| 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
      
      
      
	
	Reproduced from the
	 
      
       
       
      The world has become a terrifyingly safe
      place. Clean, healthy, predictable, relatively crime -free, children don't
      die much,most people live to a ripe old age, journeys are no longer a dangerous
      adventure,epidemics don't sweep us away - life is dull,dull,dull.We were
      born and evolved to take risks,feel
      fear,thrill,terror,burning with adrenaline. 
      
       
      Now that we no longer face real danger,we
      either invent it (horror movies) or,worse,we pretend it's all around is when
      it isn't.We have lost the ability to measure real risk.In a brilliant programme
      about modern attitudes to risk,this weeks
      Equinox (Monday 12th
      9.00pm C4) [Ref. PT4:Analysis1.txt; PT5:Think1.txt;Think2.txt {Risk}; [Science
      2]World 9; Video:OB4
      Equinox;Reith] says it all - we live safer,but
      we fear more.  
      
       
      A new scientific discovery has found
      an enzyme called MAO (mono amine oxidase) that determines how much risk we
      like to take.Low levels of MAO mean people become high-risk takers.Needless
      to say,men have the lowest levels of MAO,while women and old people have
      higher levels. Extremely violent men in hospital for the criminally insane
      had levels of MAO one-third lower than the average - though it doesn't excuse
      or explain their behaviour,as others with low
      MAO may put it to socially useful purposes. 
      
       
      The enzyme doesn't determine your
      morality,only your appetite for risk.The bravest bull - fighters measured
      in Spain also had exceptionally low MAO.No doubt the bravery of war
      heroes,firefighters,trapeze artists, mountaineers,explorers and others generally
      admired can also be explained by lack of MAO. But the need to experience
      fear becomes harmful when it distorts reality,making us get our thrills from
      imagining the world is more dangerous than it is. 
      
       
      Newspapers and news bulletins these
      days are designed to give people the impression that even as the huddle in
      their armchairs,they are really up against raw and frightful threats.It
      makes people lose any sensible yardstick by which to measure relative risk.All
      this has spilled over into politics.Politicians outbid one another in promising
      the zero-risk society. 
      
       
      But,as this Equinox programme points
      out trenchantly,we need risk.The only totally risk - free status is death.To
      live is to take risks and morbid fear of risk can lead to a kind of living
      death. Nothing is risk free [Including
      cell-phones-LB] from the moment we wake up in
      the morning (sleep,of course,has its hazards,too).Twenty people a year are
      electrocuted turning off their alarm clocks,20 more die getting out of bed
      and 20 die putting their socks on.We have a huge scare over
      BSE when it is only killing the same number of people
      as alarm clocks.shouldn't we be having an alarm clock scare,too? [That's
      why figures should be put on incidence-LB]  
      
       
      One death from beef on the bone might
      be expected every 20 years at the current rate,but 40,000 people will die
      falling downstairs in that time.Should we make bungalows compulsory? On the
      serious side,the film shows the danger of phoney risk scares. [Like cell
      phoneys!? -LB] Recently,there was yet another birth -control pill scare when
      research showed a slightly increased risk of thrombosis with some brands.The
      result was,of course,that some women,who hadn't a clue how to assess relative
      risk,threw their pills away that day and got pregnant.Because pregnancy has
      a far higher mortality rate than the Pill,some may have died. 
      
       
      Journalists and politicians are often
      to blame [They are often innumerate.Ref:
      J.A.Paulos "A Mathematician
      Reads the Newspaper"],hyping up small scares without putting them into
      context with other equivalent risks.On this occasion,the risk calculation
      was that one woman in half-a-million would be saved by not taking the
      Pill,whereas 30 women in half-a-million could be expected to die in pregnancy.
       
      
       
      The programme also looks at the scare
      over Ecstasy tablets following the death of Leah Betts - and here it gets
      to the heart of our attitudes towards risk.Professor John Henry of St Mary's
      Hospital in London,the leading expert,finds it impossible to explain the
      real risks because no one wants to know. He says alcohol kills 100 people
      a day,Ecstasy kills one a month.So why the terror of a recreational drug
      that is relatively safe? Because,suggests the programme,we all make elaborate
      risk-benefit calculations.We like to drink,we are used to drinking,we are
      use to knowing it can be dangerous,so we dismiss the risks. 
      
       
      On the other hand,Ecstasy is only taken
      by the young not by policy makers,and to adults who experience none of its
      upside or benefits,the risk doesn't seem worth it. Everything we do involves
      risk-benefit estimates,which we may often get wrong. [So there is a "right"
      way of doing it then?-LB]We know driving kills,yet the car is so convenient
      we reckon the considerable risks worth while.Many fear flying,yet cars are
      far more dangerous. [How do we know this other than by
      statistics? -LB]  
      
       
      Programmes such as Crimewatch,and others
      yet more lurid,result in us believing murder stalks around every dark
      corner,trapping people at home through fear - but our streets are very safe.
      [In other words,what people BELIEVE, and what is TRUE are two different things
      - LB] We over - protect our children,making wildly wrong risk -benefit
      assessments on their behalf.It would be worth giving them more freedom for
      not very much more risk. [How many parents went into overdrive and were overly
      cautious,after the James Bulger affair? -LB]  
      
       
      Political priorities,our sense of success
      as a society,our willingness to be brave and have fun are all circumscribed
      if we make bad risk assessments.It's time risk was taught at school. [Or
      that mathematics was given greater emphasis for its impact on society,to
      diminish the "When am I going to use Trigonometry in my life?" attitude -LB]
      Every new scare in the newspapers should come with a kite-mark risk
      assessment,ranking it with everyday risks we already understand.So do watch
      this wise programme and consider the risk of getting risk wrong.  
       
