They don’t understand probability
Does “dangerous” necessarily default to meaning murder? A breakdown for assault and robbery would be helpful since I suspect that’s the direction a conversation would go.
@setsneedtofeed @Vaya Your chances of getting punched, groped, or pickpocketed on public transit are still far lower than your chances of suffering bodily injury or property damage from a non-fatal traffic crash.
You’re not gonna get groped in your car though
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Fantastic. Can I have a graph to show people?
It’s also not clear just from the graph whether this includes incidents in/near the station or if it’s just on the subway itself.
Since the source is NYPD I would assume it means strictly in the stations or on the trains, as the sidewalks above are not MTA property.
I think Riviera Beach is heavily skewing this data.
What’s with the random comparisons? Sometimes it’s the whole US, sometimes specific parts. What does 500 rides mean? Annual deaths per 100’000 population per 500 rides?
The per 100,000 is pretty standard for per capita
Although saying per capita here would be misleading, because it’s not like those people ride the subway 500 times AND drives a car everywhere. The ones who take the subway are the only ones at risk of subway homocide, the ones who drive are actually less likely to die in a traffic accident than people outside of their car like pedestrians and bikers, and the two groups probably are much different in size.
Yeah but I don’t understand how it would combine with the 500 rides. Were they counting only people who rode 500 times a year? Or is the implication that for this line they didn’t go by 100000 people, but instead by 500 rides? That would make it incomparable. I just don’t get it
Oh I had to go back to see what you were referring to with the 500 rides thing… Maybe that’s the sample size for NYC?
Yes 500 is about the average number of rides that an NYC subway commuter takes per year. Since all the other stats are also per year.
500 rides a year per rider
So you need to double it at the absolute minimum?
There are 52 weeks in a year. 2 trips per day, 5 days/week and you’re at 520 rides already.
That is with absolutely zero rides to the grocery store, literally anywhere but work and home. And that’s assuming it only takes 1 ride to get to work - which we’ll… Good luck with that anywhere in America even in NYC.
So they only counted those who did 500 rides a year? Or they counted 50’000’000 rides as a proxy for 100’000 subway users?
I am guessing they took the average homicide rate per ride in the metro, and used those rates to create the per capita rate assuming they take 500 rides a year.
Oh yeah I can see it, that would make sense! Thanks!
Since a lot of tickets will be bought anonymously you can’t easily count unique users of the subway system, so the raw data probably consisted of numbers of homicides, and number of rides taken by all customers combined.
But the rate between those wouldn’t fit the per person risk they want to be comparing. So to calculate a risk to a person they must have assumed a realistic case towards the higher end of ridership, that is, a commuter commuting 5 days a week for 50 weeks a year, to work and back, that would give the 500 rides number.
Kathy Hochul sent in the national guard to swarm the subways, in response to some supposed crime wave. She was eventually forced to admit the data showed she was lying, and violent crime was way down.
IMO statistics should always be a requisite factor in any deliberation or executive order that would mobilize law enforcement or military, and lying about those statics in that capacity should be a serious crime.
The small problem with statistics is that you need the story of how the statistic was created to have it say anything sensible. Without the story a graph is just a pretty picture with which you can make people believe anything. What you need as an addition is a written in law way of how the statics are calculated.
Just making statistics a prerequisite for making a decision will prompt those in power to make the numbers look in their favour.
Is there a graph that breaks it down by rider? As in, deaths per 100K riders on public transit? I think this graph would be including people that don’t ride public transit at all (I fully believe it’s still safer, just not sure if this particular graph is the most accurate).
One way I’ve seen it normalized for cars vs flying is by hours of transit time. That way, it demonstrates you’re in more or less danger per hour in the vehicle during transit.
I’ve taken public transit a lot, haven’t owned a car for around 20 years. I can count on one hand the amount of times I’ve felt threatened, and none of them resulted in me or anyone else getting hurt. I will admit part of that is probably that I’m a man, but as a trans man it puts me in a weird space where that doesn’t always protect me.
Sometimes people yell and act aggressive, and it puts me on edge. But far more often I have seen strangers band together to help people who are lost or disabled and need assistance. But nobody really makes news stories about that, so if you’re not taking public transit regularly, all you hear about is the crazy shit that happens.
No data but this is common concern among my social circle too (Toronto). More with people who don’t use transit but also with those who use it to a lesser extent. The economic conditions produced a drastic increase in homelessness over the last decade. It spills over into the public transit system as people seek warmth during the deadly winter cold. While people tend to ignore the problem, as the unhoused population grows, random attacks become a thing. That goes on the news, people see it on their daily commutes, and here we are. It’s not a transit problem.
