You and other pro-gun forum users have certainly cited the Kleck-Gertz "study" on these forums as evidence of the usefulness and necessity of firearms on a number of occasions. I bring it up as an illustration of the old proverb about those who live in glass houses. If you're going to claim that a study that is contrary to your position is flawed, you should probably think twice before citing another extremely flawed study that supports your position.farson135 said:Archroy said:That isn't true. Look further down and there is an option for a custom age range. Smack bang under the one you're using actually. Looks like you used just the right criteria to come up with an acceptable number of accidental child deaths caused by firearms, if there is such a thing.They're still dead. Keep going up to the age of majority. The number gets bigger. When does it become a problem?Ok, age 0-16 deaths are 277 as opposed to my earlier 194. Not exactly a smoking gun.
And as far as you saying that this survey is flawed : simply saying that it's flawed doesn't make it so. I don't agree with your objections to it. I don't care if the bloke/woman that did it was a biologist, a herpetologist or a trichologist.If you're being honest, you dismissed this study because it doesn't support your position. And you dertainly brought up his 9whoever he may be) profession as a biologist as a problem.I didn?t dismiss it because he is a biologist I dismissed it because he used techniques that are meant for studying biology and NOT criminology. I showed how exactly his methods were flawed. Will you address those instead?
"The person who handled that survey was not a criminologist or a sociologist but was instead a biologist. His methods were perfectly appropriate for studying bacterial cultures but NOT human behavior."
And if you look back at what I originally posted, I didn't link directly to a study, flawed or otherwise. I linked to a page that comes from the American Academy of P(a)ediatrics. I don't even know what the study that you have such a problem with is. I don't know who did it. I don't know when it was done. If there's a problem with it, whatever it is, show us a link to it and then provide a link showing a reasoned analysis of it. Like the one I did regarding the Kleck-Gertz study. If you read the link I posted about the K-G study, you'll see that it's nonsense on stilts. Wearing a Groucho Marx disguise. On a sparkly unicycle.
Well, my main area of study is history with a minor in sociology (among other things).Unless you yourself are a criminologist/sociologist or whatever -ologist you deem fit to carry out research on gun safety.
The fact is that it wouldn't matter if the survey had been carried out by a resurrected, omnipotent, omniscient Charlton Heston. If it made guns look unsafe, you'd have a problem with it.No, I won't be backing the fuck off any time soon, barring bathroom breaks and sleeping. Care to explain why you think the following is a valid complaint about the elusive survey? Quote from you:Would you mind backing the fuck off and telling me why exactly his not having time as a factor acceptable in this study? If you cannot then you are talking out of your ass.
"Also (assuming they would not just use something else if guns were available), imagine all of the people on the main branch of your family since your Great-Grandparents. Got it? How many people is that? 30? 40? More? Now imagine that you take all of those people and just keep adding for a few more centuries. That is a lot of people. Now imagine that your family kept firearms in their home that entire time. Don't you think that eventually one of your family members will (at least) attempt to commit suicide, just based on odds?"
Where to begin? Very few people have their entire family living in the one house, unless they find themselves in really dire financial straits. Very few families occupy the same home for centuries, especially in America. From what I've seen, when buildings get old, they knock it down and start again. And regardless of all that, if you have a family member that is depressed and in a slough of despond decides that they want to end it all, if they use a gun, they're more likely to die than if they used another, less lethal method. It's a very specious argument.
So? What am I Kleck?s keeper? I have never even held his studies as definitive. The only time I have ever mentioned Kleck?s study is when I say that there are between 108,000 and 2.5 million defensive gun uses per year. Those are the extremes so I put them at the extreme but I always say that the number is somewhere in the middle.On the subject of studies, you do realise that the Kleck study, which proves that there are a hundred gajillion DGU's per year has its detractors?
http://www.saf.org/LawReviews/Hemenway1.htm
Common DGU myths:
There are 1M to 2.5M DGUs annually in the US.
This has its genesis with criminologist Gary Kleck who has a number of studies as to the frequency of DGUs, ranging from 1M to 2.5M DGUs occurring annually in the US. If we assume Kleck?s methodology is flawless (it's not), there are problems with Kleck?s findings that are readily apparent. For example, Kleck?s own research states that in 8% of all DGUs, the gun is fired?wounding an alleged criminal. Kleck also notes that 15% of gun shot wounds are fatal. If we do the math: 2.5M DGUs x .08 woundings x .15 fatal wounds, we should have 30,000 justifiable gun homicides each year in the US. FBI UCARS routinely place the annual number of justifiable homicides at less than 300 per year--from all causes.
I still have no idea why you are getting so pissed off. I never mentioned Kleck (did you even know if I had heard of him before I told you I had) and my concern is with the statistics YOU provided. Defend them or just stop.
If you look at the mathematics of the K-G study and actually try to apply them to the real world, the whole thing collapses in an ignominious heap with its undercrackers round its ankles. Oh, and I'm not pissed off. And off to bed.
Prove it or shut up in 3...2...1...