Monday, June 22, 2015

Heritage as Hate

Today we are going to take a break from statistics and talk about history.

For those of you who don't know, I am from South Carolina. Unfortunately, my state has once again found itself in the spotlight, and as any Southerner knows, spotlights draw out the bugs. Well, a couple of those bugs have bit me in sensitive areas, so now I gotta scratch:

"The Confederate Battle Flag is about Heritage not Hate!"

Except the heritage IS hate. Absolutely NOTHING about the CSA, the Army of Northern Virginia, or any other aspect of that flag's abominable history is about anything other than hate. I honestly don't know if any of my ancestors died in that war, because I have always been too embarrassed and afraid to ask. I don't know how I would deal with that black mark on my family's name.

Is there anyone today who would say that the descendants of SS troops, concentration camp guards, the "Young Turks" of the 1920's, or any other government group that was actively enslaving and killing human beings based on their race should be "proud" of that part of their heritage? Or should they rightly condemn that heritage, acknowledge it for the evil that it was, admit that their ancestors died defending evil, and work towards ensuring that racist, genocidal evil is never allowed to take root in their homelands again?

The only legitimate place for the symbols of hatred are in museum displays that fully articulate that what the symbol stands for was wrong. Tell why it was wrong, tell why it was allowed to happen, and explain why we can not condone the actions, the symbols of the actors, and the ideology behind the symbols themselves.

"The Civil War was about States Rights, not Slavery!"

Umm..ok...partial credit on this one. The Civil War was indeed about States' Rights. However, the only rights that any of the Southern States cared about were the rights to keep slaves and the right to pursue fugitive slaves into states that did not allow for slavery.

South Carolina Declaration of Causes of Secession 

The link above goes to the entire document that was drafted and approved by the SC Convention on Secession in April, 1860.

Here are some choice quotes for you:

"
...all the States north of that line have united in the election of a man to the high office of President of the United States whose opinions and purposes are hostile to slavery. "

 "This sectional combination for the subversion of the Constitution, has been aided in some of the States by elevating to citizenship, persons, who, by the Supreme Law of the land, are incapable of becoming citizens; and their votes have been used to inaugurate a new policy, hostile to the South, and destructive of its peace and safety."

"The Guaranties of the Constitution will then no longer exist; the equal rights of the States will be lost. The slaveholding States will no longer have the power of self-government, or self-protection, and the Federal Government will have become their enemy."



No where in that document does it mention any other "right". It repeatedly decries the efforts of those in the Free States to increase the freedoms held by free blacks to include the rights to vote and own property.


This is the real history of that flag. This is the real reason for the Civil War. Why are so many Southerners struggling to hold onto a past that never was? Scarlet O'Hara was never real. There were no good slave owners. The African-Americans who served the Confederate Army were almost all slave laborers, or camp aides for their masters.

"Way down yonder in the Land of Cotton, Lord how times have changed,
But I wonder if the truth is marching on.

It's hard to be a Southern man and learn your history,
Cause it comes back and hits you close to home."
- Corey Smith "Goodbye Dixie"
It is time, way past time, really, that we admit what happened 150 years ago in America. It's time we admit that symbols have meanings, otherwise they wouldn't be symbols. It's time to go to work and change what the perception of being "Southern" means.

It's time to take that flag down.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Ignorance is No Excuse for a Law

(h/t Tam for the title of this post)


At first I didn't want to make this post. I have railed many times against using atrocities to further agendas and feel like by answering those that would, I give credence to their tactics.

However, there has been much talk of the "rise" in violent crime in this country as well as the tools and means of committing those crimes, so I thought it was a good idea to go back to the facts.

Table 7 - Violent Crime Offense Analysis
(I have edited this table from its original to remove sub-classifications of offense. The break-down of the data was not relevant, as I am focusing on total offenses.)

Contrary to what we are being told, ALL forms of violent crime in this country are on the decline, not the rise.


