isleaiw1, on 13 May 2024 - 08:36 PM, said:
There you go, misreading the stats. Those stats are for crimes IN the area, not by people FROM the area. You can get crime stats for countries too, but apparently that isnt enough detail for you....
And yes, we shouldnt try and show causation where there may not be any. Its not related to race or religion or colour, but maybe to drug or alcohol use, socio economic position etc. Just link it to that. You may of course be able to show that more immigrants from certain countries fall into those groups where causation has been proven, but that is as close as it should get.
I can understand that you wouldn’t want this information made public and how you’d brand it racist
Denmark have recently released the same information and the results are truly horrific
Violent Crime Convictions
Having summarized the results of the official government financial analysis, I now append with my own analysis on the topic of immigration and crime. An official Danish report is available to be read, however it is written in Danish and is less comprehensive than my analysis in some aspects2. According to Danmarks Statistik, there were 5,921 violent crime convictions in 2021, of which 71% (4,193) were committed by people of Danish origin and 29% (1,728) by immigrants and their descendants. In 2021, immigrants and their descendants represented 14% (817,438) and people of Danish origin 86% (5,022,607) of the total population of 5,840,045. Thus immigrants and descendants are overrepresented in violent crime convictions, being 14% of the population and constituting 29% of the violent crime convictions. This translates into immigrants and descendants having 2.5 times higher conviction rates than natives.
However, like financial contributions, convictions also exhibit great heterogeneity. Western immigrants and descendants were 5.0% of the population and accounted for just 3.8% of the nation’s violent crime convictions. Non-Western immigrants and descendants were 8.9% of the population and accounted for 25.4% of the nation’s violent crime convictions. Homicide is very uncommon in Denmark, but we see a similar pattern for homicide convictions. For rape convictions, the pattern is even stronger. The results for the period 2010-2021 can be seen in the figure below. For each group, it shows the population share and the share of total violent crime convictions, as well as shares of specific types of violent crime convictions, that can be attributed to each group.
This post has been edited by Search & Destroy: 14 May 2024 - 12:09 PM