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Anyway, I read the articles from your first 2 links and the 3rd seemed like a dead link. Thank you for them! One thing that really makes it hard to get accurate stats across countries is that we count them differently in different countries, as was pointed out in your first link above. I tried to find some recent crime stats online (as I noticed your articles from from 6-7 years ago). Unfortunately, the most recent hard stats I could find date to 1998-2000 and are from the Seventh United Nations Survey of Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems. So during that period (and we should probably assume a large margin of error due to things like countries counting stats in a wide variety of ways, etc.), here's Assaults per capita (http://www.nationmaster.com/red/graph/cri_ass_perc ap-crime-assaults-per-capita&int=20): 1. South Africa: 12.0752 per 1,000 people 2. Montserrat: 10.2773 per 1,000 people 3. Mauritius: 8.76036 per 1,000 people 4. Seychelles: 8.62196 per 1,000 people 5. Zimbabwe: 7.6525 per 1,000 people 6. United States: 7.56923 per 1,000 people 7. New Zealand: 7.47881 per 1,000 people 8. United Kingdom: 7.45959 per 1,000 people 9. Canada: 7.11834 per 1,000 people 10. Australia: 7.02459 per 1,000 people 11. Finland: 5.32644 per 1,000 people 12. Iceland: 4.66406 per 1,000 people 13. Tunisia: 4.02561 per 1,000 people 14. Jamaica: 3.95943 per 1,000 people 15. Portugal: 3.59445 per 1,000 people 16. Chile: 3.32476 per 1,000 people 17. Norway: 3.2064 per 1,000 people 18. Netherlands: 2.68964 per 1,000 people 19. Ireland: 2.47037 per 1,000 people 20. Mexico: 2.40275 per 1,000 people Burglaries (http://www.nationmaster.com/red/graph/cri_bur_perc ap-crime-burglaries-per-capita&int=20): 1. Australia: 21.7454 per 1,000 people 2. Dominica: 18.7892 per 1,000 people 3. Denmark: 18.3299 per 1,000 people 4. Estonia: 17.4576 per 1,000 people 5. Finland: 16.7697 per 1,000 people 6. New Zealand: 16.2763 per 1,000 people 7. United Kingdom: 13.8321 per 1,000 people 8. Poland: 9.46071 per 1,000 people 9. Canada: 8.94425 per 1,000 people 10. South Africa: 8.89764 per 1,000 people 11. Montserrat: 8.24323 per 1,000 people 12. Iceland: 8.11156 per 1,000 people 13. Switzerland: 8.06303 per 1,000 people 14. Slovenia: 7.93734 per 1,000 people 15. Czech Republic: 7.24841 per 1,000 people 16. Hungary: 7.15849 per 1,000 people 17. United States: 7.09996 per 1,000 people 18. France: 6.11634 per 1,000 people 19. Ireland: 5.73755 per 1,000 people 20. Netherlands: 5.55531 per 1,000 people Firearm homicide rate per > 100,000 population (http://www.nationmaster.com/red/graph/cri_gun_vio_ hom_fir_hom_rat_per_100_pop-rate-per-100-000-pop&int=20): 1. South Africa: 74.5748 2. Colombia: 51.7683 3. Thailand: 33.0016 4. Guatemala: 18.5 5. Paraguay: 7.3508 6. Zimbabwe: 4.746 7. Mexico: 3.6622 8. United States: 3.6 9. Belarus: 3.31 10. Barbados: 2.9963 11. Uruguay: 2.5172 12. Lithuania: 2.2463 13. Slovakia: 2.1659 14. Côte d'Ivoire: 2.068 15. Estonia: 1.534 16. Macedonia, Republic of: 1.2802 17. Latvia: 1.2648 18. Portugal: 0.8488 19. Bulgaria: 0.7714 20. Slovenia: 0.6036 Non-firearm homicide rate per > 100,000 population (http://www.nationmaster.com/red/graph/cri_gun_vio_ hom_non_hom_rat_per_100_pop-rate-per-100-000-pop&int=20): 1. Colombia: 62.74 2. South Africa: 51.3901 3. Guatemala: 25.4737 4. Mexico: 14.1112 5. Paraguay: 12.0451 6. Estonia: 10.4456 7. Belarus: 10.13 8. Latvia: 10.0337 9. Lithuania: 10.0135 10. Ukraine: 8.9253 11. Thailand: 8.4679 12. Moldova: 8.127 13. Barbados: 7.4906 14. Zimbabwe: 7.2381 15. Poland: 5.6072 16. United States: 5.5 17. Uruguay: 4.6149 18. Côte d'Ivoire: 4.0688 19. Bulgaria: 4.0652 20. Azerbaijan: 2.8078 So anyway, yes, Becky, your articles definitely match what these stats say! I find it depressing that the US is in the top 20 for both the homicide stats listed above. I'm kind of surprised at everyone's reaction here. I know the idea of practicing non-violence isn't as... accepted in the US as the idea of the right to bear arms, but I'm hardly the only person in town who feels this way! To reiterate: * Of course the burglar should have done time for burgling, had he not been shot and killed. * No, of course the homeowner/renter shouldn't be sent to prison for shooting the burglar (uh, it's legal in this country), and God only knows why Yarb Hammstein suggested that I thought he should be sent to prison. * No, Yarb Hammstein, I am not the kind of person who would "be begging someone- armed- to save" me in this type of situation. Well, actually, on second thought, I don't know what I'd do. It's kind of hard to predict if it's never happened to you. But I know I would not kill the person. I'd hope that I would use intelligence to try to get out safely and if that didn't work, I would stay put and hope to get out safely. And now it is time to go watch the game. Go Memphis! Have a good night everybody! |
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madmags |
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I think the unarmed should be made to place signs on their homes stating that there are no weapons inside. This way, we won't have to hear people cry when some burglar gets shot or killed by a homeowner protecting his or her home or life. Last edited by Philly.Man : 04-14-2008 at 10:27 PM. |
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