Commonsense
is often based on nonsense.
Think I’m wrong? Oh,
please, don’t make me hurt you.
Commonsense
or nonsense? Fat people are more
at risk for early death than thin people.
Nonsense.
According to a recent study at the UC Davis School of Medicine, which I
gleaned through a thorough reading of the November issue of Details Magazine,
people of below average weight are 2.2 times more likely to suffer an early
demise than people with a normal Body Mass Index (BMI), while the greatly obese
are only 1.3 times as likely. Hey,
fat can be healthy! So now let’s
climb on the ‘Get-fat-train’ and constantly badger thin people about bulking up
for their health. Tell Mayor
Bloomberg to pass a law.
Commonsense
or nonsense? Breast cancer is the
number one killer of women?
Looking at all the pink flashing around, you’d certainly think so.
Nonsense. Stats for the U.S. from the Center For
Disease Control, say that heart problems are the number one woman killers. Cancer is second. But, let’s get a second opinion. According to the World Health
Organization, for women in high-income countries, heart problems and strokes
lead the way by a wide margin.
Breast cancer comes in at number 5. But according to Heath Resources and Service Administration,
cancer deaths (22.4%) are much closer to heart problems (25.5%).
Want
to break those cancer deaths down for me?
Ok. Here are the numbers of
women’s deaths for 2010, from the American Cancer Society:
Lung and Bronchus: 71,080
Breast: 39,840
Colon and Rectum: 24,790
Pancreas: 18,030
Ovary: 13,850
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma: 9,500
Leukemia: 9,180
Uterus: 7,950
Liver and Intrahepatic Bile
Duct: 6,190
Brain and Other Nervous
System: 5,720
There
are caveats. Stats vary by age and
race.
Commonsense
or nonsense? Anti-abortion and Law
& Order go hand in hand.
Nonsense: If you’re a strong supporter of law and
order and also firmly against abortion, you’d better reconsider your positions.
In 2001, Steven Levitt of the
University of Chicago and John Donohue of Yale University published a paper
titled, “The Impact of Legalized Abortion on Crime.” Their data showed that as abortion rates went up in the
U.S., crime went down at the same rate.
As you can imagine, this caused a stir, and a flurry of rebuttals. However, Levitt and Donahue stood by
their data, took all the objections into account and reran the numbers in
2005. Same results. Abortions lower the crime rate.
Commonsense
or Nonsense? Poor people remain
poor.
Nonsense,
at least in high-income countries.
Here’s a look at a Canadian study, appearing in the Financial Post, in an article by Jason Clemens, “Income mobility
blurs the picture painted by Occupiers”
“Specifically,
Statistics Canada’s Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (SLID) follow 17,000
households over rotating six-year periods. Such data provides researchers and
policymakers with powerful information about how Canadians’ income and labour
market participation varies over time.
There
are a number of ways to analyze mobility. A recent study by Statistics Canada
divided the population into five equal groups (quintiles) based on income.
Statistics Canada then followed these individuals over time to assess how their
incomes changed relative to the initial income thresholds used to divide the
population.
To
get a sense of the income levels for these five groups, the average income
(after tax) for individuals in 2005 was: $14,100, $25,400, $34,700, $46,100,
and $76,600.
The
latest one-year data, 2008-09, shows quite a bit of mobility, despite the
marked economic slowdown of the period. For example, 25% of those who started
in the bottom 20% had moved up at least one group within a year. Similar upward
movement is observed for the second quintile (26%) and the third quintile
(24%). Put differently, for each of the bottom three income groups (each
composing 20% of the population), roughly one in four people moved up at least
one group in just one year.
The
rates of mobility increase when the period is extended to five years, covering
2005 to 2009. Forty-three percent of those who started in the bottom 20% moved
up at least one grouping over five years. Rates of upward mobility were again
strongest for the bottom 60% of earners over this period. These results are
also remarkably similar to analyses completed in the 1990s.”
Commonsense
or nonsense? If you’re going to
get wealthy, the only way is to inherit money.
Nonsense. In “The Millionaire Next Door: The
Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy,” By Thomas J. Stanley, Ph. D. and
William D. Danko, Ph. D., there are piles of interesting stats, but one of the
most telling is: About 80 percent of America’s millionaires are
first-generation affluent.
Commonsense
or nonsense? The more money spent
on education, the better the schools.
Nonsense.
As reported by By Jamie Gumbrecht, CNN:
Spending a lot of money doesn't mean a kid is getting a good education,
and spending less doesn't mean it's bad. Per-pupil spending comes up often
because it's among the few easy-to-compare measurements that crosses school, district and state
lines, said Matthew Chingos, a researcher with Brookings Institution's Brown
Center on Education Policy.
“Per-pupil
funding is a pretty terrible measure of quality of education,” Chingos said.
“In some case, it matters, but sometimes it’s hard to find evidence it
matters.”
The
dichotomy may come about because of the various ways money can be spent. School facilities can eat money, yet
tell you nothing about what’s going on in the classroom. Here’s a list of the highest amounts
spent per pupil:
Highest per-pupil spending
Washington,
D.C. - $18,667
New
York - $18,618
New
Jersey - $16,841
Alaska
- $15,783
Vermont
- $15,274
Wyoming
- $15,169
Connecticut
- $14,906
Massachusetts
- $14,350
Maryland
- $13,738
Rhode
Island - $13,699
Posted
by Jamie Gumbrecht -- CNN
Here
are the top ten states for science and math:
1 Massachusetts
2 Minnesota
3 New Jersey
4 New
Hampshire
5 New York
6 Virginia
7 Maryland
8 Connecticut
9 Indiana
10 Maine
Examine
what you know and how you found out.
I suggest that may best be done in a quiet tavern, while you face a pint of beer.
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