Firearms and their relation to crime figures

DammitBoy, I wasn't going to call troll on you. Plenty of folks are calling you a troll and you do troll on a regular basis, but I know that your attention is mostly on sex and masturbation (as stated in the beard thread) so you're thinking about something else. Concentration is hard when you got your mind on pussy.

The argument is simple-

(1) Too many other variables shape patterns of crime. One can't blame guns for violence but neither can one say that guns don't matter. Gun homicides are a top ten killer, that matters.

(2) But lets say, if we removed all other variables, would guns change the likelihood of lethal violence.

Well we know guns do make violence more lethal. Would more guns make our society safer by deterring people or would it make violence more likely because society is also insecure because of a heightened sense of vulnerability to violence?

Too long?
 
http://www.comcast.net/news/strange...E&fn=/2006/08/15/456455.html&cvqh=crime_226th

Nebraska Man Arrested for 226th Time
By Associated Press
Tue Aug 15, 10:16 PM

LINCOLN, Neb. - Kevin Holder's rap sheet is 43 pages long, dating back to 1980, and he just got another entry _ his 226th arrest. Police say they caught him Sunday morning after a brief chase and found burglar tools in his possession.

"He's very well-known to Lincoln police officers," Police Chief Tom Casady said.

Holder's convictions include criminal mischief, marijuana possession, violation of protection order, assault, resisting arrest, assault on an officer, possession of cocaine. Many were misdemeanors, but he also has been sentenced to at least three prison terms for felonies, including a four-year stretch starting in 1996.

"Your average Nebraskan thinks after a prisoner has committed a certain number of crimes (he) will be put away for a long period of time. That doesn't happen," Casady said.

Lancaster County Attorney Gary Lacey said Holder was charged Tuesday with felony possession of burglar tools and prosecutors will urge a judge to treat Holder as a habitual criminal. With another felony conviction, that could result in a sentence of up to 60 years. Holder remained behind bars Tuesday afternoon.

Holder's list of arrests doesn't come close to setting a record for Lincoln-Lancaster County. He's No. 40, police spokeswoman Katherine Finnell said Tuesday.

A number of people have more than 500 arrests in the city of 226,000 people. The record was held by Edward Rooks, who died in 2004, with 652 arrests.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
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