A
Ani_Ibi
Guest
I was watching an interview with Freakonomics author Levitt last night. As smooth as can be he said that he had applied all other possible factors to the lower crime rate at the end of the 80s and just couldn’t come up with a correlation. Finally he hit on abortion.
Such compelling science I have not seen since Cheech and Chong.
In any case, here we have a dilemma in the popular media mind:
Such compelling science I have not seen since Cheech and Chong.
In any case, here we have a dilemma in the popular media mind:
*]Do we let ‘unwanted’ children live and then execute them for mass murder when they grow up? Or
*]Do we take the Minority Report route and kill them before they are even born?
Now, for Catholics, Option 1 is technically a prudential question for which the answer is yes/no/maybe, but Option 2 is always an infallibly defined question for which the answer is NO.
But what about the rest of the planet? What kind of an un-Occam-like-cutting-tool-quandary must they be floundering around with?
Well that’s the logic of the thing. Let’s look at the premise. I mean is there actually a correlation between abortion and a lower crime rate? Steve Sailer seems to think that this correlation is … er … total jabberwocky.
‘Freakonomics’ Abortion Research Is Faulted by a Pair of EconomistsNow, it turns out, according to two economists at the Boston Fed who have checked Levitt’s calculations in detail, that the abortion-cut-crime theory rested upon two mistakes Levitt made.
Mr. Foote says he spotted a missing formula in the programming of Mr. Levitt’s original research. He argues the programming oversight made it difficult to pick up other factors that might have influenced crime rates during the 1980s and 1990s, like the crack wave that waxed and waned during that period.
Yikes! Thoughts on this? Anyone?He also argues that in producing the research, Mr. Levitt should have counted arrests on a per-capita basis. Instead, he counted overall arrests. After he adjusted for both factors, Mr. Foote says, the abortion effect disappeared.