Thank you for that. (I have no idea why we had to go through all of that)
From Data Hazard's own tweet, which only goes to 2005, the period between 1980 and 2005 is when black women have a lower per capita murder rate for the below 25 age groups, though the +25 are fairly similar.
The other post he included doesn't include females at all.
I looked through the FBI's Crime Data Explorer which used NIBRS, and it doesn't allow for a break-down by sex and race of offender. I'm not going to spend the time right now downloading the master file as an ASCII file and importing it into Excel or Power BI to sort through it if I don't have to.
From what you're showing me, it's that the murder rates of white men and black women appear to be similar, but also seem like the the white men are still higher than black women, and I'm not seeing anything that disputes that. What Datahazard said specifically:
Until 1984, Black Females commit homicide at a higher rate than White Males (including Hispanic Males) every year.
That part seems to be true, but I'm not convinced that that is true in 2022 or 2025.
From Data Hazard's own tweet, which only goes to 2005, the period between 1980 and 2005 is when black women have a lower per capita murder rate for the below 25 age groups, though the +25 are fairly similar.
That data period also has white and Hispanic men combined.
That part seems to be true, but I'm not convinced that that is true in 2022 or 2025.
Black female homicides spiked during Floyd at a similar ratio to black males, this is also true of multiple other crime statistics like theft in that time period.
That data period also has white and Hispanic men combined.
Ehhh, alright, so be it. If Data Hazard broke it down to that extent it would be fine, but he did say prior to 1984. I kinda see hispanic as a political affiliation more than an ethnic one anyway, but I'll accept that black women and white men are close enough to be within the margin of error of one another, which is more than a significant statement in and of itself.
Black female homicides spiked during Floyd at a similar ratio to black males, this is also true of multiple other crime statistics like theft in that time period.
Sure, but I can't see the difference in what we have here. Violence spiked in all groups as far as I'm aware, during the Summer of Floyd.
Thank you for that. (I have no idea why we had to go through all of that)
From Data Hazard's own tweet, which only goes to 2005, the period between 1980 and 2005 is when black women have a lower per capita murder rate for the below 25 age groups, though the +25 are fairly similar.
The other post he included doesn't include females at all.
I looked through the FBI's Crime Data Explorer which used NIBRS, and it doesn't allow for a break-down by sex and race of offender. I'm not going to spend the time right now downloading the master file as an ASCII file and importing it into Excel or Power BI to sort through it if I don't have to.
From what you're showing me, it's that the murder rates of white men and black women appear to be similar, but also seem like the the white men are still higher than black women, and I'm not seeing anything that disputes that. What Datahazard said specifically:
That part seems to be true, but I'm not convinced that that is true in 2022 or 2025.
That data period also has white and Hispanic men combined.
Black female homicides spiked during Floyd at a similar ratio to black males, this is also true of multiple other crime statistics like theft in that time period.
Ehhh, alright, so be it. If Data Hazard broke it down to that extent it would be fine, but he did say prior to 1984. I kinda see hispanic as a political affiliation more than an ethnic one anyway, but I'll accept that black women and white men are close enough to be within the margin of error of one another, which is more than a significant statement in and of itself.
Sure, but I can't see the difference in what we have here. Violence spiked in all groups as far as I'm aware, during the Summer of Floyd.