whereas the American statistics includes
Definition of aggravated assault: "an unlawful attack by one person
upon another for the purpose of inflicting severe or aggravated bodily
injury." It includes attempts with a weapon
So the Canadian stats include a whole medley of crimes (such as slapping and threats) which while still crimes are not as serious as the american definition of aggravated assault, and yet are listed in the same table in the survey. The result is a seemingly inflated tally for Canada, unless you understand that the survey was not meant for comparative purposes and merely as a way to collect the data into one place.
I know you will dismiss my criticisms of your post as a mere attempt to protect my world-view from statistics so really I'm probably just wasting my time, however I hate to see someone post a source and then not give them the courtesy of checking out their source to make sure it says what they think it says.