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by dsp1234
3427 days ago
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The latest statistics that I can find on the CDC's website (final data for 2014) shows that the number of homicide deaths in the US for that year was 10,945, which far outstrips terrorism deaths. Since I don't intend on shooting myself, the probability of me being shot is immediately a fraction of the number quoted in the article. While I did not review the data for 2005-2013 and 2015, if the trends are similar in those years, then firearm deaths are about 1/3 (32.6% in 2014). I live in Ohio. If you're looking at regional differences, the ratio to firearm homicides to terrorism deaths is even higher in Ohio since there has been no major terrorist attack there, but there have been hundreds of firearm homicides over that 10 year period. [0] - https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr65/nvsr65_04.pdf table 18, firarm, homicide |
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One thing to note about terrorist attacks, is they follow a power law. The vast majority of terrorist attacks are complete failures that cause barely any casualties. But the most successful ones kill thousands. It's quite possible an unusually successful terrorist attack could kill tens of millions, which would vastly overwhelm homicide statistics. E.g. if a terrorist organization obtained weapons of mass destruction. Fortunately that has lowish probability, but perhaps not low enough to make the risk greater than homicide.
Say there is a 1% chance every decade of a terrorist attack that kills 15 million people, the annual expected death toll is about 15,000, which is greater than the annual homicide deaths.