Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6768|UK

lowing wrote:

2. Nope, you forced me into YOUR scenerio, I was pointing out its bias.
No wrong. Your changing his scenario.

He is saying you get to choose if you are shot or stabbed. Now lets do this nice and mathematical for you. (Made up stats, but need them for an example).

Chance of dying from being shot = 70%
Chance of dying from being stabbed = 50%

Now lowing, which would you rather gamble on, getting shot or stabbed?
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6653|USA

Vilham wrote:

lowing wrote:

2. Nope, you forced me into YOUR scenerio, I was pointing out its bias.
No wrong. Your changing his scenario.

He is saying you get to choose if you are shot or stabbed. Now lets do this nice and mathematical for you. (Made up stats, but need them for an example).

Chance of dying from being shot = 70%
Chance of dying from being stabbed = 50%

Now lowing, which would you rather gamble on, getting shot or stabbed?
Can I add, not having my govt take away my right to defend myself and avoid getting shot OR stabbed by self defense?

You are going about this all wrong. those stats are biased in essence forcing me into a corner. You need to be asking, would I rather be shot in the head or stabbed in the head, would I rather be shot in the heart or stabbed in the heart, would I rather be shot in the arm or stabbed in the arm.

It is like you offering me a stick in the eye or a dish of ice cream. Of course I would take the ice cream.
Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6768|UK

lowing wrote:

Vilham wrote:

lowing wrote:

2. Nope, you forced me into YOUR scenerio, I was pointing out its bias.
No wrong. Your changing his scenario.

He is saying you get to choose if you are shot or stabbed. Now lets do this nice and mathematical for you. (Made up stats, but need them for an example).

Chance of dying from being shot = 70%
Chance of dying from being stabbed = 50%

Now lowing, which would you rather gamble on, getting shot or stabbed?
Can I add, not having my govt take away my right to defend myself and avoid getting shot OR stabbed by self defense?

You are going about this all wrong. those stats are biased in essence forcing me into a corner. You need to be asking, would I rather be shot in the head or stabbed in the head, would I rather be shot in the heart or stabbed in the heart, would I rather be shot in the arm or stabbed in the arm.

It is like you offering me a stick in the eye or a dish of ice cream. Of course I would take the ice cream.
Lowing you know fully well that you don't get to a. decide where you get stabbed or shot or b. the chance of death from those injury's.

But ok ill play your silly game. Getting shot in head results in 99% death, getting stabbed in the head results in 90% death. I can go on for every region of the body if you want, eg I get stabbed in the cheek I will probably survive, I get shot in the cheek the entire bullet will still pass through the rear of my head causing massive bleeding. You are ALWAYS more likely to die from a gun shot wound and where in the body. Mainly because the wound a bullet causes is far in excess of a knife wound.

Anyone that says they would rather take the risk of a gun shot wound over a stab wound is talking rubbish or is suicidal.

Waiting for retort saying "but why would you not die from getting stabbed in the cheek, where the blade passes into the back of your head" Mainly because that would require a pretty damn long blade.

Last edited by Vilham (2009-04-04 06:25:02)

nickb64
formerly from OC (it's EXACTLY like on tv)[truth]
+77|5613|Greatest Nation on Earth(USA)

Dilbert_X wrote:

Reciprocity wrote:

people who legally carry concealed handguns statistically do not commit crimes.
But the fact remains that the vast bulk of spree shootings are carried out by licensed firearm owners.
As a firearm owner myself I would like to know how we can address that.
Dade County, Florida created a tracking system to track the frequency of crimes committed by their 21,000 Concealed Weapon Permit Holders in 1987, between then and 1992, 4 crimes were committed by permit holders, none involving injuries, no innocents were harmed by a permit holder. The program was abandoned in 1992 because there were too few crimes to render it useful. The entire state of Florida recorded a total of 18 crimes by permit holders between 1987 and 1994. As of 1998, there was one incident when a permit holder shot someone after a traffic accident, but the shooter was determined to be acting is self defense. As of 1998, no permit holder had shot a police officer, while there were several cases of permit holders saving the life of an officer.
DrunkFace
Germans did 911
+427|6683|Disaster Free Zone

Reciprocity wrote:

people who legally carry concealed handguns statistically do not commit crimes.
Then make that the standard requirement to own a gun.

