Spacekiwi wrote:
Just checked the dates on your data, and the data for your facts is from between 2002 and 2004, according to the site. the Data I used was from a later study in 2012 according to the data on the wikipedia pages. Im not sure how they did it, but according to your numbers and mine, the british managed to drop their murder rate by around 4.5 per hundred thousand over 8 to 10 years.
That is pretty much correct yes. If you get a graph covering from the 90s to now, you will notice an increase in crime up until early 2ks, at which point the strict gunlaws took serious effect. Murder rates dropped seriously for several years then levelled out.
UK is actually a perfect example of the effects of strict gunlaws.
Spacekiwi wrote:the US also managed a respectable 0.8 per 100,000 drop, which assuming a population of 400 million, is still a drop of 3200 deaths.
USA had a longterm downwards trend, not a huge difference, but of course, someone had to exploit it politically, so in NY, it was claimed that the zero-tolerance regime was the cause. Conveniently leaving out that the downwards trend started before that and also happened elsewhere.