One can always find or cherry pick statistics to support ones preconceived notions.
I do recall some who compared gun related crimes between Britain and the US, touting the low rates of Britain, an thereby surmising that Britain had a safer populace due to gun control measures.
Upon investigation of how the stats were tallied, it was found that US gun related crimes were reported on an any-incident basis. In the US, if it showed up in a police log, it was tallied. Gun related deaths, for example, were tallied whether by police action, personal defense, accidental, or criminal perpetration. Making no differentiation between beneficial gun involvement, negligent action, or detrimental. Whereas, only gun related crimes that were proved after conviction were tallied in Britain.
It is easy to argue for one statistic basis over another. However, it was clear that each set of statistics had different purposes.
In the US, funding dollars were connected to need for correction. Therefore, it was highly desirable to show alarming rates to bolster departmental funding dollars.
In Britain, in order to show that the police were doing such an excellent job, the numbers were stacked (conviction only) to show how well they were doing and keeping rates low.
I recall reading about a published scandal about how the police in some Brit locales were cooking the books to show how effective they were at preventing crime, in order to justify lavish funding.
One of the first things a statistician learns when comparing stats., is to first know they actually have relevance, rather than simply having a comparable label on the end results. Politicians, lobbyists, and propagandists seldom care about how they were collected, only that it appears to support their argument du jour, and has good "soundbite" potential for uninformed, ignorant listeners who are unable or unwilling to delve into statistic fundamentals.