	  
      
       
	Crime blunder doesn't add up
      
      
      Home Office admits figures were wrong 
       
      by Gillian Longstaff 
       
       RED-FACED Home Office officials have been forced to apologise
      for making Tameside look more like 'Shameside'. 
       Blundering government officials this week admitted a
      mix-up in their recently released nationwide crime league, which left Tameside
      with one of the worst crime records in the North West.  
      Home Secretary Jack Straw [-for brains.Don't forget this is the government
      which said we needed to emphasise numeracy skills -LB]'s name and shame league
      - issued and published in The Advertiser two weeks ago - placed the
      borough at the top of the grot spots for violence, robbery and car theft. 
      But the true picture, revealed Tameside Council's head of community safety,
      John Johnson, who spotted the error, shows the borough has one of the lowest
      crime rates in Greater Manchester, contrary to the lawless picture the incorrect
      figures painted. 
      Some crime rates were actually double the real figures, he said. In offering
      their sincerest apologies for the bungle - and laying the blame on a 'computer
      error' - a Home Office spokeswoman said: "Errors in some of the crime and
      disorder reduction partnerships has been brought to our attention, "The errors
      are being corrected and we apologise for any inconvenience caused."  
      Mr Johnson says the botch is a major setback for members of their crime fighting
      partnership, which includes police, Victim Support, the fire service, Racial
      Equality Council and New Charter Housing.  
      "It's a real concern when everyone has put a lot of hard work into this
      partnership to actually reduce crime," said Mr Johnson.  
      "We have worked very well together, as is borne out by the actual figures.
      It's unfortunate this has gone national and I've suggested to the Home Office
      that in future they check with local partnerships before going public. They
      have a responsibility.  
      "The positive message is Tameside is one of the safest areas to live in Greater
      Manchester. We've got one of the lowest burglary rates in Greater Manchester,
      the second lowest in terms of theft from vehicles and in terms of sexual
      offences only Wigan are lower." 
      The borough's actual crime statistics, recorded between April 1999 and March
      2000, are:  
      
       
	- 
	  Violence against the person - 3,024.
	
 - 
	  Sexual offences - 147. 
	
 - 
	  Robbery - 441. 
	
 - 
	  House burglary - 2,869. 
	
 - 
	  Car theft - 3,338. 
	
 - 
	  Theft from vehicles - 2,883. 
      
  
      
      Although Tameside was placed alongside the likes of Salford,
      Blackburn and Sunderland, they were only compared demographically and not
      criminally explained Mr Johnson.  
      [Once again innumerate public officials screw up and make lame
      excuses.Computers don't make errors,people make errors. GIGO - Garbage in
      - Garbage out -LB]  
      
       
       
	Blitz on burglars
      
      
      THIS week the borough's crime fighting supremos announced measures
      to kick the crooks where it hurts.  
      A host of schemes to crack down on criminal activity throughout the borough
      were issued by the Tameside Crime and Disorder Partnership.  
      The multi-agency team, including Tameside Council, police, the Probation
      Service, Victim Support and Youth Service, has secured government cash to
      ease the burden on residents, retailers and shoppers.  
      A massive £77,000 scheme is currently underway to install gates on alleyways
      in Ashton's West End, Waterloo and Hurst areas.  
      The council's head of community safety, John Johnson, explained: "We know
      the majority of burglaries are committed by going in through the back of
      properties and this has proved to be a strong deterrent. All the residents
      are very enthusiastic and they're all given keys for their own access." 
      The partnership will also be targeting those who've been repeatedly victimised
      by burglars with a number of crime prevention measures in areas such as
      Ridgehill. Copley and Brushes estates in Stalybridge, Haughton Green, Dukinfield
      and Hyde. 
      "We're looking at installing things like door chains, window locks and
      environmental measures to prevent the more vulnerable become victims again,"
      added Mr Johnson.  
      They're also looking at introducing their successful Safe Child Scheme -
      where shops sporting the SCS logo are trained to reunite lost kids and parents
      - in towns across the borough. 
      And the highly effective radio link-up to detect shoplifters is also being
      considered in Denton and Stalybridge. There are also plans to bring closed
      circuit TV to Denton and Droylsden.  
      Answering critics of the CCTV system which say it's not manned enough and
      cameras aren't focused on crime hots spots, Mr Johnson said: "CCTV has proved
      to be very effective. Since it's been introduced in
      Ashton crime
      has reduced by 40-50 percent. There's no doubt it is a deterrent." [Ref:
      Counterblast{Privacy}] 
      The Advertiser August 3 2000  | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     | 
     |