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@Death23
well, metro Detroit has full control on how to deal with local crime and local teacher's unions, so it's really hard to blame whitey.
Separation is very expensive. There are alternatives which you might not have considered.
No. In regards to I.Q, yes. But there are instances wherein black people are genetically superior to white people (and other races).
you are using a wildly racist argument do argue that racism isn't an issue. that is some serious irony.Please keep the toys in the pram.
Shut up.
I don't think there is any point in continuing this. If you honestly think you are genetically superior to another race then there is obviously no way of reaching you with logic. That kind of thinking was disproved a long, long time ago.
That kind of thinking was disproved a long, long time ago.
Metro Detroit has full control on how to deal with local crime and local teacher's unions, so it's really hard to blame whitey.
What I am saying, is that until the street is all the same.
So, originally, you asked this question: "do you actually believe that black people are genetically inferior to white people?"You have, somehow, turned my "no" into a 'yes'. Due to this, you've proven that you are incapable of rational discussion, and thus our conversation terminates here
Unfortunately, African Americans are far more likely to be disadvantaged than Whites because there is a large, negative genetic component (i.e. not racism). In essence, African Americans create their own disadvantage, and thus that doesn't need to be controlled for. If we were to control for it, I suspect (but not know) that the racial gap would disappear entirely, because you would be eliminating the undesirable genes (and the expression thereof) that create the gap in the first place. Genetic components such as lower I.Q [1][2], poor delayed gratification propensity [3], presence of the 'warrior gene' [4] etc. create this gene differential between African American and White populations, and thus one group, on average, becomes more "disadvantaged".
Conversely, non-disadvantaged African Americans are such because of their better genes
lol you also said that black people had lower IQs than white people because they are genetically inferior. So you think you are smarter than black people for genetic reasons, but that isn't racist? lol you are such a joke.
This sort of avoids the point no? We account for disadvantaged status because we want to find the results when all other variables are equal. I can accept everything you said here (about less desirable genes and whatnot) and my point would still stand. If African Americans have undesirable genes, we would want to compare blacks with desirable genes to whites with equivalent genes to truly see if race is playing a role.
Okay, so what I'm saying is these non disadvantaged blacks would still get sentenced longer than equally non disadvantaged whites. About 20.4% longer actually.
Okay, so what I'm saying is these non disadvantaged blacks would still get sentenced longer than equally non disadvantaged whites.
The variables not addressed in the 2012 Booker report are as follows: (1) how the defendant presents himself in court, (2) and how likely he is to reoffend. The latter is partially controlled for by the Booker report in that it takes into account criminal history, but that isn't the only part in determining future likelihood of committing a crime (e.g. a new drug habit could have been formed).I don't know if the 20.4% would evaporate entirely or minutely, but not controlling these variables puts an otherwise excellent study into some doubt.
Also, to go off topic slightly, I can't find any plausible critiques of this part (quoting a previous post of yours): "men have to endure sentences which are 63% longer than their female counterparts (I know my link is a 538 article but it summarizes a 2015 study from Michigan state university)". So, the study certainly isn't complete trash and is actually quite good.
You must acknowledge that no study can address every variable under the sun, can you find a study that controls for both of these? I did some google searching and couldn't.
Well yes, from my understanding the gender gap in sentencing just isn't disputed (though I'm sure flaws in this individual study could be nit picked). Every study has limitations, and they all recognize them as such, including that 2015 Michigan study that found the 63% disparity. This is why we must err on the side where the majority or the plurality of data rests.This is why I believe in racial sentencing disparities actually, we have the meta analyses (this one looks at 85 studies) and we can see where the totality of the data points.
I'm not sure "no study" can do this, but it's certainly an extremely tall order that the overwhelming majority of studies haven't/will not be able to do.
After our conversation ended here, I did some research to see if SES actually affects crime. A meta-analysis (Faulk 2016), of a whole variety of topics involving race and SES, found that there was only a "weak" relationship with crime in general Race, Poverty, and Crime – The Alternative Hypothesis . Although, that is not to eliminate low SES entirely as a predictor of crime(as it is still weak), but we know what is left is "small", if it exists at all. So, SES matching the participants wouldn't matter all that much.
As for age, I don't know how much this affects crime (will need to research further).
This links only to an abstract. Do you have the meta-analysis in full?
Perhaps for very very simple topics yes, all variable could be accounted for. But for a topic as multifaceted as this, I can't imagine everything being taken into account.
Your study sidesteps the question I think. This isn't about whether high or low SES made you more likely to commit crime, we want to see how it impacts sentencing specifically.
I am not quite sure, but I did find this as a top result when I searched around. [SOURCE FOR QUOTE] Page 45