Percentage of population: 63......13
of total offenses charged : 69......27
Deaths Due to Use of Lethal Force by Law Enforcement: 54......32
Inmates in prison by race: 57.....38 — ssu
If deaths or prison sentences would have no racial bias, then the total offenses charged would be a good indicator in telling how many go to jail or how many are killed by the police.
32% differs from 27% by 5%, which is noticeable, yet 38% (percentage of inmates) differs from 27% by 11%, which is huge. — ssu
Further, although force was employed in fewer than 4% of contacts for all racial/ethnic groups in 2008, blacks were nearly three times more likely than whites to experience any use of force during an LE encounter.
Higher poverty among the black population accounts for a meaningful, but relatively modest, portion of the black-white gap in police killing rates. In contrast, higher census
tract poverty fully explained the Latino-white gap, and the police killing rate among Latinos
was lower than expected given their relatively high rates of census tract poverty
Thank you reading and understanding my point correctly, and as this was done in a simple google search, it surely wasn't meant to be a thorough statistical inquiry. Only that where there is more crime, there are likely more police encounters and likely more excessive use of force and this should be taken into account.Rereading your post, I saw a different claim. That instead of adjusting for the per capita percentages, "total offences charged" should be conditioned on for calculating whether there is a disparity or not in deaths due to use of lethal force by law enforcement. Outside of the issue of whether the causal chain:
X is charged with an offence -> X is killed by police.
actually makes sense as an explanation here, which is the modelling assumption underlying that conditioning. adjusting for that does make the numbers more in line — fdrake
And of course there also is the question if "total offences charged" has in itself already a bias that makes charges made more likely towards blacks than white, which could be the case. The question that comes up to me is how big role does the war on drugs have to play with this.If race also influences whether X is subject to force in an offence charging encounter, it'll have an effect over and above the preferential sampling effect. — fdrake
What that encounter is might differ, but as I've said there's an obvious difference and there is a statistic that shows it.Conditioning like that doesn't explain this kind of thing though, taken from the paper you referenced:
Further, although force was employed in fewer than 4% of contacts for all racial/ethnic groups in 2008, blacks were nearly three times more likely than whites to experience any use of force during an LE encounter. — fdrake
Before models, best to understand underlying issues like the impact on war on drugs, as I mentioned already, or how broken communities really go into free fall in the US making a huge divide between the prosperous and poor communities. Poverty goes through racial lines still in the US.But at that point, we really need to start talking about models, rather than comparing data in a naive hatchet job way. — fdrake
Before models, best to understand underlying issues like the impact on war on drugs, as I mentioned already, or how broken communities really go into free fall in the US making a huge divide between the prosperous and poor communities. Poverty goes through racial lines still in the US. — ssu
meanwhile an actual data leak from Trump's 2016 campaign shows how they attempted to deter 3.5 million Black Americans from voting. — Maw
believes you can suppress a vote with Facebook ads, confusing voter suppression with political campaigning. — NOS4A2
Before models, best to understand underlying issues like the impact on war on drugs — ssu
My mistake. I thought “deterring people from voting” meant “voter suppression”. It does mean that in regular parlance but perhaps not in your world. — NOS4A2
Trump campaign strategy to deter millions of Black Americans from voting in 2016 — Maw
We have a major problem here in American. 1) Trump will not accept loss. 2) The Republicans will join him in this stance. 3) The Justice Department will back this any way it can. 4) His storm troopers will rush into the streets with their guns to protest. Maybe someone can add more to this grim picture? — JerseyFlight
I do not believe that the spineless Republicans are willing to continue feigning support of Trump if he loses by a wide margin. Rather, I suspect that there are many who would be more than willing to abandon his ship as it's sinking. — creativesoul
The U.S. Military doesn't back him. — 180 Proof
Deter (verb): to discourage or restrain from acting or proceeding:
Example Sentence: Trump campaign strategy to deter millions of Black Americans from voting in 2016
Your mistake indeed.
Nonetheless, one cannot deter someone from voting, or suppress a vote, by showing anti-Clinton ads on Facebook. — NOS4A2
You can, a black guy in Milwaukee admits that he was deterred from voting by a fake anti Clinton add in the report.Nonetheless, one cannot deter someone from voting, or suppress a vote, by showing anti-Clinton ads on Facebook.
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