Table 7




Offense Analysis




United States, 2009–2013




Classification 2009 2010 2011 20121 2013
Murder 15,399 14,722 14,661 14,856 14,196
Rape (revised definition)2



108,612
Rape (legacy definition)3 89,241 85,593 84,175 85,141 79,770
Robbery: 408,742 369,089 354,746 355,051 345,031
Burglary: 2,203,313 2,168,459 2,185,140 2,109,932 1,928,465
Larceny-theft (except motor vehicle theft): 6,338,095 6,204,601 6,151,095 6,168,874 6,004,453
Motor vehicle theft 795,652 739,565 716,508 723,186 699,594


Table 8 - Expanded Homicide Data

No real surprise here. Firearms are the most used weapon during the commission of a homicide. However, it is worth noting that, similar to overall violent crime, the use of firearms to commit homicide is on the decline.


Expanded Homicide Data Table 8




Murder Victims




by Weapon, 2009–2013




Weapons 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Total 13,752 13,164 12,795 12,888 12,253
Total firearms: 9,199 8,874 8,653 8,897 8,454
Handguns 6,501 6,115 6,251 6,404 5,782
Rifles 351 367 332 298 285
Shotguns 423 366 362 310 308
Other guns 96 93 97 116 123
Firearms, type not stated 1,828 1,933 1,611 1,769 1,956
Knives or cutting instruments 1,836 1,732 1,716 1,604 1,490
Blunt objects (clubs, hammers, etc.) 623 549 502 522 428
Personal weapons (hands, fists, feet, etc.)1 817 769 751 707 687
Poison 7 11 5 13 11
Explosives 2 4 6 8 2
Fire 98 78 76 87 94
Narcotics 52 45 33 38 53
Drowning 8 10 15 14 4
Strangulation 122 122 88 90 85
Asphyxiation 84 98 92 106 95
Other weapons or weapons not stated 904 872 858 802 850

So, since firearms are the most used weapon in homicide, stricter gun laws must be the answer, right?

From BradyCampaign.org, the states with the strictest gun laws are (From most strict, to most loose):

  1.     CALIFORNIA
  2.     CONNECTICUT
  3.     NEW JERSEY
  4.     MARYLAND
  5.     NEW YORK
  6.     MASSACHUSETTS
  7.     HAWAII
  8.     ILLINOIS
  9.     RHODE ISLAND
  10.     DELAWARE

The states with the loosest gun laws are (from most loose to most strict):

  1.     ARIZONA
  2.     ALASKA
  3.     WYOMING
  4.     SOUTH DAKOTA
  5.     VERMONT
  6.     MISSISSIPPI
  7.     KANSAS
  8.     KENTUCKY
  9.     MONTANA
  10.     UTAH
Now, let's take a look at Homicide data by state:

Table 20 - Murder by State, Types of Weapons, 2013
(I have edited the following tables to show only the states that I am focusing on and to add simple calculations on the data. The link above is to the original table for verification.)


Most Strict 10

Total homicides: 3906, Total with Firearm as the weapon: 2704, Percentage of homicide with weapon: 69.23%


Table 20








Murder








by State, Types of Weapons, 2013








State Total
murders1
Total
firearms
Handguns Rifles Shotguns Firearms
(type
unknown)
Knives or
cutting
instruments
Other
weapons
Hands, fists,
feet, etc.2
California 1,745 1,224 805 29 48 342 238 191 92
Connecticut 86 60 34 0 0 26 12 5 9
Delaware 39 33 22 1 0 10 4 2 0
Hawaii 9 6 1 2 2 1 2 1 0
Illinois3 433 364 352 3 2 7 41 19 9
Maryland 379 268 263 0 4 1 57 29 25
Massachusetts 135 78 35 2 0 41 25 25 7
New Jersey 401 291 229 0 2 60 53 37 20
New York 648 362 290 4 19 49 136 113 37
Rhode Island 31 18 3 0 1 14 5 6 2