Now 2 hypothetical scenarios.
1. No one has guns. The 'innocent' don't have guns, the 'criminals' don't have and can't get guns. For all intense and purposes guns just don't exist.
2. Everyone has guns. The criminals have guns and are willing to use them, the innocent also have guns for protection, they're free to get anywhere at any time.

Two very different very unrealistic extremes, but which do you think would result in lower deaths and less injuries? Now shouldn't you be striving to get as close to this situation as possible and not countering the problem with a bigger potential problem in the future??
mcjagdflieger
Champion of Dueling Rectums
+26|6312|South Jersey
You know what, your right. guns are bad. the gov will protect me, since we live in that tom cruise movie, minority report. I think i'll take my rifle out with the trash next week.
nickb64
formerly from OC (it's EXACTLY like on tv)[truth]
+77|5613|Greatest Nation on Earth(USA)

DrunkFace wrote:

Reciprocity wrote:

people who legally carry concealed handguns statistically do not commit crimes.
Then make that the standard requirement to own a gun.

Now 2 hypothetical scenarios.
1. No one has guns. The 'innocent' don't have guns, the 'criminals' don't have and can't get guns. For all intense and purposes guns just don't exist.
2. Everyone has guns. The criminals have guns and are willing to use them, the innocent also have guns for protection, they're free to get anywhere at any time.

Two very different very unrealistic extremes, but which do you think would result in lower deaths and less injuries? Now shouldn't you be striving to get as close to this situation as possible and not countering the problem with a bigger potential problem in the future??
The problem is that that is a hypothetical situation, it could never happen IRL. Criminals will always find ways to access and use guns. Period.
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6653|USA

Vilham wrote:

lowing wrote:

Vilham wrote:


No wrong. Your changing his scenario.

He is saying you get to choose if you are shot or stabbed. Now lets do this nice and mathematical for you. (Made up stats, but need them for an example).

Chance of dying from being shot = 70%
Chance of dying from being stabbed = 50%

Now lowing, which would you rather gamble on, getting shot or stabbed?
Can I add, not having my govt take away my right to defend myself and avoid getting shot OR stabbed by self defense?

You are going about this all wrong. those stats are biased in essence forcing me into a corner. You need to be asking, would I rather be shot in the head or stabbed in the head, would I rather be shot in the heart or stabbed in the heart, would I rather be shot in the arm or stabbed in the arm.

It is like you offering me a stick in the eye or a dish of ice cream. Of course I would take the ice cream.
Lowing you know fully well that you don't get to a. decide where you get stabbed or shot or b. the chance of death from those injury's.

But ok ill play your silly game. Getting shot in head results in 99% death, getting stabbed in the head results in 90% death. I can go on for every region of the body if you want, eg I get stabbed in the cheek I will probably survive, I get shot in the cheek the entire bullet will still pass through the rear of my head causing massive bleeding. You are ALWAYS more likely to die from a gun shot wound and where in the body. Mainly because the wound a bullet causes is far in excess of a knife wound.

Anyone that says they would rather take the risk of a gun shot wound over a stab wound is talking rubbish or is suicidal.

Waiting for retort saying "but why would you not die from getting stabbed in the cheek, where the blade passes into the back of your head" Mainly because that would require a pretty damn long blade.
well then surely you have thought of banning all blades longer than 1.5 inches, for the safety of the public who could stbbed in the cheek all the way to their brain stem..

