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This works much better if you clink the link.  That way you can view the table.

http://www.haciendapub.com/stolinsky.html

Feature Article

                          America: The Most Violent Nation?

                                      David C. Stolinsky, MD

Is America the most violent nation on earth? Those who blame this country for
most of the ills of the world would have us believe
so. They frequently refer to high rates of homicide and suicide, though they
rarely cite actual data. But before fear impels us to
shred the Bill of Rights, we should determine whether our fear has a factual
basis.

The accompanying table (Table 1) gives suicide and homicide rates for all 86
nations for which data are available.
Rates are per 100,000 population and come from the United Nations 1996 Demographic
Yearbook published in 1998.(1) Note
that the latest U.S. suicide rate (for 1997) is 11.4, slightly below the 11.9
listed, while the 1997 U.S. homicide rate is 7.3, far below
the 9.4 listed here. Figures exceeding published U.S. figures are starred, while
those exceeding only the most recent (1997) U.S.
figures are doubly starred. For a more contemporaneous comparison, the singly
starred figures should be stressed.

                                                   Accuracy of the figures varies.
Suicide may not be reported
                                                   to spare the family. Thus
Egypt claims a suicide rate of zero.
                                                   On the other hand, Japan lists
murder-suicides as suicides; if
                                                   a man kills his family and
himself, all are listed as suicides.
                                                   The thousands of patients
"euthanized" by doctors each year
                                                   in the Netherlands are listed
as dying from disease. There
                                                   are 185 UN members, so over
half of all nations, including
                                                   the former Soviet Union and
many African and Asian
                                                   nations, reported no data
at all.

                                                   Regarding suicide, the U.S.
is in the middle of the pack, with
                                                   35 of the 86 nations having
higher rates (38 using the most
                                                   recent U.S. figure). Compared
to the U.S. rate of 11.9,
                                                   Russia has a rate of 41.2,
Hungary 32.9, Denmark
                                                   22.3, Switzerland 21.4, France
20.8, and Japan 16.7. In
                                                   general, Northern and Eastern
European and Asian
                                                   nations tend to have high
suicide rates, while countries
                                                   in Southern Europe and Latin
America tend to have
                                                   low rates.

                                                   Is there a relation between
suicide and strictness of
                                                   gun-control laws? Northern
European and Asian nations tend
                                                   to have high rates and strict
laws, while Latin American
                                                   nations tend to have low rates
and more lax laws. Hence one
                                                   could make a spurious claim
that strict gun laws "cause"
                                                   suicides. Such a claim would
ignore many relevant facts. For
                                                   example, Latin countries are
mainly Catholic, with severe
                                                   social pressures against suicide.
Still, it makes as much (or as
                                                   little) sense to say that
gun laws "cause" suicides as that they
                                                   "prevent" homicides.

                                                   The U.S. suicide rate has
fluctuated between 10 and 17 for a
                                                   century, with peaks in 1908
and 1932, and shows no relation
to gun laws or gun availability. The current rate is below the midpoint and falling
slightly. Recently suicides in the young increased.
Advocates of gun laws blame the availability of guns. But suicides in older Americans
decreased. The advocates ignore this fact.
If something bad happens, they blame guns; if something good happens, they ignore
it. And this is called "research."

Is there a correlation between suicide and homicide rates? Statistical analysis(2)
shows none (r = 0.08). Nations with low suicide
rates may have low (Greece) or high (Mexico) homicide rates. Nations with high
suicide rates may have low (Switzerland) or high
(Russia) homicide rates. Since suicide and homicide rates are not correlated,
it is difficult to see how a single factor,
such as gun laws, could cause major reductions in both of them.

Moving to the homicide data, we recall that America is often said to have the
highest homicide rate of any "civilized," "Western,"
"industrialized," or "advanced" nation. Do those who make such claims believe
that Mexico is uncivilized, Brazil is not in the
Western Hemisphere, Russia is not industrialized, or Ukraine is retarded?

Looking at the homicide figures, we again wonder about accuracy. Are "political"
killings (by the government or rebels) in
Northern Ireland, Egypt, Israel, Guatemala, Peru, China, and elsewhere listed
as homicides, listed separately, or concealed? We
must admit that the U.S. has a higher homicide rate than any Western European
nation. Still, 23 nations admit to higher rates:
Armenia, Bahamas, Belarus, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Estonia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Mexico,
Moldova, Paraguay, Philippines, Puerto Rico, Russia, Sao Tome, Tajikistan, Trinidad,
Ukraine, and Venezuela. Using the 1997
U.S. homicide rate of 7.3, Azerbaijan and Cuba also have higher rates. Nine nations
(ten using the 1997 figures) including Russia
have both higher suicide and higher homicide rates.

There may be a lesson here. Perhaps the more we resemble Colombia with its drug
wars, and Eastern Europe with its ethnic
strife, the more our homicide rate will rise. In fact, homicide rates in some
central cities, including Washington, D.C. with its
"crack" wars, are already as high as that of Colombia. This is not an encouraging
thought.