Totals 3906 2704 69.23%







Least Strict 10

Total homicides: 857, Total with Firearm as the weapon: 552, Percentage of homicide with weapon: 64.41%


Table 20








Murder








by State, Types of Weapons, 2013








State Total
murders1
Total
firearms
Handguns Rifles Shotguns Firearms
(type
unknown)
Knives or
cutting
instruments
Other
weapons
Hands, fists,
feet, etc.2
Alaska 34 12 5 3 1 3 5 13 4
Arizona 304 184 133 11 11 29 56 55 9
Kansas 112 78 39 9 5 25 8 16 10
Kentucky 165 111 82 10 6 13 23 22 9
Mississippi 142 110 80 3 8 19 9 14 9
Montana 15 9 5 0 1 3 3 2 1
South Dakota 12 3 0 0 1 2 1 4 4
Utah 49 31 25 2 1 3 6 7 5
Vermont 9 5 1 2 1 1 0 1 3
Wyoming 15 9 6 3 0 0 2 4 0











857 552 64.41%







Now the first thing I noticed was the fact that the overall number of homicides in the less strict states is much, much lower that the number of homicides in the more strict states.

AHA!! Less strict gun laws = Less murder!!!

Umm...no. That's not the way this works. The states with the most strict gun laws also happen to be the most dense in population. More people = more criminals = more murder. No big surprise there.

The surprise, for me, was the percentage of murders that were committed with firearms. The states with the more strict gun laws was ~5%  higher for murders committed with firearms than the states with the less strict gun laws. The conclusion I draw from that is that gun laws have either no bearing or a negative bearing on the amount of murders committed with firearms.

Again, the "narrative" is that violent gun crime is on the rise in this country and the only thing that will fix it is stricter gun laws. The numbers do NOT support this. If anything, they show the exact opposite. Crime is down, and "stricter gun laws", as defined by the most anti-gun group in our country, appear to have no effect on the percentage of murders committed with guns.

Friday, June 19, 2015

Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics

First of all, let me say this:

It took a lot to get me back to blogging. I normally keep my opinions to myself and a select few friends who I can have intelligent conversations with, and who can debate with me without it going to personal attacks and / or name calling. I don't know how long I will keep posting, what my content will be, or even what I am trying to accomplish (if anything). 

Now, on to the show.


In the last few months we, as a nation, have been bombarded with commentaries, editorials, and news stories about the relationship between law, violence, and race in this country. We have been presented with graphics, statistics, and think tank outputs that were designed to further one agenda or another.

Here is the raw data from the FBI Uniform Crime reports in 2013 (Last year that data is available for)



Table 43 - Arrests by Race 2013

From this table it is clear that those criminals identified as white lead the number of arrests in all categories except for two: Robbery and Murder/Non-negligent Homicide. Whites lead the number of total arrests with 68.9% of total arrests for all violations, with Black or African American at 28.2% of total arrests.


Table 43A





Arrests





by Race, 2013





[11,951 agencies; 2013 estimated population 245,741,701]





