An interesting use of statistics
Posted by strugatsky 8 years, 11 months ago to Politics
As I was carousing through certain intellectual readings, I've come across an interesting statistic, apparently popular in UN and certain Western publications http://www.theguardian.com/news/datab.... It lists percentage of homicides by firearms per country. So, it appears that some countries are very bad, like the US, for example, with a high percentage of homicides effected by a firearm. Other countries, on the other hand, had much happier victims who were killed by other methods.
Saudi Arabia, for one, has no listed homicide by firearm percentage, which is presumably zero, just like in Bahrain, since the preferred method there is beheading. England prefers knifing, while Rwanda is fond of machetes. So, as long as the death is not due to a firearm, the Progressive maggots are completely happy as, I presume, are the victims as well.
Edit: corrected the link.
Saudi Arabia, for one, has no listed homicide by firearm percentage, which is presumably zero, just like in Bahrain, since the preferred method there is beheading. England prefers knifing, while Rwanda is fond of machetes. So, as long as the death is not due to a firearm, the Progressive maggots are completely happy as, I presume, are the victims as well.
Edit: corrected the link.
The post referenced the latest article in Reason but produced nothing else. The latest article referenced an earlier article likewise nothing.
The next story was a taped confession which miraculously disappeared supposedly bought in all copies by the AR Foundation. Nothing there.
Three strikes your out. No evidence, no source wasn't even a good fairy tale.
I would be careful about that rag.....
That's two of those unsubstantiated claims in the last few months.
http://www.theguardian.com/news/datab...
What does normalized mean? Another word for spin? Spin means deceit. But then it is the Guardian and the source they used is 'iffy.'
The US Figures however matched but why use numbers from 2007 when 2013 or 2014 are available?
Guardian once again proves it's statistics are ....shite.