Okeefenokee wrote:One hundred out of a thousand is ten percent. You know you're backing up my argument, right?
Penner posted a barrage of links that he believes supports his belief that the police are too quick to kill.Okeefenokee wrote:Unless you have some figures, all you're doing is talking. I've shown you data, and you don't accept it. Present your own, then. Let's see some work, eh? If the streets are running red with blood, step outside and take a picture, because otherwise, I've demonstrated that they aren't, and you've presented nothing other than skepticism not backed up with evidence.
You made a response to Penner's post saying he was wrong by using a single chart from the Washington Post, without any analysis of the chart.
I made a post explaining how the chart was misleading.
You responded, saying my post supported you previous post.
I responded with an argument expanding on my earlier post on why that is not so. This included inferences, reasoning, facts, and numbers, along with a link to newspaper site https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ser ... e-killings that has an extensive data that is easily searchable, along with many articles on police homicides.
You responded not with any criticisms, let alone analysis, of my arguments, or even more information in support of support of your previous statement, but only with a overblown, imaginative retort.
I've added some screen shots.
By the way, the WaPo's article is good, but not as extensively researched, and uses slightly different criteria, as the Guardian's site. The Guardian list 1146 people killed, with 234 being unarmed, or 20.42% of the total, in 2015 which is the same year as the WaPo's chart. Since the police only report about half of their homicides to the FBI, both papers have had to do extensive digging, which makes getting accurate information difficult.