Still, how about I avoid getting shot or stabbed all together by defending meyself instead of calling for a "bobbie" and waiting 30 minutes for them to show up and scoop me up for the morgue.
Vilham
Say wat!?
+580|6768|UK

lowing wrote:

Vilham wrote:

lowing wrote:


Can I add, not having my govt take away my right to defend myself and avoid getting shot OR stabbed by self defense?

You are going about this all wrong. those stats are biased in essence forcing me into a corner. You need to be asking, would I rather be shot in the head or stabbed in the head, would I rather be shot in the heart or stabbed in the heart, would I rather be shot in the arm or stabbed in the arm.

It is like you offering me a stick in the eye or a dish of ice cream. Of course I would take the ice cream.
Lowing you know fully well that you don't get to a. decide where you get stabbed or shot or b. the chance of death from those injury's.

But ok ill play your silly game. Getting shot in head results in 99% death, getting stabbed in the head results in 90% death. I can go on for every region of the body if you want, eg I get stabbed in the cheek I will probably survive, I get shot in the cheek the entire bullet will still pass through the rear of my head causing massive bleeding. You are ALWAYS more likely to die from a gun shot wound and where in the body. Mainly because the wound a bullet causes is far in excess of a knife wound.

Anyone that says they would rather take the risk of a gun shot wound over a stab wound is talking rubbish or is suicidal.

Waiting for retort saying "but why would you not die from getting stabbed in the cheek, where the blade passes into the back of your head" Mainly because that would require a pretty damn long blade.
well then surely you have thought of banning all blades longer than 1.5 inches, for the safety of the public who could stbbed in the cheek all the way to their brain stem..

Still, how about I avoid getting shot or stabbed all together by defending meyself instead of calling for a "bobbie" and waiting 30 minutes for them to show up and scoop me up for the morgue.
knives over 3 inches are banned, you can't walk around the street with one. Unfortunately knives are a necessary part of everyday life so enforcing that ban is impossible. Guns on the other hand aren't a necessary part of everyday life, unless you need to hunt to survive.

Yeah have fun when someone jacks you and puts a gun to your head. Enjoy going rambo on him, ill be waiting for the obituary.

Meanwhile I just leg it from the dude with the knife and life to fight another day.
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6653|USA

Vilham wrote:

lowing wrote:

Vilham wrote:


Lowing you know fully well that you don't get to a. decide where you get stabbed or shot or b. the chance of death from those injury's.

But ok ill play your silly game. Getting shot in head results in 99% death, getting stabbed in the head results in 90% death. I can go on for every region of the body if you want, eg I get stabbed in the cheek I will probably survive, I get shot in the cheek the entire bullet will still pass through the rear of my head causing massive bleeding. You are ALWAYS more likely to die from a gun shot wound and where in the body. Mainly because the wound a bullet causes is far in excess of a knife wound.

Anyone that says they would rather take the risk of a gun shot wound over a stab wound is talking rubbish or is suicidal.

Waiting for retort saying "but why would you not die from getting stabbed in the cheek, where the blade passes into the back of your head" Mainly because that would require a pretty damn long blade.
well then surely you have thought of banning all blades longer than 1.5 inches, for the safety of the public who could stbbed in the cheek all the way to their brain stem..

Still, how about I avoid getting shot or stabbed all together by defending meyself instead of calling for a "bobbie" and waiting 30 minutes for them to show up and scoop me up for the morgue.
knives over 3 inches are banned, you can't walk around the street with one. Unfortunately knives are a necessary part of everyday life so enforcing that ban is impossible. Guns on the other hand aren't a necessary part of everyday life, unless you need to hunt to survive.

Yeah have fun when someone jacks you and puts a gun to your head. Enjoy going rambo on him, ill be waiting for the obituary.

Meanwhile I just leg it from the dude with the knife and life to fight another day.
If some one got the drop on me and put a gun to my head, me being armed or not is pretty much meaningless, how about a  more likely scenerio where I am at home asleep and a home invader breaks in? Guess who will be surprised?