Offense charged Total arrests
Race
Total White Black or
African
American
American
Indian or
Alaska
Native
Asian Native
Hawaiian
or Other
Pacific
Islander
TOTAL 9,014,635 6,214,197 2,549,655 140,290 105,109 5,384
Murder and nonnegligent manslaughter 8,383 3,799 4,379 98 101 6
Rape3 13,515 8,946 4,229 160 173 7
Robbery 78,538 32,945 44,271 579 649 94
Aggravated assault 291,031 183,092 98,748 4,356 4,423 412
Burglary 203,089 136,990 61,709 1,966 2,196 228
Larceny-theft 990,936 677,173 284,358 16,402 12,605 398
Motor vehicle theft 52,307 34,864 15,960 685 725 73
Arson 8,364 6,198 1,925 130 107 4
Violent crime4 391,467 228,782 151,627 5,193 5,346 519
Property crime4 1,254,696 855,225 363,952 19,183 15,633 703
Other assaults 881,086 573,546 283,357 14,041 9,717 425
Forgery and counterfeiting 48,581 31,208 16,375 288 677 33
Fraud 112,920 74,682 35,958 1,145 1,094 41
Embezzlement 12,574 7,882 4,386 87 207 12
Stolen property; buying, receiving, possessing 74,541 50,237 22,687 684 862 71
Vandalism 161,078 113,842 42,566 2,951 1,638 81
Weapons; carrying, possessing, etc. 112,228 65,317 44,671 888 1,251 101
Prostitution and commercialized vice 41,946 22,666 17,378 386 1,492 24
Sex offenses (except rape and prostitution) 46,553 33,695 11,462 622 744 30
Drug abuse violations 1,204,162 815,181 365,785 9,408 12,930 858
Gambling 5,055 1,433 3,362 27 226 7
Offenses against the family and children 78,465 51,017 25,519 1,414 511 4
Driving under the influence 910,470 766,440 113,928 12,575 16,831 696
Liquor laws 277,444 222,201 40,665 10,861 3,672 45
Drunkenness 356,427 288,146 56,885 7,399 3,550 447
Disorderly conduct 372,202 231,604 129,782 7,982 2,775 59
Vagrancy 21,354 13,732 6,802 581 222 17
All other offenses (except traffic) 2,602,939 1,741,855 790,854 43,953 25,090 1,187
Suspicion 825 499 303 12 11 0
Curfew and loitering law violations 47,622 25,007 21,351 610 630 24


Table 6 - Expanded Homicide Data Murder

This table shows that murder is largely divided along racial and gender lines. 83.4% of Whites murdered were murdered by Whites, 90.1% of Blacks or African Americans were murdered by Blacks or African Americans.

When a White Offender killed a White victim, 94.2% of the time, the offender was male. When a Black Offender killed a Black Victim, 98.7% of the time the offender was male.


Expanded Homicide Data Table 6







Murder







Race, Ethnicity, and Sex of Victim by Race, Ethnicity, and Sex of Offender, 2013







[Single victim/single offender]







Race of victim Total Race of offender Sex of offender
White Black or
African
American
Other1 Unknown Male Female Unknown
White 3,005 2,509 409 49 38 2,661 306 38
Black or African American 2,491 189 2,245 20 37 2,217 237 37
Other race2 159 32 27 96 4 142 13 4
Unknown race 68 25 17 3 23 38 7 23

Whew. That was a lot of data. So, what does this mean?

Well...to me it shows that at least two of the narratives being pushed on News Media are flawed.

At the Law ENFORCEMENT level, there are far more arrests of White criminals than there are of Black/African American criminals. An analysis of the Judicial level (arrest to conviction, severity of sentence upon conviction, etc.) is outside the scope of this post, and bears looking into at a later date. We have been told that officers are more likely to arrest minorities, but the data does not bear this out.

We have also been told White on Black homicide (and from some sources, vice versa) is a larger issue than inter-racial homicide. This is also glaringly false. In an overwhelming number of cases, we have males of the same race killing each other.

I am not posting this to further any agenda other than the interpretation of raw data vs. force fed statistics. I have not done any reformatting, additions, or subtractions to the actual tables from the FBI, and have only done simple math to arrive at my percentages. The links above each table go to the full tables on FBI.gov, and you are welcome to check my math.

I truly believe that we can not move ahead in this country until we get back to an informed public. The person responsible for the quote in the title of this post also famously said:

“If you don't read the newspaper, you're uninformed. If you read the newspaper, you're mis-informed.”

 I am of the opinion that this holds double weight in an age of 24-hr news channels, social media, and echo chamber think tanks. Check the facts for yourself. When presented with a chopped-up, over-processed graphic, find out where it came from. Find out WHY they made that graphic or offered a percentage without giving the numbers they started with. Find out who is funding them. Do your own research before you jump into an argument that has implications you don't fully understand.

Before you like, share, retweet, +1, thumbs up, or give gold, make sure you understand what agenda you are furthering.