By
Alan Caruba
Multiple
murders by a crazed killer will always generate headlines as they should. The
latest occurred on May 23 when a mentally ill young man, Elliot Rodger, killed
six and injured thirteen others. Of the six, he stabbed three and used a gun to
kill or wound the others. He wasn’t the first to do this and he won’t be the
last. These killers of multiple numbers of people all have insanity in common. It’s
not about the weapon, it’s about the killer.
In the
1940s when I was growing up, I went to a lot of movies in which killing was
part of the stories being told. As television became part of every home in the
1950s, this theme could be seen in many of the shows and movies. Whether it was
the good guys, cowboys wearing white hats or police pursuing criminals, both often
had to strike down killers.
One can
understand why many believe that we live in a society that is a jungle in which
we are at great risk of being killed by those we know or by complete strangers,
particularly in our large cities. The facts, however, tell another story
entirely.
Among the
leading causes of death in America, heart disease, according to statistics from
2010, was the primary cause, taking 597,689 lives. It was followed by cancer,
chronic lower respiratory diseases, stroke, and accidents. In 2013, there were
more than 316 million Americans, but you were more likely to die from old age
than diseases and other causes.
Of the list of 16 leading causes of death,
homicide was listed as the 15th.
Despite
the daily reports of killings and assaults, the reality is that, since the
1990s, crime of all kinds has declined in the United States and current crime
rates are approximately the same as in the 1990s.
Based on
records maintained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of
crime statistics, defined as four criminal offenses, murder and non-negligent
manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery and aggravated assault, the potential of
being a victim has been reduced. The U.S. homicide rate, which has declined
since 1992 from a rate per 100,000 persons of 9.8 to 4.8 in 2010 is still,
however, among the highest in the industrialized world.
The
reasons given for the decline in America include the increase of police
officers in the 1990s. On September 16, 1994, President Clinton signed the
Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act into law. Under the act, more
than $30 billion in federal aid was spent over a six year period to improve
state and local law enforcement, prisons, and crime prevention programs.
Significantly, the prison population has expanded since the mid-1970s, though
not all are incarcerated for violent crimes.
In fact,
cities like New York and Philadelphia have been leading the way to a reduction
of violent crime with the entire nation on track to have its lowest murder rate
in four decades. Chicago, often cited for its murder rate, was a safer city in 2013
though it still leads in the number of murders.
All this
is good news, but it is obscured by the daily reports of killings that are a
staple of what the media regards as news no matter where you live. Coverage of
murder trials, along with the endless shows devoted to fictional presentations
about murder leads people to believe that life in our cities and elsewhere is a
succession of murders, but the statistics tell us a very different, real story.
In states
where concealed carrying of weapons is legal, the murder rate is lower than
those that do not permit this. Efforts by the Obama administration to put
limits on our Second Amendment right to bear weapons only put us at greater
risk. The purchase of billions of ammunition by the administration is a
backdoor attempt to reduce our access to ammunition. Demands for increased
registration of gun ownership, already a standard law in all our states,
represent a liberal effort to convince Americans that guns are a major threat.
They are a major deterrent.
Our
perception of crime and of murder is the result of the news and entertainment
media’s constant depiction of this element of life in America, but it does not
reflect reality. This is not likely to change, but one can take comfort in the
reality the statistics provide.
There is
one significant exception that does not appear on the list of the causes of
death in America. If you were a fetus in 2012, you were among an estimated 1.04
million killed. Since Roe v. Wade legalized abortion in 1973, more than
50,000,000 babies have been killed.
There’s a
word for this. It’s genocide.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
1 comment:
You never hear the cries of *ban cars* or *ban knives* or *ban disease*...
Fists and hammers kill more people per year than do guns...
Ban fists and knives maybe??
And what about OLD AGE? Talk about a KILLER...
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