Tyrone Biggums
Well-known member
This is not a sign that violence has increased - it is a sign that how violence is reported has changed, paired with your personal thoughts on seeing an old person. I'm willing to bet money that instances of random violence on innocents hasn't increased per capita at all in the last 30 years. Any numbers to back up your statement?
Crime statistics from here.
Mr Baillieu said research had shown that violence against senior Victorians was increasing faster than for any other age group in the state.
The increase in assaults for people over 60 was a 99.3 per cent rise, compared with a total statewide increase of 56.4 per cent for all age groups during the same period.
While people over 60 make up 3.02 per cent of crime victims, up from 2.96 per cent eight years ago, the number of crimes being perpetrated against the elderly was rising.
The number of sexual assaults against elderly people rose to 41, while assaults rose alarmingly from 442 in 1999 to 881 assaults last year(2007).
But this isn't even close to what you said. You said you would sacrifice all of modern medicine in exchange for eliminating all weapons. If you're talking about helping those in Africa (for example) it brings us full circle - surely improving technology (for example cheap medicines, or even just 'well technology') will improve their lives, which runs completely counter to your argument that science has made the world a worse place?
It's not just Africa, it's Asia, its South America, the Middle East.
Your idea is fine in principle, except you didn't factor in one vital component. Humans. It's in our nature to fight and go to wars.
As the world population gets bigger and resources dwindle, land and food become even more scarce there's always possibilities for more wars on the horizon.