Vilham wrote:
nlsme1 wrote:
Bertster7 wrote:
Which was done with legally obtained, licensed guns. You can't stop every random nutter going on a rampage.
Compare about 50 gun related homicides (almost all of which are swiftly solved and people have been convicted of, due to the emphasis placed on them) to more than 10,000. It's hardly a favourable comparison for the US.
Gun control is working very nicely here. Violent crime in general has also been tumbling for decades. When I was a teenager the streets were far more dangerous than they are now.
This doesn't really look like a "tumble spanning decades" to me.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:LOndonHomicide.jpgIn fact, you are just below where you were 20 years ago. Add that in with the fact your prison population has doubled in the same time, while your population has seen a 10% growth, and you might just rethink the "tumble".
London has a population of around 10 million. I would say 200 homicides a year is pretty good, regardless of the rate of decline/incline.
Not bad, let's compare NYC.
New York City
Population= 8,363,710 (2008)
Pop. Dens.= 66,940/sq. mi. (2008)
Homicides= 497 in 2007 (first time ever below 500 since 1963 when he statistics were made public)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City#CrimeLondon
Population=7,556,900 (2007)
Pop. Dens.=12,331/sq. mi. (2007)
Homicides=162 in 2007 (Although it peaked in 2003-04, while publicly available statistics are only availabe after 1990. In 1990 there were 184 homicides. The lowest year for homicides was 1996, with 139.)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London ;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_in_LondonLos Angelas
Population=3,833,995 (2008)
Pop. Dens.=8,205/sq. mi. (2008)
Homicides=314 in 2009 (a FIFTY year low)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_angela … and_safetyI would say that population density has at least SOME effect on crime. So does ethnic diversity. New York holds the title. However, New York homicide rates have been at record lows. Londons, not so much. L.A. is doing good too. Fifty year low and all.
Last edited by nlsme1 (2010-06-03 07:28:01)