-3 points

That’s how you don’t do infographics.

permalink
report
reply
7 points

Would you mind elaborating? What’s your issue with it?

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

That guns being available to the general public, including some of the most deadly ones, inherently do A LOT more harm than good. This doesn’t even cover the police arriving and shooting the good guy with a gun thinking he is the bad guy, or good guys with guns shooting each other. The fact that guns are allowed to the general public in US is complete lunacy.

permalink
report
parent
reply
-14 points

I disagree, they would do a lot of good if part of any weapons being available (not just guns, but FPV drones and ammo for them, anti-tank and anti-air missiles, small mortars, and so on), but not for crime levels. The benefit would be in improving political stability (no, it wouldn’t help MAGA and such, because they don’t really want a violent takeover, they want an administrative takeover and then unpunished violence against those who can’t defend themselves).

When only rifles are available, it doesn’t help that end at all - you can’t fight the government or the invading army or some terrorists with just rifles.

So I agree that one has to pick a lane here. If we understand private weapons’ ownership as that well-organized militia to protect against tyranny yadda-yadda, then that includes a lot of stuff. Drones with grenades at least. If we don’t and, say, the national guard is that militia, then allowing just pistols and rifles lacks the advantages, preserving the harm.

permalink
report
parent
reply
23 points

I found it easy to follow - much easier than typical graphs.

permalink
report
parent
reply
-6 points

It’s confusing. Usually such a pic means a single stream of possibilities branching, so to say. Here multiple branches are for the same data point.

They could at least make them different colors, which would be the components of the initial color if combined. I think I’ve even seen such a graph.

permalink
report
parent
reply
-2 points

Gun rights aren’t for stopping active mass shooting events. Gun rights are to protect yourself and you small circle of family because the police are always too far away.

Active shootings are bad for regular people to try to stop because usually those people who do, end up being killed by the policemen they finally show up. A regular guy with a gun can never be expected to rush into a school to confront a shooter.

A regular armed citizen will be charged with a crime if they stop a school shooter or any other spree shooter in a gun free zone.

This data is disingenuous because they are plotting a unicorn event with a normal event to prove that Unicorns aren’t helpful. The question doesn’t make sense.

permalink
report
reply
9 points

It’s not disingenuous because it’s answering what lots of right wing people say about mass shootings instead of gun control. "Why don’t we arm the teachers, why is it a gun free zone " etc. This is the answer to that question, not your statement.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

Your criticism assumes the person with the gun is responding to the attack, running toward the sound of the gunshots.

Concealed weapons aren’t for responders. Concealed weapons are for the targeted, intended victims; the people already present when the attacker begins.

This chart includes only those scenarios where a criminal attacker was not stopped before firing their first shot, and was not stopped until they had continued shooting long enough to be grouped with the rest of the attackers on this chart. It includes only people who were allowed to continue their attack long enough to qualify, and does not include attacks that were prevented entirely, or were stopped before reaching the chart’s threshold.

The chart also fails to address one of the main reasons why so many of these shooters decide to stop shooting and run away: how many of them saw guns in the hands of their intended victims, and left before those victims fired a shot?

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

It also doesn’t make any distinction between events that took place where the intended victims were allowed to be armed or not. Of course there will be less instances of armed defenders in areas where arms are prohibited.

OPs premise is akin to the “small government” advocates who ruin government services and then point at how they don’t work.

permalink
report
parent
reply
12 points
*

This one actually demonstrates some flaws in this graph format. Maybe it’s just how it’s expressed this time, but, here are some insights you might gain from this presentation that aren’t actually the case:

  • “the police shot the attacker 98 times” which just sounds like a normal headline about how police handle things.
  • Very near that branch, you can accidentally see “the police died by suicide 38 times”
  • and, similarly, “the police surrendered 15 times” which is a surprise because I thought that only happened at Uvalde.

