Let me get this straight.
My original post was all about disparities in economic and social outcomes correlate more strongly to firearm-related violent crime and homicide than to gun ownership, and how economic northern countries are disproportionately represented in analyses of it compared to economic southern countries -- which have
lower firearm ownership rates but
higher firearm-related violent crime and homicide rates.
And your response to this is to post an infographic showing gun homicide rates
in exclusively economic northern countries.
Now,
here's my point in a nutshell:
worldpopulationreview.com
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worldpopulationreview.com
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worldpopulationreview.com
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Funny how that works. It's almost as if there are intervening variables in the equation and that rate of firearm ownership doesn't actually tell the entire story. Variables like socioeconomic disparity, government instability, and civil unrest. You know,
all the things I said in the first place.
And, that US violent crime rate is
only an outlier if one looks only at firearm ownership rate and disregards Gini coefficient. But if one looks at Gini coefficient, its firearm-related homicide rate falls
perfectly in line with comparable countries. In other words, the US has income inequality on par with third-world failed states and a violent crime rate to match.