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by ThA0x2
2100 days ago
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>Many variables that a priori have nothing to do with race (e.g. where you live, how much money you make, etc.) are highly correlated with race. Allowing those variables is basically the same thing as allowing race into the models. I don't want to pretend like controlling for something like this isn't possible, but I rarely see it considered (and quite rarely do I even see the problem acknowledged). They may be correlated with race, but correlation != causation. Poor people shoplift more than the well off, but that has nothing to do with race, it has to do with the culture. >What are examples these facts you refer to? Blacks commit sexual assaults and rapes at a way higher level than Whites and other minorities, even when accounting for income. |
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What I said had nothing to do with correlation vs causation. What I said was that "variables that a priori have nothing to do with race (e.g. where you live, how much money you make, etc.) are highly correlated with race." I'm speaking of signals and information theory. The point is allowing variables that combine to be equivalent to allowing the variable of race ends up being the same thing.
Do you understand my point?
> Blacks commit sexual assaults and rapes at a way higher level than Whites and other minorities, even when accounting for income.
Presumably you mean that blacks are _convicted_ (or maybe arrested) for sexual assaults and rapes at a higher level (since obviously what they do are what they are convicted of doing are not the same thing).
Anyway alright fine I do believe that. Do you believe such a general fact has anything to do with individuals and their likely future actions? How? Why?