Plus: Unpacking Biden's vs. Trumpâs economy, predicting the future, and more.
March 12, 2024 [View in browser]( Good morning! Senior correspondent Marin Cogan is here to talk about crime, gun violence, and America's biggest city. âCaroline Houck, senior editor of news [national guardsperson seen in NYC subway] Lokman Vural Elibol/Anadolu via Getty Images New York is sending the National Guard into the subway. Is it necessary? Last week, New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced a new policy that made headlines [across the country](: Following a handful of high-profile violent crimes, sheâs sending 750 members of the National Guard and hundreds of state troopers into the cityâs subway system. âNo one heading to their job or to visit family or go to a doctor appointment should worry that the person sitting next to them possesses a deadly weapon,â the governor said. Fair enough. Major crime in the transit system is [up 13 percent since the start of the year](, according to the police, and post-pandemic, [some New Yorkers have felt]( a fearful and âconfused unease about the fact that the trains seemed different.â But overall the picture is more positive: [Crime fell in New York last year](; and according to an analysis by the New York Times, the rate of violent crime on the cityâs subway system was roughly [one per 1 million rides]( â meaning your chances of being a victim of violent crime on the subway are really low. There are other reasons a New York Democrat might take an approach to crime that seems aggressively out of proportion: The idea of the city as a crime-ridden hellhole is a perennial of right-wing politics. Last fall, former President Donald Trump tore into New Yorkâs attorney general for pursuing a tax fraud case against him, [claiming falsely]( that the case was happening âwhile MURDERS & VIOLENT CRIME HIT UNIMAGINABLE RECORDS!â In a big city, thereâs almost always going to be a recent example critics can point to to say violence is out of control. So how should we judge how well a city is doing at fighting violent crime? [crime scene] Spencer Platt/Getty Images A novel way to evaluate crime levels To start trying to unpack that question, letâs look at one major element of violent crime: [gun violence](. One way is to judge overall violent crime and per capita crime rates to see how the city is performing compared to past years; thatâs what Hochul and the cityâs mayor are pointing to when saying their subway deployments are necessary. But another good way would be to look at how much gun violence there is in a given city compared to how well youâd expect it to do for a city of its size. And on the gun homicide front, a new study shows, New York City is majorly overperforming. In fact, itâs performing better than any other big city in the country. Thatâs one finding of an innovative new study by [Rayan Succar]( and [Maurizio Porfiri](, the director of the Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP) at New York Universityâs Tandon School of Engineering. You can [read the full study in the journal Nature Cities]( to learn more about their methodology, but to sum up what makes their research unique: They used [urban scaling]( theory â a form of analysis that has only been around for about 10 years and that has primarily been used to research things like wealth distribution and population growth â and applied it to crime. They looked at nearly 1,000 US cities, studying a number of different relationships between gun access, crime, and population, and aggregated multiple data sets in the six years leading up to the pandemic. Their modeling allowed them to compare the actual prevalence of gun violence in a given city to how the model predicted a city of its size would behave. One of their major findings is that gun homicides scale superlinearly to the population in cities â in other words, the bigger the city, the larger the number of gun crimes per capita. In more rural areas, on the other hand, there are more guns but fewer gun homicides. So while cities have fewer guns per capita, Porfiri says, âthey are responsible for more violence than what would happen in a rural area.â There are some theories as to why this is, and most have to do with increases in social interaction. As Succar puts it, âIf you interact with 200 people per day, thereâs way more possibility youâll get shot than if youâre interacting with five people per day.â Maybe thatâs good news for people who believe that theyâre safest in a rural area far from big cities with a large stash of firearms (though the research on the [risks posed to people who keep firearms in their homes]( might want to have a word). But it isnât the entire story. [nyc subway stop ] Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images New York has fewer gun homicides per capita than expected The model also predicted that a city of New Yorkâs population size should have way more gun homicides per capita than it does. In fact, of all the big cities they studied, New York had the largest gap between what the model predicted the gun homicide rate per capita would be and what it was. âNew York should be applauded,â Porfiri says. Given how large the city is, itâs outperforming expectations on an important measure of gun violence. (The authors donât delve into the reasons why, but itâs likely a complex mix of culture, law enforcement, and policy.) Is this (admittedly nuanced) finding going to convince Republicans who are certain the city is uniquely crime-plagued because of its purportedly soft-on-crime leaders? Probably not. But the findings matter. Across the country, year after year, [cities struggle with crime](, and those problems often get spun into political narratives [that have little relationship to the facts](. Getting a better understanding of how gun crime concentrates in cities â and distinguishing how a city performs given that reality â is an important development. [âMarin Cogan, senior correspondent]( [Listen]( Charlamagne tha God on Biden v. Trump A recent poll shows almost a quarter of registered Black voters would vote for Trump. We ask Charlamagne tha God, author and radio host of The Breakfast Club, about Black votersâ dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party. 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