I do think part of the issue is that you might not see actual violence on a train, but you might see some behaviour which makes you feel uncomfortable. Because you’re in a carriage with maybe 100 other people, then the likelihood is less that you’re in any actual danger, and far more that you’ve witnessed an incident which makes you wary. Meanwhile, there are several car accidents daily, but it’s witnessed by maybe 20 odd people, and most people only see a slowdown of the road.
You hit the nail on the head. The ultimate cause is homelessness due to profit being necessary to live in a home – when shelter is a basic right at all.
It isn’t just that; most of the developed world refuses to build the kind of housing that poor people need to put a roof over their heads. Studios and dorms used to be far more common units of housing.
Having lived in a studio, I think it’s not exactly a solution - it does solve the housing crisis to an extent, but not to the extent of comfort. Adequate housing can and should be affordable. Here the left-wing parties have been pretty active in building more of those, eg by building apartments, modal construction, and the like.
They also have worked on reducing energy bills. Something the right wing parties haven’t.
If we’re at a point where millions are sleeping on streets, I’d rather prioritize housing over housing with space.
If the housing is easily expandable, eg modular, sure.
What’s with the Sawyer County call out? Do they just have the highest death rate for traffic accidents or something?
I don’t really know anyone afraid of transit crime here in LA, but the main deterrent is mostly how long it takes to get to places – which is ironic, given cars are the main reason our trains and busses are delayed (our trains cross busy intersections, which is insane).
A lot of people aren’t used to being in crowded public spaces like they were used to, with COVID making it worse. The presence of homeless makes the perception worse.
Statistics do not help, when you have a feeling. The honest solution is to make the experience feel safer. So clean open friendly light stations help a lot and the trains should also be clean and friendly.
The honest solution is to make the experience feel safer. So clean open friendly light stations help a lot and the trains should also be clean and friendly.
No, no, the solution is to remove the benches, setup hostile architecture, put bars on every piece of glass, and…
- The MTA
Statistics DO help, when you have a feeling, if you have an open mind. In fact, knowledge helps modify behaviour a LOT. I get a lot more out of a video essay from https://nutritionfacts.org/ that actually explains the mechanisms behind nutritional advice vs. just hearing, “You should eat more beans.” Data changes my mind, almost every time.
Exactly. Dirty noisy smelly subways are not where people want to be. I’ll take a car any day over that. Sorry.
Tbf, ive only been on the Chicago and Boston subways. They were pretty freaky at night.
Streets are also dirty, noisy and smelly. How have you not noticed this? Just admit that you are familiar with one and not the other. You’ve tuned out the risks that you accept and that you force others to accept unwillingly, and they don’t factor into your perceptions anymore. So of course one looks better than the other, through the lens of delusion.
You’re right, but in a car youre isolated from that, see the difference ?
A car driving through a crappy neighborhood os better than getting on a subway in a carappy neighborhood. Now, this isnt even a question of are cars good or bad but more of if the streets were cleaned up decently and we had well taken care of public transit.
Inner city I agree cars are a nightmare. Sub 100k people towns and rural areas, they are necessary.
They’re also necessary if you haul a lot of stuff for work/hobbies, as I do.
Do you think I’ve never driven a car? Many people take transit for the exact reasons you drive a car. Because it avoids stress and unpleasant situations. Driving sucks!!
@Vaya So if we’re going to deploy the military domestically in the name of public safety, the best use of their resources would be to park their tanks on highways and stroads to block off excess lanes and prevent the extreme speeding that’s so rampant on US roads.
Yep, absolutely. My hubby has zero issue with public transportation. He’s also 6’1 220 pounds. I don’t think he quite gets why a woman a foot shorter and a hundred pounds lighter would prefer to not.
Kind of a strange thing to say on a post providing evidence that it’s an order of magnitude safer than driving.
It is however a decent anecdotal example of why feels often trump reals when it comes to encouraging transit usage.
Yeah im one of those. It’d be insanely easy to rob and stab someone on a train or bus, im surprised it doesn’t happen all the time. But I also detest large cities.
This is more a crime/homeless issue than a car issue imo. A homeless person with nothing to lose is going to stab you for your wallet. If im driving downtown instead of walking, that cant happen.
No, you just get killed in a car accident thirty or forty times for every one time you avoid “a homeless person with nothing to lose”. How can you possibly advocate. It’s downright irresponsible to talk like that.
It’s insanely easy to stab or rob anyone in public.
Ok, so you actually proved my point, thanks.
A lot harder for that to happen when youre in a car.
I love upsetting lemmites when talking about these things because they likely live in 2 million person cities and have no clue how life is outside of them.
Cars suck in big cities. They’re necessary anywhere that isn’t LA or NY.
Kinda glad I moved out of PBG. This is wild to see.