The changes in the U.S. homicide rate over time are interesting. In 1900 there
were few gun laws. New York had no
handgun law and California no waiting period. Guns of all types could be ordered
by mail or bought anonymously. And
the homicide rate was 1.2, about one-sixth of what it is today. The homicide
rate peaked in 1933, during the Depression, and
then fell. It was low during and after World War II, but began to rise in the
1960s and 1970s, and reached its high for this century,
10.7, in 1980. It then fell to 8.3 in 1985, a fall of 22 percent. This welcome
news was virtually ignored by the media, which
emphasize rises in violence but downplay decreases. Homicide rose again in the
late 1980s, but not to its 1980 high. The homicide
rate continued to rise following the Gun Control Act of 1968, while the fall
in the early 1980s occurred when anti-crime laws but
no new anti-gun laws were passed.

>From 1991 to 1997 the U.S. homicide rate fell 30 percent. Liberals credit a strong
economy and low unemployment;
conservatives point to three-strikes laws and increasing use of the death penalty.
We are uncertain which factors to credit. The
portion of the population made up by males aged 15 to 24, the most crime-prone
group, fell by 5 percent, so this can account for
only a fraction of the 30 percent fall in homicide. In any case, the fall began
in 1992, while the Brady Act (waiting period
for handgun buyers) and the assault-weapons ban went into effect in 1994. Clearly,
these laws cannot be credited for a fall
in homicide that had begun two years earlier. Violence is often like an Rorschach
test --- what we read into it depends more on us
than on it. This subjectivity must be avoided.

Will extremely harsh anti-gun and anti-crime laws be more effective than conventional
laws? Figures for East and West Germany,
the last before the Wall came down, reveal a unique "experiment." In 1945 a uniform
population was split in two. After four
decades of dictatorial rule, the homicide rate in the Communist East was 0.7,
hardly lower than that in the free West, 1.0. But the
suicide rate in the East was 25.8, much higher than 15.8 in the West. That is,
even the harshest regime prevented few homicides,
but at the cost of many suicides --- hardly a fair exchange. Overly severe laws
may be counterproductive as well as oppressive.

Israel and Switzerland, where most adult males keep military-type guns at home,
have low homicide rates, so easy
access to guns cannot be the key factor in homicide. Some nations with strict
anti-gun laws also have low homicide rates, but
is this cause and effect? The low homicide rate in the United Kingdom holds for
both gun and non-gun homicides; strict gun laws
cannot account for a low rate of fatal beatings. Japan has harsh anti-gun and
anti-crime laws and a low homicide rate, but
Japanese-Americans, who live under our laws and have access to guns, also have
a low homicide rate. Japanese immigrants bring
something with them that inhibits homicide and is transmitted to their children
and grandchildren. It may be self-control or love of
education, but it has nothing to do with laws. Cultural factors are clearly important.
To study the effect of gun laws, statisticians
would first have to correct for all the cultural differences between various
nations. Not enough is known to do this. The best we
can do is observing what happens when new gun laws are passed in the U.S. and
Germany, or when Japanese live in the U.S. In
these cases, little effect of gun laws is seen.

In telling Americans, especially young ones, that they live in the most violent
nation on earth, we are slandering our country. In
addition, we may be inadvertently increasing the violence. Studies reveal that
children whose teachers believe they will do well
actually do better in school. Children may sense their teachers' expectations
and live up to them. It seems likely that children
raised to believe that they come from the most violent people on earth will act
accordingly. The violence-prone minority
will be more violent, believing that they must strike before others attack them,
while the nonviolent majority will lapse into hopeless
passivity. This is not helpful to a free country.

It really comes down to what we prefer as a basis for our opinions --- facts
or myths. Myths may be comforting, but they rarely
lead to effective action. Myths tell us that nations with strict anti-gun laws
have low rates of suicide and homicide, so the answer
is easy --- pass more laws. And if the laws don't work, pass still more. Facts,
on the other hand, may be disturbing. They rarely
provide easy answers for complex problems.

Without the deceptive comfort of myths, we are forced to confront reality. Liberals
must face the fact that despite billions spent on
social programs, changes to make the justice system more "fair," and new gun-control
laws, the homicide rate doubled since the
1960s. Conservatives must face the fact that despite continuing family breakup,
fatherless boys, decaying schools, and loss of
respect for human life, the homicide rate fell by one-third in the 1990s. Advocates
of drug legalization must face the fact that this
fall in homicide occurred as the "war" on drugs continued. Opponents of violent
films and video games must face the fact that as
these increased, homicide as well as school violence fell, despite highly publicized
shootings. Conversely, liberals must admit that
the recent fall in homicide was associated with three-strikes laws and increasing
use of the death penalty, while conservatives
must admit that the fall in homicide was associated with low unemployment and
a strong economy.

In short, we all must admit that we have much to learn about the causes of violence.
This requires more effort and intellectual
honesty than looking to the government to pass yet another law. America is hardly
the most violent nation, and our homicide rate
has fallen recently, but we are more violent than we used to be --- and than
we should be.



                                           References

1. 1996 Demographic Yearbook. New York, United Nations, 1998.
2. Stolinsky SA, Stolinsky DC. Suicide and homicide rates do not covary. J Trauma
2000; 48:1168-1169.

Dr. Stolinsky is a retired medical oncologist and co-author of Firearms: A Handbook
for Health Professionals, published by
The Claremont Institute. His e-mail is [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Originally published in the Medical Sentinel 2000;5(6):199-201. Copyright �2000
Association of American Physicians and
Surgeons.

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