So you think your odds of surviving an encounter goes up when you can not defend yourself huh? Wow, sorry ya feel that way.
nickb64
formerly from OC (it's EXACTLY like on tv)[truth]
+77|5613|Greatest Nation on Earth(USA)

lowing wrote:

Vilham wrote:

lowing wrote:

well then surely you have thought of banning all blades longer than 1.5 inches, for the safety of the public who could stbbed in the cheek all the way to their brain stem..

Still, how about I avoid getting shot or stabbed all together by defending meyself instead of calling for a "bobbie" and waiting 30 minutes for them to show up and scoop me up for the morgue.
knives over 3 inches are banned, you can't walk around the street with one. Unfortunately knives are a necessary part of everyday life so enforcing that ban is impossible. Guns on the other hand aren't a necessary part of everyday life, unless you need to hunt to survive.

Yeah have fun when someone jacks you and puts a gun to your head. Enjoy going rambo on him, ill be waiting for the obituary.

Meanwhile I just leg it from the dude with the knife and life to fight another day.
If some one got the drop on me and put a gun to my head, me being armed or not is pretty much meaningless, how about a  more likely scenerio where I am at home asleep and a home invader breaks in? Guess who will be surprised?

So you think your odds of surviving an encounter goes up when you can not defend yourself huh? Wow, sorry ya feel that way.
Victim’s use of gun=50% decline in likelihood of injury
(Research Paper source)

Gun Use by victim=50% higher survival, that sounds like pretty good odds to me.

Last edited by nickb64 (2009-04-04 15:46:12)

destruktion_6143
Was ist Loos?
+154|6628|Canada
nick, you consistently fail to provide sources. just pointing that out...
HollisHurlbut
Member
+51|5999
Adding "research paper source" isn't a citation.  Besides, last I heard armed resistance to an armed assailant is only slightly more effective at escaping an encounter without injury than simple acquiescence to the assailant's demands.  Of course, that data is at least eight years old, but I'm skeptical of a change of that magnitude.

I don't think it's particularly relevant to the discussion anyway, but there it is.
Reciprocity
Member
+721|6582|the dank(super) side of Oregon

HollisHurlbut wrote:

Besides, last I heard armed resistance to an armed assailant is only slightly more effective at escaping an encounter without injury than simple acquiescence to the assailant's demands.
I'd rather kill a perpetrator than be his victim.  maybe that's wrong.















nope.  it's not wrong.

EDIT:  but before it got to that i'd avoid leaving myself in that vulnerable position.

Last edited by Reciprocity (2009-04-05 02:25:24)

lowing
Banned
+1,662|6653|USA

HollisHurlbut wrote:

Adding "research paper source" isn't a citation.  Besides, last I heard armed resistance to an armed assailant is only slightly more effective at escaping an encounter without injury than simple acquiescence to the assailant's demands.  Of course, that data is at least eight years old, but I'm skeptical of a change of that magnitude.

I don't think it's particularly relevant to the discussion anyway, but there it is.
I think it is relevant. I do not care if your odds were less, you simply can not allow the criminal element to run amok because it is safer for you and no one gets hurt including the criminal. There is right and there is wrong and bottom line line is, some things are wroth defending and fight for, if not fight worth fighting against.

I simply can not muster the "rationality" that would allow me sit by and just LET myself be victimized. It is the most alien and absurd notion I can think of.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6544|Texas - Bigger than France

HollisHurlbut wrote:

Adding "research paper source" isn't a citation.  Besides, last I heard armed resistance to an armed assailant is only slightly more effective at escaping an encounter without injury than simple acquiescence to the assailant's demands.  Of course, that data is at least eight years old, but I'm skeptical of a change of that magnitude.

