And, after all that, if you compare the intentional homicide rate of the US with Europe, you get the same rate, approximately. Europe's rate per hundred thousand people is 5.4, and the US rate is 5.0. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_co ... icide_rateAshtonBlack wrote:US gun deaths for 2004: 10.3 per 100,00.Seth wrote:Dammit! This is simply not possible, after all the UK has draconian anti-gun laws that are guaranteed to keep guns out of the hands of criminals, right? And we all know criminals obey anti-gun laws in the UK and everywhere else.....oh, wait....never mind!![]()
One more victim to British delusion and political correctness. Poor little sheeple. It's sad, really.
English gun deaths for 2004: 0.46 per 100,00.
Yeah, the gun laws don't work. /sarcasm.
Wiki source, but their primary sources are listed on their site.
That's, of course, comparing apples to apples.
If we want to limit the comparison to just the UK, rather than all of Europe, then we need to limit the comparison to individual US states to the UK. US states range from a low of 0.8 per hundred thousand (New Hampshire) and 1.1 (Hawaii and Vermont) to 8.7 (New Mexico). For obvious reasons, New Mexico, bordering on Mexico....has its murder rate jacked way the fuck up for reasons not related to American culture. Other states with very low rates, under 2.0, are Idaho, Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, Montana, Utah and North Dakota. Those with above a 2.0 but not over 3.0 are Wisconsin, Wyoming, Washington, South Dakota, Rhode Island, Oregon, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/murder- ... -and-state
So - a good 18 states are about as good as the UK. While Euros tend to want to compare the top countries of western Europe and line that up against the entire US of 330, 000,000 people and its broad geographical and social differences, it's not a fair comparison. That would be like comparing Hawaii, New Hampshire or Vermont with Estonia, Belarus and Ukraine.