Darth Wong wrote:Why should you? The guy is a known liar, and it's not hard to massage statistics to come up with preferred conclusions if your methodology is dishonest. If the data is there, why can't you confirm it by looking at the source data rather than pathetically appealing to the authority of a known liar?
I'd refer you to his response to some of the criticisms made (most notably by Michelle Malkin
HERE. They put a somewhat different light on the critiques of his work. Lott is still the primary source for the effects of gun control on crime rates and we still have the awkward fact that when states introduced concealed carry, their crime rates went down (For example, the following quote comes from a report to Congress Gun Laws, Culture, Justice & Crime In Foreign Countries.
"U.S. crime trends have been better than those in countries with restrictive firearms laws. Since 1991, with what HCI calls "weak gun laws" (Sarah Brady, "Our Country`s Claim to Shame," 5/5/97), the number of privately owned firearms has risen by perhaps 50 million. Americans bought 37 million new firearms in the 1993-1999 time frame alone. (BATF, Crime Gun Trace Reports, 1999, National Report, 11/00.) Meanwhile, America`s violent crime rate has decreased every year and is now at a 23- year low (FBI). In addition to Japan, other restrictive countries have experienced increases in crime.
Which goes to the point I made right at the start; each country has its own specific situation and experience with one is not directly transferrable to another. So, the U.S. situation has to be taken on its own merits, not as a matter dictated by drawn parallels with others. In the U.S., the highest crime rates are in areas with the strictest gun control, most notoriously the big cities. New York, Chicago et al.
I would also refer you to "Would Banning Firearms Reduce Murder and Suicide? A Review of International and Some Domestic Evidence," by Don Kates, (a Yale-educated attorney who served as a professor at Stanford Law School), and Gary Mauser,(a Canadian university professor and author) published in the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy. The text of the article can be found
HERE - be warned its a PDF file. Thsi work is exhaustively referenced to original-source data.
The following quotation is worth noting.
In this connection, two recent studies are pertinent. In 2004,
the U.S. National Academy of Sciences released its evaluation
from a review of 253 journal articles, 99 books, 43 government
publications, and some original empirical research. It failed to
identify any gun control that had reduced violent crime, suicide,
or gun accidents. The same conclusion was reached in
2003 by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control’s review of thenextant
studies.
In short, there is no evidence whatsoever that gun control has an effect on crime rates. In that case, even the (agreed somewhat spotty) evidence that the availability of guns for self defense reduces crime rates has added importance. It's also interesting to note that the evidence available suggests that those who benefit most from the defense offered by handgun availability are the poor and women. That's predictable, they're the groups who are at the greatest disadvantage when attacked by criminals without having a weapon to equalize things.
I would concur that the absence of an effective social security net is one factor that leads to a high crime rate (which would explain why the big cities are the crime centers they are). However, disarming the victims is hardly a logical response to that situation in the light of the article quoted which shows the utter ineffectiveness of gun control measures.