I don't think it's particularly relevant to the discussion anyway, but there it is.
http://homepage.usask.ca/~sta575/cdn-fi … ntrol.html

source Sagecraft study wrote:

The definitive study finds that, while handguns are used in vast numbers of crimes annually, they are even more often used by good citizens to repel crime (c. 581,000 crimes vs. c. 645,000 defense uses, annually).{14}

source wrote:

Even as a matter of theory (much less in fact), the police do NOT exist to protect the individual citizen. Rather their function is to deter crime in general by patrol activities, and by apprehension after the crime has occurred. If circumstances permit, the police should and will protect a citizen in distress. But they are not legally duty bound even to do that, nor to provide any direct protection -- no matter how urgent a distress call they may receive.

source wrote:

The theory that widespread gun ownership causes murder seemed plausible to Americans in the 1960s when ever-increasing gun sales went hand-in-hand with (actually, were a reaction to) ever- increasing crime rates. But this interpretation is exploded when the time frame is expanded to include statistics from the 1970s and 1980s. In those decades, handgun ownership continued to rise by c. 2 million per year, so that the American handgun-stock increased from 24-29 million in 1968 to 65-70 million in 1988. Yet homicide actually fell somewhat and handgun (and other gun) homicides decreased markedly.
..teddy..jimmy
Member
+1,393|6651
Anyone else immediately think of Chris Rock when they saw the thread title?!
nickb64
formerly from OC (it's EXACTLY like on tv)[truth]
+77|5613|Greatest Nation on Earth(USA)

destruktion_6143 wrote:

nick, you consistently fail to provide sources. just pointing that out...
I can provide sources, but they are from a subscription required service used by my school and I would have to email them for anyone to be able to read them.
PureFodder
Member
+225|6287

Pug wrote:

HollisHurlbut wrote:

Adding "research paper source" isn't a citation.  Besides, last I heard armed resistance to an armed assailant is only slightly more effective at escaping an encounter without injury than simple acquiescence to the assailant's demands.  Of course, that data is at least eight years old, but I'm skeptical of a change of that magnitude.

I don't think it's particularly relevant to the discussion anyway, but there it is.
http://homepage.usask.ca/~sta575/cdn-fi … ntrol.html

source Sagecraft study wrote:

The definitive study finds that, while handguns are used in vast numbers of crimes annually, they are even more often used by good citizens to repel crime (c. 581,000 crimes vs. c. 645,000 defense uses, annually).{14}
That stat doesn't actually show if guns were useful in deterring crime or not, it simply meansures how often people who deterred crimes also had a gun on them. It obvious can't measure how many of these crime deterrences would have happened anyway, even if the potential victim didn't have a gun.

Pug wrote:

source wrote:

The theory that widespread gun ownership causes murder seemed plausible to Americans in the 1960s when ever-increasing gun sales went hand-in-hand with (actually, were a reaction to) ever- increasing crime rates. But this interpretation is exploded when the time frame is expanded to include statistics from the 1970s and 1980s. In those decades, handgun ownership continued to rise by c. 2 million per year, so that the American handgun-stock increased from 24-29 million in 1968 to 65-70 million in 1988. Yet homicide actually fell somewhat and handgun (and other gun) homicides decreased markedly.
As I mentioned earlier, the disconnection between the number of guns and the homicide rates just gives you an indication of when gun availability reached it's saturation point. Once people (and criminals) start owning several guns, the number of guns goes up but the number of people with access to a gun doesn't. You could probably find similar data for car ownership vs. deaths from auto accidents. They rise together then at some point stop having any relation to each other as you reach the point when the increase is predominantly coming from people owning more than one car. By the same logic you would have proved that cars have nothing to do with auto accidents.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6544|Texas - Bigger than France

PureFodder wrote:

That stat doesn't actually show if guns were useful in deterring crime or not, it simply meansures how often people who deterred crimes also had a gun on them. It obvious can't measure how many of these crime deterrences would have happened anyway, even if the potential victim didn't have a gun.
Sure it does, if you trace the footnote it's linked to a study.

