seahawk wrote: ↑Sun Nov 25, 2018 9:44 am
dolomite wrote: ↑Sat Nov 24, 2018 12:10 pm
Mjl wrote: ↑Sat Nov 24, 2018 11:02 am
You said we should put more emphasis on it, figured that meant some solution was attainable.
What I was getting at was when there is a mass shooting, it's in the news for a much longer time than the every day shootings for instance in Chicago, which don't seem to be news worthy. The numbers for mass shootings don't even come close to the overall total.
Crime in Chicago has been tracked by the Chicago Police Department's Bureau of Records since the beginning of the 20th century. The city's overall crime rate, especially the violent crime rate, is higher than the US average. Chicago was responsible for nearly half of 2016's increase in homicides in the US, though the nation's crime rates remain near historic lows.[5][6][7] The reasons for the higher numbers in Chicago remain unclear. An article in The Atlantic detailed how researchers and analysts had come to no real consensus on the cause for the violence.[8]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_in_Chicago
I don't think anyone has a solution to prevent people being killed with firearms, (except for the examples I gave in my previous post(re courtrooms, planes, schools).
If you stand on the side of the NRA, as you have above, it's obvious that you don't care the tiniest bit about people getting killed by guns every day, so why talk about Chicago, other than that it's where Obama is from and the ultra-racist types get off on bringing up Chicago whenever possible?
Chicago is large geographically, which means that it has fewer murders per capita than some other cities, but that doesn't matter to Trump and his mega-racist followers.
Don't know why you think I'm on the "side" of the NRA. All I said was "lambasting the NRA would have little effect". I just mentioned Chicago as a random example of everyday gun violence. I could have mentioned Flint, L.A., New York City, New Jersey or any other city that has gun violence. My main point was that more is made of mass shootings as compared to everyday gun violence.
https://www.alarms.org/top-100-most-dan ... rica-2018/
"The strictness of gun laws seems to play a limited role in violent crime rates, as the states with well over their share of cities in the top 100 (Table 1), like Florida, Michigan, Georgia, and Alabama, all have rather lax gun laws. However, there are outliers, as Illinois, the location of #1 East St. Louis (as well as Chicago, which has a very violent crime rate for its population, yet not high enough to place in the top 100) , and New Jersey, home of five cities in the top 100, have very strict gun laws.
Although mass shootings are becoming increasingly common in American life, the violent crime and prevalence of gun murders plaguing America’s most dangerous cities aren’t best explained by lax gun laws, rates of gun ownership, or one-off rampages (although, these do have an effect), but rather, by income inequality.
Where there is a high poverty rate, and little opportunity to earn a decent wage, we find high homicide rates and a prevalence of other types of violent crime.
The American communities suffering the hardest at the hands of violent crime are also some of the most impoverished in the country, with some of the highest unemployment rates, to boot."