Fuck this shit, I'm keeping whatever weapons I want. Call me a redneck, call me stupid, call me whatever the hell you want.
And above your tomb, the stars will belong to us.
correlation is not causation.RAIMIUS wrote:
So, do any of the other theories fit as well as the lead theory? That seems like a lot of strong correlations around the same thing.
I'll be honest, the theory is new to me, but if the correlations are at 90% for national, regional, municipal, and international samples, that's pretty darn convincing. If true, such a strong correlation indicates this might be one of the best things to go after in order to reduce crime rates.
The lead effect theory is definitely worth looking into a bit more!
Last edited by aynrandroolz (2013-01-26 16:24:11)
your logic is bad
http://pricetheory.uchicago.edu/levitt/ … ed2001.pdfaynrandroolz wrote:
crime-rates are down because of abortion? only an american with a christian moral compass could give abortion such credit. crime is down because society has a lot less struggle and strife - things are relatively comfortable, middle class, and bourgeoisie. the standard of living is at a median-enough rate to keep violent crime down. conversely, in areas of concentrated poverty, the violent crime rate will still be relatively unchanged. the abortion argument is absolutely crackers, because whether a particular nation is pro- or anti- abortion, the population problem is rampant, anyway. over-population is a hugely rising factor and is not being affected at all by abortion: for every baby aborted, there's another 5 geriatrics living past the 100 milestone. there's generally less violence because society and everyday life in general is less antagonistic and less adversarial.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2013-01-26 19:58:13)
This is pretty much what I read:Jay wrote:
More cops per capita than most cities has more to do with it.
well that's just like you, isn't it? mindlessly accept what somebody says because they have a 'prof.' in front of their name. weren't you singing the gospel praises of one of your professors to me via PM, a month or two ago? didn't KEN say the exact same thing about you: that all you do in this sub-forum is emptily recycle some other 'expert's' opinion? listen, freakonomics is novel. they're meant to be lateral, irreverent looks at real-world phenomena: they're not conclusive. of course, less 'unwanted' babies at the bottom end of the social scale may contribute in some way to less crime... but less violent crime? are you really going to try and suggest there is an iron, immutable law or logical causation between 'underclass' babies and violent crime? that sort of the-biological-becomes-political argument is only two degrees removed from eugenics. please. think for yourself a little before you speak. there are plenty of more plausible and wide-spread changes in the 20th century that would lessen the 'ambient' amount of violence in society. comfort and material wealth are definitely one of the main - and most obvious - causes. putting such a high-emphasis on the abortion rate, and pinning so much discontent on the mythical 'single lower-class mother' bracket (as if they don't get enough shit from rich white politicians and academic wankers) is just lazy. it's a tangential and minor link, sure, which is why freakonomics will put it in their novel book. but it's not a systematic explanation. you just swallow this shit because you are utterly second-rate. i look forward to the day you'll make a contribution that isn't blatantly taken point-for-point from the textbooks on your desk.Cybargs wrote:
http://pricetheory.uchicago.edu/levitt/ … ed2001.pdfaynrandroolz wrote:
crime-rates are down because of abortion? only an american with a christian moral compass could give abortion such credit. crime is down because society has a lot less struggle and strife - things are relatively comfortable, middle class, and bourgeoisie. the standard of living is at a median-enough rate to keep violent crime down. conversely, in areas of concentrated poverty, the violent crime rate will still be relatively unchanged. the abortion argument is absolutely crackers, because whether a particular nation is pro- or anti- abortion, the population problem is rampant, anyway. over-population is a hugely rising factor and is not being affected at all by abortion: for every baby aborted, there's another 5 geriatrics living past the 100 milestone. there's generally less violence because society and everyday life in general is less antagonistic and less adversarial.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zk6gOeggViw
I'd believe some dudes at the economic departments from U Chicago.
The hypothesis is this: Less unwanted babies = less crime. The women who want an abortion usually fall into the "at risk area," where they don't have the financial, emotional, and familial means to properly raise a child. Having legalized abortion doesn't mean women won't have kids, it just delays their decision to have kids. But it doesn't account for all drop in crime, but it's abortion is a significant decline in crime.
Spearhead wrote:
I love how uzique interprets everything as a personal insult
Mutantbear wrote:
your logic is bad
So, reject the thing with multiple layers of fairly strong correlation, because "correlation is not causation," then go with the idea with less correlation because that one seems right. Sounds like great thinking!aynrandroolz wrote:
correlation is not causation.RAIMIUS wrote:
So, do any of the other theories fit as well as the lead theory? That seems like a lot of strong correlations around the same thing.
I'll be honest, the theory is new to me, but if the correlations are at 90% for national, regional, municipal, and international samples, that's pretty darn convincing. If true, such a strong correlation indicates this might be one of the best things to go after in order to reduce crime rates.
The lead effect theory is definitely worth looking into a bit more!
many other things changed during the same decades as the 'pacification' of society. maybe it's to do with the affordability of white goods and washing machines! i see a marked increase in the sales of kitchen appliances during the same time as a drastic reducing in domestic abuse and violence! perhaps all the husbands stopped beating up their wives for making such crappy work of the washing & drying! no such upsets with the all-new convenience from Zanussi! definitely worth looking into more!!!
you find 'lead theories' come up all the time - from ancient rome and theories of rome's classic demise, to modern day america, it seems. there seems to be a hardcore niche of anthropologists and historians that just love them some fucking lead. it's behind everything! the reason the roman empire crumbled was because, even with their unprecedented technique and invention, they were using lead water pipes for everything! it was poisoning them from birth, and creating an essential defect! etc.etc.
correlation is not causation.
from the 1950's onwards, western societies had a new economic and technological stimulus. in wider macro-focus, history goes through cycles of destruction and then rebuilding; it pivots on an alternating dialectic of vitalism and decadence. from 1950 onwards the going has been good (even with the cold war, which was, after all, defined as the 60's instagram polaroid-negative of violence). when people's hands are put to work in a growing/booming economy, and when they are satisfied in a civic sense, with fancy (and illusory) notions of 'making progress', and so on, people are on the whole less violent. put the tin foil hat away.