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- Newsgroups: talk.politics.guns
- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!inmet!inmet!dlb
- From: dlb@fanny.wash.inmet.com (David Barton)
- Subject: Re: Effectiveness of gun control
- In-Reply-To: dean@vexcel.com's message of Wed, 23 Dec 1992 19:00:31 GMT
- Message-ID: <DLB.92Dec23150210@fanny.wash.inmet.com>
- Sender: news@inmet.camb.inmet.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: fanny.wash
- Organization: Intermetrics Inc., Washington Division, USA
- References: <1992Dec23.190031.24169@vexcel.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 20:02:10 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <1992Dec23.190031.24169@vexcel.com> dean@vexcel.com (Dean
- Alaska) writes:
-
- Results
-
- In Washington, D.C., the adoption of the gun-licensing law
- coincided with an abrupt decline in homicides by firearms ( a
- reduction of 3.3 per month, or 25%) and suicides by firearms
- (reduction, 0.6 per month, or 23%). No similar reductions were
- observed in the number of homicides or suicides committed by other
- means, nor were there similar reductions in the adjacent
- metropolitan areas in Maryland and Virginia. There were also no
- increases in homicides or suicides by other methods, as would be
- expected in equally lethal means were substituted for handguns.
-
- [The body of the study contains many graphs and tables documenting
- the claims above. It also discusses why the intuitive idea that
- gun availability through the black market would render controls
- useless does not actually pan out.]
-
- Sigh. Reading this newsgroup a while will avoid such silliness.
-
- This study has been discussed ad nauseam here. The figures are given
- in absolute terms, not homicides per 100,000. The population of the
- District dropped over the same period by approximately the same
- amount. Any final reduction, when given in homicides per 100,000
- population shows no statistically significant correlation.
-
- Of course, it also stops just short of the big jump in '88.
-
- Dave Barton
- dlb@hudson.wash.inmet.com
-