View Full Version : Math process error
aussenseiter
02-02-2024, 10:19 PM
I am looking for the name of the mathematical fallacy being committed here. I saw it on Twitter.
Please note that this is not an invitation to post any of the usual racist horseshit shutup.
On to Oz:
https://i.imgur.com/YWvELCr.png
I have this little inkling of a thought(I'm not that bright, OK?) that comparing the rate of criminality among natives vs the absolute native population is fine, but comparing the rate of criminality among foreigners vs the absolute native population is...I want to call it a rump equation. It's not a cogent math problem to solve. It just tells you the population is much bigger. :confused:
Please note that in the above "vs" does not mean committed against. See second sentence.
Nibblewitz
02-02-2024, 10:48 PM
Rate of crime per 100,000 individuals is calculated by taking the total of a groups’s instances of crime divided by the population of the group, then the fractions are normalized to have a denominator of 100,000.
The population of natives and legal immigrants can be measured using census data. How do they count the total number of undocumented immigrants?
aussenseiter
02-02-2024, 10:57 PM
Rate of crime per 100,000 individuals is calculated by taking the total of a groups’s instances of crime divided by the population of the group, then the fractions are normalized to have a denominator of 100,000.
The population of natives and legal immigrants can be measured using census data. How do they count the total number of undocumented immigrants?
I think they're counting undocumented crimes *vs the whole population to deflate the number of the crime rate, as opposed to comparing it internally.
Is it illogical to think of it that way or the inverse?
Nibblewitz
02-02-2024, 11:10 PM
If they are simply dividing the number of a group’s convictions to the entire population, then they aren’t measuring crime rates of these groups but rather an adulterated measure of absolute crime.
All these data suggest is that less undocumented immigrants were convicted than citizens. I am still wondering how they can divide by a population that they can’t fully count.
aussenseiter
02-02-2024, 11:34 PM
If they are simply dividing the number of a group’s convictions to the entire population, then they aren’t measuring crime rates of these groups but rather an adulterated measure of absolute crime.
All these data suggest is that less undocumented immigrants were convicted than citizens. I am still wondering how they can divide by a population that they can’t fully count.
I think comparing native crime vs total population against immigrant crime vs total population has the apparent effect of lowering the crime 'rate' of the latter. Because the latter is smaller.
That's as far as my grey matter goes for now. Do go on with your census schpiel. :o
I think the math is wrong in that the yellow bar should be 100,000/100,000 as 100% of that cohort has committed a crime by virtue of having illegally entered the country
Also that little light blue bar tells us something about the merits of legal immigration
aussenseiter
02-03-2024, 12:23 AM
I think the math is wrong in that the yellow bar should be 100,000/100,000 as 100% of that cohort has committed a crime by virtue of having illegally entered the country
Also that little light blue bar tells us something about the merits of legal immigration
Lol
But that's an even smaller group being compared against the whole population including natives.
I do not like this math invention you sinners cooked up.
Patriam1066
02-03-2024, 12:52 AM
You’ve never understood per capita for some reason
/shrug
aussenseiter
02-03-2024, 12:59 AM
You’ve never understood per capita for some reason
/shrug
I do understand per capita. But is it appropriate to compare immigrant criminality to the whole country's population?
Still looking for my fallacy.
Ciderpress
02-03-2024, 07:27 PM
I am still wondering how they can divide by a population that they can’t fully count.
Ding ding.
Luckily, I think most people tend to realize how insane this all is once they think about it for more than 2 seconds.
Ciderpress
02-03-2024, 07:31 PM
Here's the makeup of my household: Two cats, two adults, and an unspecified number of ghosts in the walls. Let us compare their relative behaviors with this helpful bar graph.
Ding ding.
Luckily, I think most people tend to realize how insane this all is once they think about it for more than 2 seconds.
This number is simple to calculate.
$Count = NumberOfUnemployedAmericanCitizens(willing, able, crackhead, NULL);
NumberOfUndocumentedImmigrants(cheap, desperate, willing, vulnerable, LrgLLC nrby) = $Count;
Easy. That's why all dey US and A citizens are up in arms.
Also, those same undocumented immigrants are taking soc sec & voting.
No wonder you guys are le madz.
This number is simple to calculate.
$Count = NumberOfUnemployedAmericanCitizens(willing, able, crackhead, NULL);
$Count += NumberOfUnderEmployedAmericanCitizens(willing, desperate, union?, skinColour=BOOL);
NumberOfUndocumentedImmigrants(cheap, desperate, willing, vulnerable, LrgLLC nrby) = $Count;
Easy. That's why all dey US and A citizens are up in arms.
Also, those same undocumented immigrants are taking soc sec & voting.
No wonder you guys are le madz.
----- edited to add Under Employed US citizens. Those that need 2 or more jobs to survive. -----
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