SUBSIM Radio Room Forums



SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997

Go Back   SUBSIM Radio Room Forums > General > General Topics
Forget password? Reset here

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 10-05-09, 05:52 AM   #1
Skybird
Soaring
 
Skybird's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: the mental asylum named Germany
Posts: 42,738
Downloads: 10
Uploads: 0


Default

"Some people more prone to getting injured" you said, Mothball. This study says the probabilty of armed people getting shot is found to be more than four times as big than for unarmed people. Note that the comparing case groups are almost the same size, between 650 and 700, but the "armed" group has had almost five times as many people shot down.

They reasons you gave for that, greater attraction by the attacker, may be right, and if they meet resisrtance in a situation where they did not expect it, it may also lead to short circuits in their behavior and - bamm, there you go. But these reasons do not change anything. They have been dealt with in social psychology for quite some time (when is aggressive behavior by a defender successful, and when is it provoking even more aggressiveness by the attacker). But the basic problem remains.

If that study is robust, it says that you run greater risks of getting shot when you own a weapon, and indeed, the author recommend at the end that people should reconsider the possession of firearms as a self-defensive means. according to this statistical finding, it is absolutely counterproductive.
__________________
If you feel nuts, consult an expert.
Skybird is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-05-09, 06:15 AM   #2
Freiwillige
The Old Man
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Phx. Az
Posts: 1,458
Downloads: 24
Uploads: 0
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Skybird View Post
"Some people more prone to getting injured" you said, Mothball. This study says the probabilty of armed people getting shot is found to be more than four times as big than for unarmed people.
The probability of the bad guy getting shot by an armed citizen goes up 100% verses an unarmed victim.
Freiwillige is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-05-09, 07:35 AM   #3
UnderseaLcpl
Silent Hunter
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Storming the beaches!
Posts: 4,254
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Platapus
Without knowing what adjustments and what the confounding variables, it is difficult to determine the accuracy of the results.
Well put. I would very much like to know the circumstances under which these tests were performed, and the scenarios involved, as well as many other variables. Too bad it costs $ or I'd take a look at them.

Sky does bring up a good point in suggesting (as per the study) that armed victims are more likely to be shot in some situations; if an assailant with a firearm has the drop on you and you stupidly try to out-draw him....well, the results will be fairly predictable. As Sky points out, discretion is sometimes the better part of valor, whether you are armed or not. Techniques exsist that allow one to suddenly and advantageously reverse such situations, but they are risky and difficult for anyone without a very vested effort in self-defense education to execute.

That said, the suggestion that simply posessing a weapon makes you more prone to becoming a casualty is questionable. In many cases, possessing a firearm will make you much less prone to becoming a casualty; for instance, if someone is intent upon killing or wounding you with an inferior weapon, a firearm would be a decided advantage under most circumstances. Similarly, if one were to find oneself in the area of a mass shooting, use of a firearm is a much better recourse than simply panicking and running/hiding, counting upon others to take bullets for you. That is, assuming you care anything for the lives of others.

In fact, in the situation described above, one would stand an excellent chance of successfully wounding or killing the attacker because they would have the element of surprise.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Skybird
Carrying weapons in self-defense must not necessarily have a deterring effect - it also can trigger easier use of violent force by the attacker in an attempt to overcome the surprising or to be expected resistance of the intended victim.
True, if a bit nebulous. Carrying weapons, especially concealed weapons, may indeed not have any deterrant effect at all. Statistically speaking, I could walk into just about any venue in the US, start shooting, and reasonably expect not to be shot at until I had done a considerable amount of damage. It is also probable that I could rob a given merchant or person without fear of armed reprisal.

