Ahhh because Mexico is an OECD country, and to eliminate it from the graph when it is the only country with a much higher rate of gun death than the USA, and then claim on the graph The U.S. has far more gun-related killings than any other developed country: obviously proves the entire article, graph and all is BS, a lie, and a manipulation.
You are not doing a good job of convincing me you are capable of analysing data..........
You certainly have an aptitude for believing fudged data.
Over and over and over and over I have told you and argued for and provided a list of countries that should be included.
All of them. Every country.
Still mad. Need to learn to let go, waldo.
no - as already related to you, the article associated with the graphic goes into detail to highlight the Mexican rate, to state it's 3 times as high as the U.S. rate and to attribute that to the decade+ carnage associated with the drug wars in Mexico. You peabrain can't fathom the point already made that to include Mexico, the graph scale would have to be manipulated to the point of skewing the graphic presentation. In the graph as it stands you can see just how high the U.S. figure reaches as compared to all other referenced countries.
:mrgreen:
All that said, yes a significant portion of the guns come from the USA. Obviously.
What in the world does that have to do with the subject at hand?
Nothing, of course. You are setting up a straw man, as you have completely lost the debate over the United Nations graph
but again... you refuse to state why you believe including Mexico would offer a legitimate representative account of Mexican gun legislation/policy. You refuse to state why you believe including Mexico would offer a legitimate point of comparison to all other countries mentioned. You refuse... you repeatedly refuse the request/challenge. You sure want to include Mexico in the comparison you absolutely refuse to accept!!! :mrgreen:
.
do you truly think it's a legitimate point of comparison to include a country, Mexico, that's been ravaged by drug wars over a decade+, that's had a conservative estimate of over 120,000 gun related murders in that period associated with the drug wars, that by your own admission has the majority of it's guns brought in illegally from the U.S., etc? What value, what points of comparison are you attempting to make by wanting to include Mexico?
The Facts....
Mexico was eliminated from the graph,
It was the only OECD nation eliminated from the graph
It was also the OECD nation that did not fit their obviously preconceived conclusion.
The explaination was too many people in Mexico are killed with guns, on a graph that pretends to indicate the number of people killed with guns. It is hilariously inappropriate.
The graph scale was manipulated by removing Mexico.
The graph uses membership in the OECD to designate developed countries, therefore this heading is a lie: The U.S. has far more gun-related killings than any other developed country:
The graph is a lie.
You can make anything indicate anything if you remove all the data that disproves your thesis.
This is so obvious that your protest are actually quite amusing.![]()
Can we eliminate all inner city murders in the USA from the data?
They are overwhelmingly driug/gang related.
What value, what points of comparison are you attempting to make by wanting to include Mexico?
:mrgreen:The title you're wigging out on is based on per-capita population!
:mrgreen:
Are you stating:- that the number of guns in Mexico is a reflection of the Mexican gun regulations, gun laws, gun policy? Yes or No?again...
- that the number of guns in the U.S. is a reflection of the U.S. gun regulations, gun laws, gun policy? Yes or No?
d What value, what points of comparison are you attempting to make by wanting to include Mexico?
I am sorry but since I do not know who you are referring to as "Flossie" and have always researched information on my own, I have no clue what you are going on about.Is there anyone besides Flossy or Bluebyrd that believes anything that Waldo AKA (Machu Picchu) posts....??
do you really presume to simply equate "gun violence"... "number of shootings", to... murder/homicide rates? Even if you purposely cherry-pick those rates in isolation of all other gun violence related injury/crime, medical advances (if nothing else) speak to an influence on those death rates....... In Medical Triumph, Homicides Fall Despite Soaring Gun ViolenceThe number of U.S. homicides has been falling for two decades, but America has become no less violent.
Crime experts who attribute the drop in killings to better policing or an aging population fail to square the image of a more tranquil nation with this statistic: The reported number of people treated for gunshot attacks from 2001 to 2011 has grown by nearly half.
"Did everybody become a lousy shot all of a sudden? No," said Jim Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police, a union that represents about 330,000 officers. "The potential for a victim to survive a wound is greater than it was 15 years ago."
In other words, more people in the U.S. are getting shot, but doctors have gotten better at patching them up. Improved medical care doesn't account for the entire decline in homicides but experts say it is a major factor.
Emergency-room physicians who treat victims of gunshot and knife attacks say more people survive because of the spread of hospital trauma centers—which specialize in treating severe injuries—the increased use of helicopters to ferry patients, better training of first-responders and lessons gleaned from the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan.
"Our experience is we are saving many more people we didn't save even 10 years ago," said C. William Schwab, director of the Firearm and Injury Center at the University of Pennsylvania and the professor of surgery at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
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Ay-yup. That's the death shot. Pun intended.Ahhh because Mexico is an OECD country, and to eliminate it from the graph when it is the only country with a much higher rate of gun death than the USA, and then claim on the graph The U.S. has far more gun-related killings than any other developed country: obviously proves the entire article, graph and all is BS, a lie, and a manipulation.
Seriously? "I know you are, but what am I?" is the best you got?says the guy, YOU, who just can't... let it go! :mrgreen: Again, I'm quite content to be the outlet for you to feel you're actually contributing to this thread.
Not true. Colpy has repeatedly shown flexibility and interest in finding a set of restrictions that will take some of the inherent danger out of allowing human beings to be armed. The anti-gunners, on the other hand, show no flexibility at all. They want all firearms eliminated, except for those borne by agents of the state, who we all know are uniformly and invariably kind, cautious, charitable, and professional.I think ideologues like Waldo and Colpy are equally right and equally wrong. Neither one can get passed their agenda but, of course, you know all about that sort of thing.
Seriously? "I know you are, but what am I?" is the best you got?
Grade 3 taunts. Wow. And I bet you think yourself an adult and an intelligent human being.
huh! If you accept the accuracy of that "MoonieTimes" article you linked to, it includes an update statement that the group, "Everytown for Gun Safety", issued:“A previous version of this report incorrectly stated that we identified 1,106 ads posted by unlicensed Vermont sellers offering firearms for sale. We inadvertently included 48 ads posted by licensed dealers in Vermont in this total. This version of the report reflects data based on the updated total of 1,058 gun ads posted by unlicensed sellers,” the group said in a statement.so... they included 48 ads they shouldn't have... that makes them ~4% Liars, hey Colpy! :mrgreen:
1. You are much more apt to be killed with a gun in Mexico than you are in the USA, despite Mexico's strict gun laws.
2. The graph as presented (without Mexico) is a blatant lie, thus discrediting the entire article.
that's right... something about a decade+ ongoing drug-cartel war - go figure!
!
Actually, it makes them 4% absolute liars and 100% misleading propagandists because as a private citizen you do not need a license to advertise or sell a firearm to another private citizen. While they pretend and insinuate there is something wrong with the ads, there is not, legally at least.
no - again, the article fully qualifies why Mexico wasn't on the graph... I keep repeating this to you; you keep ignoring it. Again, as I interpret, it wasn't included simply for presentation sake. With a rate 3 times higher than the highest other country, the U.S., including the outlier Mexico would skew the look of the graph. You need to get over your blustering conspiracy theme here. You keep barking about no link being provided... you're right, I provided a link for the other WSJ article, but not the one you keep whining about... of course, you could throw a simple google image search out on the graphic and you would find the article immediately! But that would simply get in the way of your barking routine!