| | Here's a good review of data on the effect of gun laws:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1730198/pdf/v011p00077.pdf
Here's a good quote:
If we assume a constant impact of the law across all adopting states and combine the states ... we produce estimates similar to those of Lott and Mustard for firearm homicide, RR 0.95 (95% CI 0.91 to 1.00) and total homicide, RR 0.97 (95% CI 0.94 to 1.01). We believe these estimates are inaccurate because they fail to account for the variation in risk ratios across states and the variation between states in homicide rates over time. And here's a recap of that quote:
On the whole, after we let more folks carry guns in this country, there was a non-significant drop in murder involving guns in this country, and there was a non-signficant drop in murder altogether. The risk of murder via gun became only 95% of what it had been under laws preventing gun carrying, and the risk of getting murdered in general became only 97% of what it had been under laws preventing gun carrying. The authors, however, believe that such an aggregate (an "overall, there was less murder in the country when there were more guns in the country") analysis is misleading.
In other words they would say that, in spite of the overall decrease in murder seen after the increase of gun availability in this country, you not only have to take 51 different views of the data -- 50 states + the District of Columbia -- you also have to add in some assumptions, such as the assumption that the murder rates were going to fall when they did regardless of gun availabilty.
Notice how tricky that gets. It could very easily devolve into the fallacy of the argument with a child (AWAC):
*************** Child: I want more ice cream.
Parent: But you just had some ice cream.
Child: Yeah, but I was supposed to have more ice cream then, because I ate my dinner -- so that ice cream doesn't count toward my total.
Parent: No, you have to look at your overall rate of ice cream ingestion, that's what matters -- the overall rate.
Child: No it doesn't. I only have to look at my specific rate, which means I deserve more ice cream right now. ***************
:-)
Ed
(Edited by Ed Thompson on 1/09, 1:08pm)
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