Crime isn’t at a 20-year high, but concern about it is. Partly prospect theory (getting worse/better matters, not just overall level), and part reminds me that the US murder rate was higher in the 1980s but people thought it was higher in the ‘90s. In the ‘90s, more murder on TV.https://twitter.com/ABC/status/1410904505340895233 …
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Public perception of crime and actual data on crime often don’t correlate. These graphs run 1993-2016. You can see the actual drop in crime reflected in perception at first, but then perceived crime rose as actual violent crime kept declining. Most likely explanation is media.pic.twitter.com/awCwS5gY3i
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Replying to @NGrossman81 @chesaboudin
Haha, "crime is decreased by decriminalization" Genius Now show the non violent crime rate...
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Did they decriminalize murder or rape? This is about violent crime . . .
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Is it? Then why do the data sets of the graphs state "crime" and "violent crime" contradictorily? Why did he use the word "often" and why use 2016 data rather than current event data which is that crime (not just violent crime) is rising recently in face of decriminalization?
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And current crime numbers are not available, if you use FBI Uniform Crime Reporting data, the latest report available is 2019.https://www.fbi.gov/services/cjis/ucr/ …
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Well then how did the original poster conclude that "crime isn't at a 20-year high"? Strange.
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Oh, because you think nothing counts except this years statistics? Really?
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