rms
Active Member
concentrated relative poverty seems like an obvious large influencer of violence. just don't see any other-more-plausible alternative
Again, I don't think poverty is an independent factor; but comparing rural Appalachia to black urban communities is like comparing apples and oranges. The Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice issued a report in the early nineties that crime in rural communities, including Appalachia, is often of the organized variety, and that local law enforcement are often complicit, and therefore crime tends to be under-reported.
Also, I doubt that rural Appalachia is actually "safer" than the black ghetto for your average Midwesterner or New Englander.
They would if you transplanted them into an urban environment. Part of what I'm saying is that Appalachia is fucking huge and spread out. There aren't turf wars when you're separated by mountains and woodlands. Which leads me to my next point...
The crime and relative poverty couldn't have common factors underlying both rather than having a direct causal connection.
Bullshit. There's very little correlation between urban-ness and serious crime. In much of Europe, the worst cities (aside from perhaps certain immigrant ghettos) have homicide rates only a few times higher than the national average. In the USA it's more than 10x the national average, and exclusively in cities with large black populations. Urban-ness correlates only because of blackness in American cities.
EDIT: Also, it ignores the fact that the black regions of rural Louisiana and Mississippi have comparable gun homicide rates to cities with high levels of black violence.
So why doesn't urbanization affect other poor groups? I never said that you said "that poor areas can't be crime-ridden". You change the subject with every reply.
Studies have shown correlations between stricter laws and lower crime rates.
They would if you transplanted them into an urban environment. Part of what I'm
saying is that Appalachia is fucking huge and spread out. There aren't turf wars when you're separated by mountains and woodlands. Which leads me to my next point...
First of all, I don't understand why hipsters and hikers are a blight (maybe the hipsters, but that's little more than a personal objection that I believe we happen to share--not a comment on their behaviors).
The reason you can't conflate them is that people who go vacationing in Appalachia aren't going and living among the local residents. They're staying in official campgrounds and national parks. There are areas of the region that are distinct from the residential communities.
So contrasting the lack of vacationers between Appalachia and the ghettos of Baltimore is misleading. It's not as though vacationers are running off to be among the residential slums of the hill folk.
With regard to European cities--and I realize this won't be a popular answer--but many of them have stricter gun laws than the U.S. Studies have shown correlations between stricter laws and lower crime rates.
American cities aren't the same as European cities, and black communities in America aren't the same as black communities elsewhere. You have to think about more than just their urbanness or poverty--and you can't skip right to "it must be because they're black."
I don't know what "access to minorities" means.