I love statistics. I think they help tell the story of many things we try to figure out. Obviously, blacks are killed by cops more than whites. That is the raw data. However, another thing I love about statistics is then digging deeper and seeing why something may be true statistically.
"Blacks represent 13% of the population but commit 50% of the murders; 90% of black victims are murdered by other blacks," writes Time's Joe Klein, calling for "provocative" thinking on race in America. "The facts suggest that history is not enough to explain this social disaster."
42I believe that statistics is if the person that was killed was attacking the police officer when killed.
How many were a direct threat to someone other than the police officer when killed?
It should still mirror the 31%. Remember, this is a chart of "justifiable homicides" and the "not attacking" bars describe where the victim was doing something other than directly threatening anyone, police officer or otherwise. And the control for an already violent situation is the non-rifle non-shotgun stat, which is where just a standard-issue handgun was used, meaning that the situation was not already violent enough to bring in a rifle or a SWAT team. In this bar, the stats look even worse. So what you get when this is controlled for is a measure of how much of a difference within that ambiguous range can be attributed to a bias. Really the only argument you can use against it is that the sample size is only 118. Still pretty sizable.I believe that statistics is if the person that was killed was attacking the police officer when killed.
How many were a direct threat to someone other than the police officer when killed?
Two dozen protesters — most of them armed — from a gun club named after the founder of the original Black Panther Party peacefully marched through parts of South Dallas on Wednesday.
The open-carry rally was organized by the Huey P. Newton Gun Club to promote self-defense and community policing in response to recent police shootings, both nationally and locally.
Police monitored the black-clad demonstrators, some of whom had rifles slung over their shoulders. As they walked down MLK Boulevard and Malcolm X Boulevard in the blistering heat, many chanted “black power” and “justice for Michael Brown,” the black teenager fatally shot by police this month in suburban St. Louis. His death has touched off a string of often-violent protests in that area.
I'm not saying there isn't a bias in policing. My point is that I caution everyone in looking at a simple stat and making major conclusions from it. The stat is what should make you start investigating more into what is causing it. It isn't the end all of information on the subject for which we can conclude to condemn a group of people (police).It should still mirror the 31%. Remember, this is a chart of "justifiable homicides" and the "not attacking" bars describe where the victim was doing something other than directly threatening anyone, police officer or otherwise. And the control for an already violent situation is the non-rifle non-shotgun stat, which is where just a standard-issue handgun was used, meaning that the situation was not already violent enough to bring in a rifle or a SWAT team. In this bar, the stats look even worse. So what you get when this is controlled for is a measure of how much of a difference within that ambiguous range can be attributed to a bias. Really the only argument you can use against it is that the sample size is only 118. Still pretty sizable.I believe that statistics is if the person that was killed was attacking the police officer when killed.
How many were a direct threat to someone other than the police officer when killed?
Of course not. Every time I post a piece of evidence, I present it not as THE evidence but as a piece of the puzzle.I'm not saying there isn't a bias in policing. My point is that I caution everyone in looking at a simple stat and making major conclusions from it. The stat is what should make you start investigating more into what is causing it. It isn't the end all of information on the subject for which we can conclude to condemn a group of people (police).It should still mirror the 31%. Remember, this is a chart of "justifiable homicides" and the "not attacking" bars describe where the victim was doing something other than directly threatening anyone, police officer or otherwise. And the control for an already violent situation is the non-rifle non-shotgun stat, which is where just a standard-issue handgun was used, meaning that the situation was not already violent enough to bring in a rifle or a SWAT team. In this bar, the stats look even worse. So what you get when this is controlled for is a measure of how much of a difference within that ambiguous range can be attributed to a bias. Really the only argument you can use against it is that the sample size is only 118. Still pretty sizable.I believe that statistics is if the person that was killed was attacking the police officer when killed.
How many were a direct threat to someone other than the police officer when killed?
I said that partly due to your comment about "It should still mirror the 31%. You then stated (and I agree) that this is a relatively small sampling. Someone would have to go through the 118 incidents and classify them farther to then make a conclusion that we have major problems here. For me, I would need to look at the individual situations and decide if a mistake actually was made.Of course not. Every time I post a piece of evidence, I present it not as THE evidence but as a piece of the puzzle.I'm not saying there isn't a bias in policing. My point is that I caution everyone in looking at a simple stat and making major conclusions from it. The stat is what should make you start investigating more into what is causing it. It isn't the end all of information on the subject for which we can conclude to condemn a group of people (police).It should still mirror the 31%. Remember, this is a chart of "justifiable homicides" and the "not attacking" bars describe where the victim was doing something other than directly threatening anyone, police officer or otherwise. And the control for an already violent situation is the non-rifle non-shotgun stat, which is where just a standard-issue handgun was used, meaning that the situation was not already violent enough to bring in a rifle or a SWAT team. In this bar, the stats look even worse. So what you get when this is controlled for is a measure of how much of a difference within that ambiguous range can be attributed to a bias. Really the only argument you can use against it is that the sample size is only 118. Still pretty sizable.I believe that statistics is if the person that was killed was attacking the police officer when killed.
How many were a direct threat to someone other than the police officer when killed?
I agree. the amount of crime is troubling. I would be interested in a study as to why poor black communities have more crime than other poor communities.Yes.
And the bigger troubling thing is how much crime is pervasive in the African-American community in the first place. Which I guess mainly comes down to poverty.
So, maybe it has to do with the type of living situation they are in instead of necessarily poverty. (yes, I understand that poverty is a part of their living situation).My guess is that it would be equal if their situations were equal. But poor blacks tend to reside in inner-city environments; poor whites tend to be more rural or suburban. (suburban isn't the right word, but you get what i mean)