12/20/2007
- Name: John Lott
- Location: Virginia, United States
About Me
My commentary on a broad array of economics and crime related issues.
Most of my posts are now at the Crime Prevention Research Center. Our work is very important and you will find the latest information available there. Please click here or go to crimeresearch.org to get that information.
E-mail: johnrlott@crimeresearch.org
Academic Papers
- Terms of Use
Copyright 2005 by John R. Lott, Jr. All rights reserved
My Op-eds
More Books of Mine
Dumbing Down the Courts: How Politics Keeps the Smartest Judges Off the Bench
Straight Shooting: Firearms, Economics and Public Policy
Are Predatory Commitments Credible? Who Should the Courts Believe?
Reviews of Freedomnomics
Other Web sites
Previous Posts
- Op-ed on New Jersey Eliminating Its Death Penalty
- "400 Prominent Scientists Disputed Man-Made Global...
- Kyoto curtailing carbon dioxide emissions?
- Using a tragedy to pass unrelated gun regulations
- Government Regulation: Our mistake, you pay
- College makes students more liberal?
- ‘The Politically Incorrect Guide to Hunting’
- Why Hillary might be in real trouble
- Making the question of gun free zones clear
- 10-year-old girl for eating a steak with a steak k...
Book Reviews
- For a list of book reviews on The Bias Against Guns, click here.
Interesting Past Topics
-Research finding a drop in violent crime rates from Right-to-carry laws
-Ranking Economists
-Interview with the Washington Post
-Debate on "Guns Reduce Crime"
-Appalachian law school attack
-Sources for Defensive Gun Uses
-The Merced Pitchfork Killings
-Fraudulent website pretending to be run by me
-Steve Levitt's Correction Letter
-Ian Ayres and John Donohue
-Other issues regarding Steve Levitt
-National Academies of Science Panel on Firearms
-Baghdad murder rate
-Arming Pilots
-General discussion of my 1997 and 2002 surveys as well as related surveys
-Problems with Wikipedia
-Errata for Gun Books
-US Supreme Court Wire
-Futures for Financial Markets
-judgepedia
Links
Economist and Law Professor David D. Friedman's Blog
Larry Elder's The Elder Statement
Economist Robert G. Hansen's Blog
Firearmstruth.com -- a media-watchdog website
A debate that I had with George Mason University's Robert Ehrlich on guns
Lyonette Louis-Jacques's page on Firearms Regulation Worldwide
An interview concerning More Guns, Less Crime: Understanding Crime and Gun Control Laws
The End of Myth: An Interview with Dr. John Lott
Art DeVany's website, one of the more innovative economists in the last few decades
St. Cloud State University Scholars
Bryan Caplan at George Mason University
Alphecca -- weekly review on the media's coverage of guns
Xrlq -- Some interesting coverage of the law.
Career Police Officer
Gun Law News
Georgia Right-to-Carry
Darnell's The Independent Conservative Blog
Robert Stacy McCain's Blog
Clayton Cramer's Blog
My hidden mathematical ability (a math professor with the same name)
geekwitha45
My Old AEI Web Page
Wrightwing's blog
Al Lowe's blog
St. Maximos' Hut
Dad29
Elizabeth Blackney's blog
Eric Rasmusen
Your "Economics" Portal to the World by Larry Low
William Sjostrom
Dr. T's EconLinks.com
Interview with National Review Online
Blog at Newsmax.com
Pieces I have written at BigGovernment.com
Data
- Johnlott.org
(description of book, downloadable data sets, and discussions of previous controversies)
Updated Media Analysis of Appalachian Law School Attack
Journal of Legal Studies paper on spoiled ballots during the 2000 Presidential Election
Data set from USA Today, STATA 7.0 data set
"Do" File for some of the basic regressions from the paper
1 Comments:
Echoes of "Brave new world" and "Flowers for Algernon" there.
I can see the temptation to take the drugs and the commercial incentive to attempt to develop new ones.
It would certainly be interesting if the basis for variation in human intelligence turns out to be chemical rather than soley structural.
everyone I know who is Bi-polar is also increadibly creative during their high periods, but do they pay for it with the lows!
Those who have been "medicated" often abandoned the treatment because of the numbness it causes. that, and their work is very different when on medication.
Saying that, the history of "mind enhancing substances" inludes the myths about cocaine.
Morphine and Diamorphine were used for a while as anti depressants (as both had "the benefits of opium but with none of the problems of addiction") as were the later synthetic barbituates, benzo-diazapenes etc.
With experience, all were ultimately addictive and debilitating.
Military use of amphetamine certainly keeps guys awake and fighting, but hell, look at the "friendly" fire it seems to contribute to. The same could also be said about the use of khat and coke by people prone to violence.
Drawing the Analogy with steroids in sport. I used to know a girl called Zoe Warrick. She got to number 6 in the world in female body building, but comitted suicide in 1995 aged about 32.
She had campaigned for several years against the use of anabolic steroids in sport, blaming her use of them for her massive mood swings, depression, and damage to her heart, liver, pancreas, immune system etc.
Friends who are fitness freaks are often derogatory about both male and female bodybuilders becoming extremely aggressive in the run up to competition as a result of the drugs they are taking. That said, a cousin of a long ago ex, used to get his kicks by beating the hell out of the steroid filled bouncers on the doors of night clubs. He was a scrawny little guy who worked on a farm. Apart from his (obviously)immature personality, he was both stronger and far more agile than the guys with the big water filled muscles.
I wonder whether "mind enhancers" have their own side effects?
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