Every year our goverment gives out crime rate statistic, are these for real are we just a pawn in the game of crime. Can anyone really not be a statistic waiting to happen?
Are there ways to be safe at all times?
Are there ways to really teach people how not to be a statistic?
Crime rate doubles every year, if this is the case and every second of the day someone is a statistic what can really be done about it?
Can we overcome this tend, are we capable of bounding together so we are not going to let them over run us?
Crime statistics can be very misleading, and it's a complicated area to discuss.
At the federal level here in the US, there are two primary measuring tools; the FBI's stats reported annually in
Crime in the United States, and the Department of Justice's
Crime Victimization Survey. Neither is perfect; the FBI's numbers are what is reported to police, and rely on the local departments to voluntarily submit the information, and to classify things appropriately. It doesn't get any information on crimes that aren't reported. The
Crime Victimization Survey is an actual survey of a representative portion of the population (hopefully...) to see how what sorts of crimes they were victims of. It relies on the quality of the sample, and on the honesty of people responding... And it will almost never capture some crimes. (Not too many murder victims answer questionairres for some reason...)
On top of that, many states, counties, cities, or towns maintain their own numbers, in their own way. And it's easily possible for a chief looking to support certain efforts to "massage" the numbers in various ways to achieve their goals. For example, if someone is trying to justify hiring more officers, they might start recording many more calls for service or incidents... But if they're an elected sheriff, running on a platform that he's reduced crime, he may discourage deputies from reporting individual offenses, and lump as much into one as he can.
There're are also problems with recognizing why trends are happening and knowing what they mean. For example, within a few years of the start of a concentrated anti-gang effort, including education and training for the public and officers, you might see some gang offenses climbing, as more are recognized and reported. Or, aggressive traffic enforcement might end up increasing the numbers of tickets written (so more people are driving "badly") and reducing the numbers of accidents (so people are driving more safely) at the same time.
At heart -- if you keep an eye on the published crime reports over the year, you'll have an idea what's going on. And have some clue as to how safe you are at home. But you can probably get the same thing by simply being aware of what's going on around you... Published numbers don't really tell you much, by themselves.