With the battle growing in
sanctuary cities to deviate from President Trump’s strategy on immigration law,
it is worth seeing another topic that we have been following closely: violent crime rate across major U.S. cities. This of course comes as President Trump menacingly
engages with Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel, in a twitter exchange that reiterates the
use of the term “carnage” (the President's quotes, not ours) to suggest the warfare-style chaos that is occurring
there.
If Chicago doesn't fix the horrible "carnage" going on, 228 shootings in 2017 with 42 killings (up 24% from 2016), I will send in the Feds!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 25, 2017
By logic (no formal definition exists per ICE) sanctuary
cities are generally liberal (Democratic) cities or regions that oppose the
current conservative policies of oppressing undocumented immigrants. The 14 most-populated U.S. cities represent
30 million Americans (or 9% of the 319 million U.S. population). Half of these large cities happen to be in states bordering Mexico. And of these 14 cities, 9 are sanctuary cities
(64%) and 5 are non-sanctuary cities (36%).
As we prove below, one is significantly safer from violent crimes in sanctuary cities, but for a couple notable exceptions (i.e., Chicago, Philadelphia). Below we’ll distinguish between these two types of cities:
- Nearly 2 thousand murders occur annually in these sanctuary cities (>70%), while less than a thousand murders occur in the non-sanctuary cities (<30%).
- While each taken life is too many, mortality statistics drive these large death numbers into probability context. So with the much larger population from the sanctuary cities (collectively or on average), the homicide rate (per 100k) there is “just” 5, while it is 9 in non-sanctuary cities!
- It is true that the murder rates have come in most cities across the U.S., but again these rates are unacceptably high, particularly as some cities are many times more ferocious versus their peers!
- The blended murder rate from the 14 large cities meanwhile is in-between at 8, and this is also just less than twice the national average is 4.
Now we can see a chart of
these 14 cities on this map below, where the size of the circular-marker is
related to the population of the city, and the text color of the murder rate is
blue
for sanctuary cities; red for non-sanctuary cities. The blue on the map regions represents areas who
mostly voted for Hillary Clinton (as noted above this was mostly limited to
mega-cities), while red indicates the rest of the country where Donald
Trump completely dominated the popular vote.
Using a mathematical practice similar to boot-strapping, we show further below, the
population-weighted murder rate distribution
for the 14 cities. Also 4 of the 9 (44%)
sanctuary cities have had an above-average murder rate among the large cities,
while 2 of the 5 (40%) of the non-sanctuary cities had an above-average murder rate. Though this difference -skewing towards
sanctuary cities- is not statistically significant (less than ½
standard deviation, or σ).
Meanwhile the murder rate
difference of 4 (9 v 5), between non-sanctuary cities and sanctuary cities, is
highly statistically significant, given the population in millions discussed early in this article. But the chance any given non-sanctuary city is more murderous versus a sanctuary city is not statistically significant (less
than 1 σ). Predominantly
with such benign jumbo-metropolises, such as New York with their “low” murder
rate of 4 (despite sky-high homelessness), versus Houston (the county’s largest non-sanctuary city) with their murder
rate of 11.
The bottom line is there is
a minor bias towards more violence
in non-sanctuary cities, areas generally aligned to conservative policies and
gun-friendly. This is where Americans will typically have a higher probability
of being slain (expressly young Black males in the inner-cities who are gunned down by others in the same community, as opposed to the police - many directors of which nationally follow this site). Though the large cities are not
easily separable into such mass generalizations, this is also why it happens
to be easy for President Donald Trump to censure the worst areas of the
country. Since there we have heterogeneously diverse characteristics of
violence, from our large sanctuary cities.
Shouldn't we compare violent crime rates before / after "sanctuary city" policies cam into play to get a meaningful comparison? Perhaps (I don't know) only a city with a low crime rate already is likely to become a sanctuary city?
ReplyDeleteGreat observation Gene! Timing of sanctuary city status and enforcement is not well-defined concepts, particularly in relation to President Trump's comments. Generally speaking, all of these 14 cities above (save for Chicago) have seen a multi-year decline in violent crimes in parallel to the rest of the country, and world. With some cities having quite low murder rates and others higher, one's mortality risk is still driven more off of the actual rate as opposed to relative comparisons. Also to note this article was not only a Top article in zero hedge, but has crossed 150k reads! http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-01-27/are-sanctuary-cities-more-violent On a separate topic did you know that 99.99% of Americans will not die from a Muslim terrorist (likelihoods shown on my other social media).
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