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The other Lott controversy: Michelle Malkin whacks pro-2nd Amendment author for self-aggrandizing
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Wednesday, February 5, 2003 | Michelle Malkin

Posted on 02/04/2003 11:44:51 PM PST by JohnHuang2

Edited on 02/04/2003 11:45:25 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]

 
 


WND Commentary


The other Lott controversy


Posted: February 5, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

For those few of us in the mainstream media who openly support Second Amendment rights, research scholar John Lott has been – or rather, had been – an absolute godsend.

Armed with top-notch credentials (including stints at Stanford, Rice, UCLA, Wharton, Cornell, the University of Chicago and Yale), Lott took on the entrenched anti-gun bias of the ivory tower with seemingly meticulous scholarship. His best-selling 1998 book, "More Guns, Less Crime," provided analysis of FBI crime data that showed a groundbreaking correlation between concealed-weapons laws and reduced violent crime rates.

I met Lott briefly after a seminar at the University of Washington in Seattle several years ago and was deeply impressed by his intellectual rigor. Lott responded directly and extensively to critics' arguments. He made his data accessible to many other researchers.

But as he prepares to release a new book, "Bias Against Guns," next month, Lott must grapple with an emerging controversy – brought to the public eye by the blogosphere – that goes to the heart of his academic integrity.

The most disturbing charge, first raised by retired University of California, Santa Barbara professor Otis Dudley Duncan and pursued by Australian computer programmer Tim Lambert, is that Lott fabricated a study claiming that 98 percent of defensive gun uses involved mere brandishing, as opposed to shooting.

When Lott cited the statistic peripherally on page three of his book, he attributed it to "national surveys." In the second edition, he changed the citation to "a national survey that I conducted." He has also incorrectly attributed the figure to newspaper polls and Florida State University criminologist Gary Kleck.

Last fall, Northwestern University law professor James Lindgren volunteered to investigate the claimed existence of Lott's 1997 telephone survey of 2,424 people. "I thought it would be exceedingly simple to establish" that the research had been done, Lindgren wrote in his report.

It was not simple. Lott claims to have lost all of his data due to a computer crash. He financed the survey himself and kept no financial records. He has forgotten the names of the students who allegedly helped with the survey and who supposedly dialed thousands of survey respondents long-distance from their own dorm rooms using survey software Lott can't identify or produce.

Assuming the survey data was lost in a computer crash, it is still remarkable that Lott could not produce a single, contemporaneous scrap of paper proving the survey's existence, such as the research protocol or survey instrument. After Lindgren's report was published, a Minnesota gun-rights activist named David Gross came forward, claiming he was surveyed in 1997. Some have said that Gross's account proves that the survey was done. I think skepticism is warranted.

Lott now admits he used a fake persona, "Mary Rosh," to post voluminous defenses of his work over the Internet. "Rosh" gushed that Lott was "the best professor that I ever had." She/he also penned an effusive review of "More Guns, Less Crime" on Amazon.com: "It was very interesting reading and Lott writes very well." (Lott claims that one of his sons posted the review in "Rosh's" name.) Just last week, "Rosh" complained on a blog comment board: "Critics such as Lambert and Lindgren ought to slink away and hide."

By itself, there is nothing wrong with using a pseudonym. But Lott's invention of Mary Rosh to praise his own research and blast other scholars is beyond creepy. And it shows his extensive willingness to deceive to protect and promote his work.

Some Second Amendment activists believe there is an anti-gun conspiracy to discredit Lott as "payback" for the fall of Michael Bellesiles, the disgraced former Emory University professor who engaged in rampant research fraud to bolster his anti-gun book, "Arming America." But it wasn't an anti-gun zealot who unmasked Rosh/Lott. It was Internet blogger Julian Sanchez, a staffer at the libertarian Cato Institute, which staunchly defends the Second Amendment. And it was the conservative Washington Times that first reported last week on the survey dispute in the mainstream press.

In an interview Monday, Lott stressed that his new defensive gun-use survey (whose results will be published in the new book) will show similar results to the lost survey. But the existence of the new survey does not lay to rest the still lingering doubts about the old survey's existence.