Like, I get what is trying to be conveyed here but the format requires a lot of work for my brain to parse and makes it harder to understand.

permalink
report
reply
2 points

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sankey_diagram, specifically made with https://www.sankeymatic.com/ from the looks of it.

permalink
report
parent
reply

5% not bad

permalink
report
reply
14 points
*

It’s 2%, off-duty officer and security shouldn’t be included because they’re the people that supposed to have gun and carry one around by default.

permalink
report
parent
reply

In aus where we have minimal guns off duty officers and security dont carry guns.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

In Malaysia too! Because we have strict gun rule, rarely these are needed, and security are just someone that work for the premise owner to keep order on minor stuff. Security with gun are meant for intimidating only and rarely justified firing it at people without gun.

permalink
report
parent
reply
12 points
*

And for that 2%, you get:

  • More people armed with and randomly carrying around guns which, you know, causes the problem.
  • A potential to catch civilians in the crossfire while not actually taking down the shooter.
  • Muddying who and where the attacker is (and how many attackers there are) for both police, security, and fleeing civilians who need to make panicked, split-second decisions.
permalink
report
parent
reply
37 points

You know what, the American obsession with guns has never been anything to do with “protection”, it’s about being ammosexual.

permalink
report
reply
-4 points

Most people who carry guns are doing it for self-defense, not civil defense.

The rules of an Active-shooter event are:

  1. Flee
  2. If you can’t flee, hide.
  3. If you can’t hide, fight back.

Carrying a concealed weapon doesn’t change that. I have a little 380 pocket pistol I’ll occasionally carry. It’s low-capacity, low-power, and low-accuracy. No way am I volunteering to take on a psychopath with a long gun who isn’t worried about collateral damage with my little pea shooter, and anyone Who expects me too just because I’m armed can kiss my ass.

I carry a pistol to protect me from muggers and car-jackers, not to protect the public.

permalink
report
parent
reply
31 points

Having the general public feeling that they need to carry a gun for self defense just sounds crazy to me.

Stabbings have risen here in the UK but generally it’s either a rare occasion where some nutter is on the run or it’s gang related. In general I would never feel the need to carry my own knife around for self defense. I don’t know anyone who carries a knife around with them for self defense.

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points
*

Imo only an idiot would carry a knife for self-defence, especially if untrained. If someone (probably women especially) feels unsafe, carrying CS-spray would be more reasonable imo.

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

Almost all of our gun violence is the same, gang/drug related. The media here acts like it’s random killings all over the place, its not. You have a better chance of drowning in a pool than getting killed by an ar15 here, yet people, even in this thread, think it’s something that happens like every 3 seconds.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

I’d feel fine with someone carrying a weapon if it’s based on a reasonable fear, and they make an effort to stay trained/safe with the weapon. For instance, they exited an abusive relationship with a significant other who feels they “belong” to them.

But there’s a lot of people who stretch the statement of “I don’t feel safe” to far more cases than make sense.

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points

Would anyone you know tell you if they carried a knife for self-defense, given that it’s generally a crime to do so in the UK?

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

It wouldn’t be wrong if someone wanted a knife for self defense though

permalink
report
parent
reply

Data is Beautiful

!dataisbeautiful@lemmy.world

Create post

A place to share and discuss visual representations of data: Graphs, charts, maps, etc.

DataIsBeautiful is for visualizations that effectively convey information. Aesthetics are an important part of information visualization, but pretty pictures are not the sole aim of this subreddit.

A place to share and discuss visual representations of data: Graphs, charts, maps, etc.

  A post must be (or contain) a qualifying data visualization.

  Directly link to the original source article of the visualization
    Original source article doesn't mean the original source image. Link to the full page of the source article as a link-type submission.
    If you made the visualization yourself, tag it as [OC]

  [OC] posts must state the data source(s) and tool(s) used in the first top-level comment on their submission.

  DO NOT claim "[OC]" for diagrams that are not yours.

  All diagrams must have at least one computer generated element.

  No reposts of popular posts within 1 month.

  Post titles must describe the data plainly without using sensationalized headlines. Clickbait posts will be removed.

  Posts involving American Politics, or contentious topics in American media, are permissible only on Thursdays (ET).

  Posts involving Personal Data are permissible only on Mondays (ET).

Please read through our FAQ if you are new to posting on DataIsBeautiful. Commenting Rules

Don't be intentionally rude, ever.

Comments should be constructive and related to the visual presented. Special attention is given to root-level comments.

Short comments and low effort replies are automatically removed.

Hate Speech and dogwhistling are not tolerated and will result in an immediate ban.

Personal attacks and rabble-rousing will be removed.

Moderators reserve discretion when issuing bans for inappropriate comments. Bans are also subject to you forfeiting all of your comments in this community.

Originally r/DataisBeautiful

Community stats

  • 2.4K

    Monthly active users

  • 87

    Posts

  • 2K

    Comments