this post was submitted on 09 Dec 2023
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The Right Can't Meme

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Let me see if I understand the argument here: gang and drug violence is magically somehow worse, and the victims somehow more deader than the family members? I dunno, sounds pretty sus. Like “gang and drug” is maybe code for something.

An argument about stochasticity would be more sensible, but if the town of 50 thousand has an average murder rate of about 4 per year over a period of many years, then it has exactly the same per capita rate of violence and death as the city, feelings about the perps notwithstanding. The city might even feel safer to the people living there, because drug and gang violence tends to be highly localized and predictable, unlike a guy walking into a bowling alley in a small town on a random night and blowing people away.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 11 months ago

LiberalGunNut™ here! I see a great deal on both sides of the gun issue, I'm more than a little familiar.

"Gang violence" is often a straight-up dog whistle that says, "Black and Hispanic kids blowing each other away doesn't really count."

While I don't think we should be talking like this, it's not always the dig whistle. Some well-meaning people say it to emphasize the idea that gun violence is not nearly so random as the media implies. Cute little white girl catches a stray round? National news. 5 black kids smoke each other in South Chicago? Might not make the local news.

Point being, the second scenario is not random. Those people choose that life. (I'd also argue it was thrust on them by poverty and poor education, but that's a whole other rant.)

Still, I don't want to be painted with the racist brush, so I stay far away from that rhetoric.

And BTW, calling out ~47% of gun deaths as suicides serves much the same purpose, with the same touch of disingenuousness. No one's saying those are not tragic, but they're not random and can be avoided.