Nonetheless, if private weapon ownership and responsible usage were to be encouraged, the deterrant effect would manifest itself much more effectively, imo. I realize the critics often point to the comparitively high ratio of guns to citizens in the US as evidence against that point, but those statistics are quite misleading. Most gun owners own more than one firearm. I myself own six, but I'm not indicative of the US population as a whole. Nonetheless, all my registered weapons count towards the ratios calculated by the ATF. Once you factor in the number of obsolete or collector firearms, which must also be registered, the ratio of guns to citizens in the US is quite low, though still above average for most nations. Admittedly, I imagine that the ratio would be raised quite a bit by the presence of illegal firearms, if there was any reliable way of tabulating their numbers.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Skybird
In other words: owning a gun has its own risks, and owning a gun is no replacement for brains, and we do not even talk about the need for proper gun training and training the psychological readiness to use ponetially lethal force against somebody else (a problem known to any self defence trainer). In many situations and places you are simply better off not to be armed. That may hurt your ego, but a hurt ego does not kill you.
What you say is quite true Sky. Quite true. If more gun owners shared this aspect of your views I'm sure that private gun ownership and regulation would not be such an issue. Unfortunately, most people in the US don't share your cognizance. Stances on gun usage range from those held by the reckless to those held by the insufferably paranoid.

Personally, I'd love to see the second amendment revisited, provided that the spirit of it remains the same. As citizens, it is our duty and our right to arm and defend ourselves against aggressors and the state, should circumstances warrant it. The fear of an armed populace is a deterrant to criminals of any kind, including criminal states, if weapon ownership is pervasive enough. That much I hold true.

However, I would like to see a proper Constitutional stance on modern firearms; one that protects and encourages proper usage and training. For all their wisdom, the founding fathers could not have predicted the advances in small-arms technology, and this is one of the few areas in which I am willing to compromise on Constitutional principles, assuming that it is done in the proper spirit and fashion.

As individuals, it is our right to defend ourselves, our families, and our possessions against both lawlessness and totalitarianism; to surrender it is to put ourselves at the mercy of the powerful and the immoral. With that right comes the responsibility to excercise it properly, that we might not become tyrants or criminals ourselves. Firearms are the modern weapons of choice when it comes to individual defense. Firearms are force incarnate, force to good or ill. As a free society, we have the responsibility to ensure that these weapons are freely available to the law-abiding citzenry, so long as responsibility and proper training can be demonstrated. How we decide to go about establishing what constitutes proof is something else again, but I feel that the idea is sound.
__________________

I stole this sig from Task Force
UnderseaLcpl is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-05-09, 07:39 AM   #4
ETR3(SS)
Ocean Warrior
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Between test depth and periscope depth
Posts: 3,021
Downloads: 175
Uploads: 16
Default

Something that must be kept in mind is statistics can be molded and shaped to ones point of view. Without being familiar with the AJPH, I can't say what their motives are for this "study" and how accurate the results are. But I will agree that a gun does not replace your brain. It's just an extra tool that may or may not help you in a potentially violent scenario.
__________________


USS Kentucky SSBN 737 (G)
Comms Div 2003-2006
Qualified 19 November 03

Yes I was really on a submarine.
ETR3(SS) is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-05-09, 09:32 AM   #5
Skybird
Soaring
 
Skybird's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: the mental asylum named Germany
Posts: 42,738
Downloads: 10
Uploads: 0


Default

Maybe I should explain what they did, people not familiar with academic slang may not get the right picture form the short summary that is available to us.

What they did is they took the crime cases of a given area (Philadelphia) in a given period of time (2003-2006), separated them in two groups (attacker vs unarmed and attackervs armed victims), and looked in what group more people got shot at. Well, that is not precisely what they did, but their approach acchieves an effect that could be described like this. They found that in the group with the armed people, 4.4 times as many of these armed people got shot at and got wounded/killed, than in the other group (again, I try to "translate" what they actually did into what was the inention for doing it). The summary also indicates that the finding is statistically significant (means it is not caused by random chance, but there is a real significant difference between the two different rresults for both groups. That is no surprise, becasue in established scientific magazaine you do not get conclusions or results published if they fail the significance criterion as long as there is no infomrational value to be gained from understanding that a given hypothesis could not have been supported in a given experimental setup. but usually publication of data in established science magazine depends on that a significant difference between two or more groups is being found instead of being rejected.

They did no experiments. They ran no observation setups in "wild life out there".

They did a statistical analysis of data from the official crime records.

I aSSUME THEY GOT THE MATERIAL DIRECTLY FROM EITHER THE POlice or the city administration.

What was it that Neal said recently about the curse of CAPS LOCK?
__________________
If you feel nuts, consult an expert.

Last edited by Skybird; 10-05-09 at 10:52 AM.
Skybird is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:07 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995- 2025 Subsim®
"Subsim" is a registered trademark, all rights reserved.