http://www.kieranhealy.org/blog/archive ... t-country/
This is the per capita number of deaths arising out of assault - including both gun- and non-gun-related deaths, in comparison to other "developed" countries. I think this is highly relevant to the current gun control debate.
In another post, he breaks it down by state and region, and ultimately by race:
While that is disturbing, we can't blame all our problems on black people. As he points out, even American white people cause each others' deaths by assault at a rate that is more than triple the average of other developed nations.The story here is depressing. Blacks die from assault at more than three times the U.S. average, and between ten and twenty times OECD rates. In the 2000s the average rate of death from assault in the U.S. was about 5.7 per 100,000 but for whites it was 3.6 and for blacks it was over 20. Even 3.6 per 100,000 is still well above the OECD-24 average, which–if we exclude the U.S.–was about 1.1 deaths per 100,000 during the 2000s, with amaximumvalue of 2.9. An average value of 20 is just astronomical. And this is after a long period of decline in the death rate from assault.
So what's the dealio, yo? Is it because we tend to attack each other with guns rather than pointed sticks, resulting in more deaths than non-fatal injuries? Are we just more violent?