The media coverage of the 1997 survey data dispute, Lott told me, is "a bunch to do about nothing." I wish I could agree.



TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: banglist
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To: Sabertooth
Thanks for the heads up!
41 posted on 02/07/2003 8:21:29 AM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: Bonaparte
I wish I could agree with you. What we have here is not a mistake but an intentional effort to deceive for the sake of personal gain. What Malkin describes calls the entire study into question. If I had bought the book, I’d want my money back. I will never quote from it or reference it. This kind of blatant fraud discredits the whole work.
42 posted on 02/07/2003 8:59:27 AM PST by Barnacle (Not just your everyday marine crustacean of the subclass Cirripedia)
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To: Carry_Okie
I was naive at the time. You are the hypocrite.

LOL!...Wholesale name calling.

You sit at a UN Agenda 21 roundtable to dictate UN policy, then use "(The environment is too complex and too important to be managed by politics.)" for your tag line and I'm the hypocrite?

You're right hypocrite isn't the right word, fraud would be a more fitting title for you.

43 posted on 02/07/2003 10:19:44 AM PST by lewislynn
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To: Adder
amphorous??? I was unaware the scientific community was related to the clay storage vessels of the classical era.
You meant amorphous (ay-mor-fus), perhaps? meaning: without shape or form.
44 posted on 02/07/2003 10:32:44 AM PST by demosthenes the elder (baaa... baaaaah!)
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To: lewislynn
You sit at a UN Agenda 21 roundtable to dictate UN policy, then use "(The environment is too complex and too important to be managed by politics.)" for your tag line and I'm the hypocrite?

In the very piece from which you quoted I wrote, "His purpose was to see rigorous science respected in policy. The final document, presented as "consensus," was rewritten in secret by non-participants, unwittingly serving the interests of a select group of developers, bureaucrats, and politicians. The plan was not only outrageously expensive, it was assured to be hugely destructive to local habitat. It was a fraud.

Dictate policy? Not a bit; and you chose to deliberately misrepresent my words out of your pathetic spite. I was there to try to put a stop to these environmental wackjobs ruining the local forests. I had no idea what the Agenda21 was when I was requested to attend by a friend of mine who was an advocate for the timber industry. I was successful enough that they had to go into a back room to kill it.

At the time, I knew no more about the UN than does any usual citizen. I believed that good laws and a government that actually helps people were a good thing. That was eight years ago. I have learned a great deal more since.

You're right hypocrite isn't the right word, fraud would be a more fitting title for you.

45 posted on 02/07/2003 10:36:30 AM PST by Carry_Okie (The environment is too complex and too important to be managed by politics.)
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To: demosthenes the elder
DOH![smacks forehead] Yeah, thats what I meant.(~~)<--chagrin
46 posted on 02/07/2003 12:55:13 PM PST by Adder
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To: Joe Brower
I agree he is a target, but we must be truthful if any of his research was made up.
47 posted on 02/07/2003 1:51:03 PM PST by Travis McGee (--------------------------- WAR SOLVED HITLER! -------------------------)
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To: Barnacle
As I said before, if there were other problems with the book, the gun grabbers would have found them by now and publicized them in every media outlet in the country.

This has not happend!

Why has it not happened?

There are several possibilities --

    1. The anti-RBKAs decided to give Lott a break.

    2. They and their thousands of friends in academia were too stupid to know how to check on Lott's facts, even with 4 years to do it.

    3. They couldn't find anything else, after combing through it exhaustively.

So is it number 1, number 2, or number 3?
48 posted on 02/07/2003 3:35:17 PM PST by Bonaparte
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To: Bonaparte
I don't know. Run that question past Malkin and give us a ping.
49 posted on 02/07/2003 7:24:58 PM PST by Barnacle (Navigating the treacherous waters of a liberal culture)
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To: Barnacle
Won't need to ask her, B. She already knows the answer. Just like I do.
50 posted on 02/07/2003 7:31:49 PM PST by Bonaparte
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