Jules Galen
Banned
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2013
- Messages
- 3,726
Are you saying that everyone who kills another human feels remorse?
You are playing with words. It's childish. Please stop.
Are you saying that everyone who kills another human feels remorse?
Minoosh, I thought you taught both English and Math courses.Originally Posted by Totovader
The rate of murder by corrupt officers is 32 per 100k, and for CCW permit holders it's .7 per 100k.
You have a problem with clarity. If the rate of murder by corrupt officers is 32 per 100,000, and there are 300,000,000 people in the U.S., then the number of people killed by corrupt officers is 32 x 3000, or 96,000. Annually, I suppose. Before you tried to turn this into a rate, you said there were 247 cases in 2010 of unjustified homicide by cop.
So what is the rate? Are you trying to say that there are 32 murderous cops per 100,000 total cops? Or, of 100,000 homicides, 32 were by bad cop? I can't tell.
You are playing with words. It's childish. Please stop.
A Tragedy that will haunt the survivor.
Here's a Youtube Video that shows how to pull off a damn-near perfect murder.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsTsqefYEcw
Notice that the shooter approached the door while he blades his handgun by his body....until he gets close. Then notice how the shooter puts his chin down and gets in the guys face and starts talking trash. He puts the chin down because he know he's about to be punched as a result of what he is saying and havong your chin tucked tight will keep you from getting KO'd (this is why professional fighters do it). the...the punch comes right on time and BLAM!!!! the kid is shot to death in "so-called" self defense.
To the internet gun crowd, the shooter was a hero. In Houston, Texas, the shooter is under indictment for his crime. See....Texas don't go for that crap neither.
Here's a Youtube Video that shows how to pull off a damn-near perfect murder. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsTsqefYEcw
Notice that the shooter approached the door while he blades his handgun by his body....until he gets close. Then notice how the shooter puts his chin down and gets in the guys face and starts talking trash. He puts the chin down because he know he's about to be punched as a result of what he is saying and havong your chin tucked tight will keep you from getting KO'd (this is why professional fighters do it). Then...the punch comes right on time and BLAM!!!! the kid is shot to death in "so-called" self defense.
To the internet gun crowd, the shooter was a hero. In Houston, Texas, the shooter is under indictment for his crime. See....Texas don't go for that crap neither.
How is that "damn-near perfect"?
Why are you posting links to murders?
he came close to getting away with it until a local Lawyer pointed out to the DA how this incident could not only have been avoided, but was provoked and almost certainly scripted by the shooter (who had a history of pulling guns on unarmed people).
he came close to getting away with it until a local Lawyer pointed out to the DA how this incident could not only have been avoided, but was provoked and almost certainly scripted by the shooter (who had a history of pulling guns on unarmed people).
Here's a video of another murder in Houston staged to look like "Self Defense". Notice how much time this poor Damsel in Distress ha to unlock her trunk and get a rifle to fend off Granpops!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0qX_7JCuf4
So, somebody watched the video with a sharp eye and no confirmation bias.
Probability of a firearm given that you have been the victim of a crime = 4.55% (~1 in 22 chance) - an interesting statistic, but not what we're after
Probability that you are a victim of crime given that there is a firearm = .43% (~1 in 234)
Probability that you are the victim of a crime given that there is no firearm = 4.81% (~1 in 21)
That shakes out to: you are 11 times more likely to be the victim of a crime given there is no firearm
Mind explaining that one?In other news, you are more likely to die when you are not in the middle of a raging hurricane.
Highly misleading use of probabilities there and no mistake.
Mind explaining that one?
To compare situations, you can't just compare the probability of dying in situation one versus situation two based on statistics. If you spend one day of your life in a hurricane and only have 1% odds of dying in it, that means you are 100 times more likely to die in a situation without a hurricane. Naively you could therefore conclude that being in a hurricane is 100 times safer than not.
In actuality, if you spend some 30,000 days outside hurricanes compared to one day in a hurricane (for simplicity's sake let's assume the odds of dying each of those days are equal) then each day not in a hurricane is 300 times safer than the one day spent in the hurricane.
To have a relevant way to compare the relative level of danger of situations, you need to factor in the time periods spent in those situations.
The OP's counterintuitive numbers are the direct result of exactly this: not factoring in time periods spent with and without gunmen in the vicinity.
Doing so would be difficult, but without adding that, the numbers are completely meaningless. You ARE more likely to die outside a hurricane, overall.
Sounds familiar.
A person with a history of, let's say...aggression and temper, has a gun and shoots someone in an incident that could have been avoided, but instead was provoked and was held up as a hero to the gun rights crowd.
We've never heard this story before.
You have completely missed the point: I'm not measuring likelihood of random events. I am measuring the conditional probability of death given a scenario. You are confusing the inverse: the likelihood of death given that you are in a hurricane is not the same as the likelihood you are in a hurricane given that you have died. The relative likelihood is: given that things exist, what is the likelihood. We don't care about the inverse of that- because we are measuring the deadliness of the groups.
Yes, you are "measuring the conditional probability of death given a scenario". Sadly that is a meaningless question to us as humans. What we want to know is, which situation is more dangerous to us in a given timeframe?
The question whether spending time in a restaurant filled with guns is more dangerous than driving a car on public roads over a lifetime has no meaning.
The question that actually matters is whether spending two hours in a restaurant with twelve armed men is more or less dangerous than driving a car for two hours.