Anonymous wrote:According to FBI crime statistics, 4.8 Americans per 100,000 were murdered in the US in 2010. The US State Department reports that 120 Americans of the 5.7 million who visited Mexico last year were murdered, which is a rate of 2.1 of 100,000 visitors. Regardless of whether they were or weren’t connected to drug trafficking, which is often not clear, it’s less than half the US national rate.
I got no bone in this debate, but I will note that your statistical comparison does not appear to account for the length of time in each place. If we accepts your wording, you are comparing a full 52 weeks of the Americans' life, regardless of location, with the period of time of the average American visit to Mexico, which even considering ex-pats who live there all year, I would assume to be lower than two weeks. If you multiply the two weeks times 26 to equalize, you would see that the risk was way higher during those two weeks than the average risk of Americans in general.