PureFodder wrote:

As I mentioned earlier, the disconnection between the number of guns and the homicide rates just gives you an indication of when gun availability reached it's saturation point. Once people (and criminals) start owning several guns, the number of guns goes up but the number of people with access to a gun doesn't. You could probably find similar data for car ownership vs. deaths from auto accidents. They rise together then at some point stop having any relation to each other as you reach the point when the increase is predominantly coming from people owning more than one car. By the same logic you would have proved that cars have nothing to do with auto accidents.
So then the saturation point was in the 1960s, since the figures have fallen significantly as a percentage since then?

If saturation has been reached, wouldn't reducing guns therefore increase violence?

I think it's proof gun ownership is not linked to violence.
PureFodder
Member
+225|6287

Pug wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

That stat doesn't actually show if guns were useful in deterring crime or not, it simply meansures how often people who deterred crimes also had a gun on them. It obvious can't measure how many of these crime deterrences would have happened anyway, even if the potential victim didn't have a gun.
Sure it does, if you trace the footnote it's linked to a study.
The study has no way of telling if the gun was the determining factor or not as they can't recreate the situations without firearms and see what happens. You'd expect there to be lots of cases of armed people stopping crimes simply because people will try to thwart crimes and lots of Americans have guns.

Pug wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

As I mentioned earlier, the disconnection between the number of guns and the homicide rates just gives you an indication of when gun availability reached it's saturation point. Once people (and criminals) start owning several guns, the number of guns goes up but the number of people with access to a gun doesn't. You could probably find similar data for car ownership vs. deaths from auto accidents. They rise together then at some point stop having any relation to each other as you reach the point when the increase is predominantly coming from people owning more than one car. By the same logic you would have proved that cars have nothing to do with auto accidents.
So then the saturation point was in the 1960s, since the figures have fallen significantly as a percentage since then?

If saturation has been reached, wouldn't reducing guns therefore increase violence?

I think it's proof gun ownership is not linked to violence.
The average gun owner in the US owns 7 guns (2004) whereas in 1994 the average gun owner owned 4 guns.
http://injuryprevention.bmj.com/cgi/con … ll/13/1/15
Obviously it makes little difference to someone's ability to kill someone else or defend themself if they have 4, 7 or a thousand guns therefore as long as the number of guns per owner fluctuates well above 1 it'll make no difference to homicide rates and similar stats.

Homicide rates were lower in the 60s in the US than they are today.

The variations in things like homicide rates are more closely linked with social policies than gun ownership in the US because of this saturation.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6544|Texas - Bigger than France
Well then, we agree that guns has no correlation with the crime or homicide rate, albeit the conclusion has been reached in different ways.
PureFodder
Member
+225|6287

Pug wrote:

Well then, we agree that guns has no correlation with the crime or homicide rate, albeit the conclusion has been reached in different ways.
I agree that the total number of guns has no correlation, but that the number of people with access to a gun has a strong correlation.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6544|Texas - Bigger than France

PureFodder wrote:

Pug wrote:

Well then, we agree that guns has no correlation with the crime or homicide rate, albeit the conclusion has been reached in different ways.
I agree that the total number of guns has no correlation, but that the number of people with access to a gun has a strong correlation.
That can be taken a few different ways.  Can you clarify?

Either it states a separate point altogether (criminals more likely to use guns now), or it says the exact opposite of the study I posted (study = gun ownership increased but crime went down).
imortal
Member
+240|6667|Austin, TX

PureFodder wrote:

Pug wrote:

Well then, we agree that guns has no correlation with the crime or homicide rate, albeit the conclusion has been reached in different ways.
I agree that the total number of guns has no correlation, but that the number of people with access to a gun has a strong correlation.
I would argue that.  I believe you would find a stronger correlation with homocide rates and population densities than with number of peopel with 'access to a gun.'  By the way, did you mean legal access, or just guns being physically possible to pick one up?

Besides, correlation does not prove causation.

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