Re: Age and violence stats

From: Ian Goddard (igoddard@netkonnect.net)
Date: Tue Jun 30 1998 - 20:40:59 MDT


At 08:47 PM 6/29/98 -0700, Max More wrote:

>I believe that older people tend to commit fewer violent crimes (and not
>just those who are in hospital beds). If true, this might be turned into a
>cultural-effects argument in favor of extending our lifespans. If violent
>crime primarily comes from youngsters, the more older people there are and
>the lower the birth rate, the lower the level of violent crime that we
>should expect.
>
>Can anyone point me to a good source of statistics on violent crime broken
>down by age? Preferably a resource easily accessible on the web.

  IAN: The magic word here is "testosterone."
  A graph showing the rise and fall of test-
  osterone in the male over lifespan maps like
  a glove onto the graph showing violent crimes
  by males. Not only that, women who commit vio-
  lent crimes have been shown to have higher
  levels of, you guessed it, testosterone:

  Violent women have higher testosterone:
  http://www.womenconnect.com/info/law/sep2797a_law.htm
  http://pslgroup.com/dg/3a046.htm

  High testosterone linked to violent crime:
  http://www.crime-times.org/95c/w95cp4.htm

  Also see: Journal of the American
  Medical Association, June 14, 1995.

  There is also the phenomenon known as "roid rage"
  in which steroid users become dangerous violent.

  See: American Journal of Psychiatry: "Domestic violence
  associated with anabolic steroid abuse." 1993; 150:348.

  American Journal of Psychiatry: "Violent crime possibly
  associated with anabolic steroid use." 1989; 146:679.

  Life extension protocols might actually extend
  the period of life in which testosterone was at
  a high level, since its decline is associated
  with aging. Some Lextension material talks about
  increasing levels of testosterone in older men.

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