Maybe crime has dropped by half in part because we lock away a lot of the violent criminals for very long terms (I am against drug incarceration fyi)
Back in the 60's and 70's prisons were like revolving doors. A 'life sentence' meant usually 13-20 years maximum and a lot of violent offenders and murders were put back onto the street to kill again. That changed in the 80's, and along with liberalization of gun laws crime took a serious nosedive as evidenced in the graph posted earlier.
Yet there were also mass killings. Littleton and Aurora Colorado and Newtown Connecticut are all nice and safe places to live for the most part. And the killings that happened there were especially heinous, but they represent a drop in the bucket compared to the murder rates before 1990. As long as people are free, some will use that freedom to act out their rage to kill and should lose their freedom forever. It doesn't help that most of the mass murderers of the past two decades were on Kill Pills known as SSRIs and more people are forced to take them every day.
Of course it's also a good time to mention while we're on the subject of mass murder that cigarettes killed almost 450,000 people in the United States last year while about 300,000,000 guns killed nobody. Which mass murders do we want to punish? Is that technically mass suicide?
Back in the 60's and 70's prisons were like revolving doors. A 'life sentence' meant usually 13-20 years maximum and a lot of violent offenders and murders were put back onto the street to kill again. That changed in the 80's, and along with liberalization of gun laws crime took a serious nosedive as evidenced in the graph posted earlier.
Yet there were also mass killings. Littleton and Aurora Colorado and Newtown Connecticut are all nice and safe places to live for the most part. And the killings that happened there were especially heinous, but they represent a drop in the bucket compared to the murder rates before 1990. As long as people are free, some will use that freedom to act out their rage to kill and should lose their freedom forever. It doesn't help that most of the mass murderers of the past two decades were on Kill Pills known as SSRIs and more people are forced to take them every day.
Of course it's also a good time to mention while we're on the subject of mass murder that cigarettes killed almost 450,000 people in the United States last year while about 300,000,000 guns killed nobody. Which mass murders do we want to punish? Is that technically mass suicide?