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On December 28 2023 19:01 Gorsameth wrote:Show nested quote +On December 28 2023 08:47 Sadist wrote:On December 28 2023 08:18 Mohdoo wrote:On December 28 2023 06:52 BlackJack wrote: In general society should be cautious giving money to things it doesn't want to incentivize. We have things like scholarships to attend college and tax incentives for first time home buyers and having children because we want to incentivize more people to attend college or buy a home and start a family. Cash stipends for being homeless might just incentivize _________? Seemingly every year progressive cities spend more and more on homelessness and every year the problem gets worse and worse. Unfortunately they lack the linear thinking to see why that's happening so instead they insist they just need a bit more money to right the ship. It’s a weird situation because, like I pointed out, it’s not like any of us are dazed and confused trying to figure out how to solve the problem. The issue is that as they begin to plan how to address homelessness, city council or mayors or whatever look at 2 things: 1: the scale of the issue and approximate cost of solving the problem 2: resources available to use solving the problem As is the case with most things, there simply is not enough available resources to fix it, so the question becomes what can be done to still improve it with the resources available. This approach works in many situations but it does not work for homelessness. The actual, in practice policies enacted by Portland are wildly deficient and basically don’t solve anything. And there are many ways to argue the policies are a net negative. They had the right idea. Their hearts weee in the right place. But this is the fatal flaw: “well, we have to do something, so how can we work within these limitations to still make something happen? Even if we can’t solve it, we can make an impact through this or that” This ultimately leads to extremely poorly executed, under-funded, and mechanistically deficient policies. The people writing the adapted policies don’t understand how to adapt them well. They do a poor job at estimating cost because it’s extremely challenging, even after deciding to “do what we can”. The timeline ends up messed up because the logistics are also challenging, which often leads to certain pieces not lining up right and making it even less effective. Or certain parts of the project get cut half way through, which ultimately ends up being a critical weakness, making it all even less effective. And so I’ll say it again: homelessness is a federal problem. I would vote for a mayor/governor candidate who declared they would completely stop all the half-ass pats on the back and instead go absolutely nuclear on the federal government. Constantly posting graphic images, descriptions of deaths from overdose, and explicitly saying all of the blood is on mayor Pete or Biden’s hands. Make a national spectacle of it, be absolutely shameless, vile stuff left and right attacking the feds while highlighting the suffering of homeless people. Maybe some kind of running counter of “number of homeless people hit by car’s being driven by Joe Biden” or something like that. I’d love it. Can you clarify what the solution is? My understanding of homeless people in the US is that many of them have mental health issues and or addiction issues. I dont know what the percentages are but I would guess a majority. I am curious about what the solution is for the folks with Mental Health problems are. Outreach and stuff is great but Im pretty sure thats already happening. You can increase the Social Safety Net and I am 100% for that, I just think there will always be some homeless unless they are basically jailed in an asylum or something. Didnt the homeless population jump pretty dramatically once those places were shutdown in the US in the 70s and 80s? I again point to the entire rest of the western world that is obviously not perfect but tends to be better then the US in dealing with homelessness, addiction and social security. This is not a new unsolvable problem. Its just the US being the US. And no the US is not doing good in outreach and stuff for mental health problems, in fact the US is kind of famous for just throwing their mentally ill in prison rather then actually try helping them.
Wikipedia has the US somewhere in the middle of the pack. Ahead of The Netherlands, France, Germany, Sweden, UK, Austria, Czech Republic, Luxembourg, Australia, to name a few
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On December 28 2023 19:26 BlackJack wrote:Show nested quote +On December 28 2023 19:01 Gorsameth wrote:On December 28 2023 08:47 Sadist wrote:On December 28 2023 08:18 Mohdoo wrote:On December 28 2023 06:52 BlackJack wrote: In general society should be cautious giving money to things it doesn't want to incentivize. We have things like scholarships to attend college and tax incentives for first time home buyers and having children because we want to incentivize more people to attend college or buy a home and start a family. Cash stipends for being homeless might just incentivize _________? Seemingly every year progressive cities spend more and more on homelessness and every year the problem gets worse and worse. Unfortunately they lack the linear thinking to see why that's happening so instead they insist they just need a bit more money to right the ship. It’s a weird situation because, like I pointed out, it’s not like any of us are dazed and confused trying to figure out how to solve the problem. The issue is that as they begin to plan how to address homelessness, city council or mayors or whatever look at 2 things: 1: the scale of the issue and approximate cost of solving the problem 2: resources available to use solving the problem As is the case with most things, there simply is not enough available resources to fix it, so the question becomes what can be done to still improve it with the resources available. This approach works in many situations but it does not work for homelessness. The actual, in practice policies enacted by Portland are wildly deficient and basically don’t solve anything. And there are many ways to argue the policies are a net negative. They had the right idea. Their hearts weee in the right place. But this is the fatal flaw: “well, we have to do something, so how can we work within these limitations to still make something happen? Even if we can’t solve it, we can make an impact through this or that” This ultimately leads to extremely poorly executed, under-funded, and mechanistically deficient policies. The people writing the adapted policies don’t understand how to adapt them well. They do a poor job at estimating cost because it’s extremely challenging, even after deciding to “do what we can”. The timeline ends up messed up because the logistics are also challenging, which often leads to certain pieces not lining up right and making it even less effective. Or certain parts of the project get cut half way through, which ultimately ends up being a critical weakness, making it all even less effective. And so I’ll say it again: homelessness is a federal problem. I would vote for a mayor/governor candidate who declared they would completely stop all the half-ass pats on the back and instead go absolutely nuclear on the federal government. Constantly posting graphic images, descriptions of deaths from overdose, and explicitly saying all of the blood is on mayor Pete or Biden’s hands. Make a national spectacle of it, be absolutely shameless, vile stuff left and right attacking the feds while highlighting the suffering of homeless people. Maybe some kind of running counter of “number of homeless people hit by car’s being driven by Joe Biden” or something like that. I’d love it. Can you clarify what the solution is? My understanding of homeless people in the US is that many of them have mental health issues and or addiction issues. I dont know what the percentages are but I would guess a majority. I am curious about what the solution is for the folks with Mental Health problems are. Outreach and stuff is great but Im pretty sure thats already happening. You can increase the Social Safety Net and I am 100% for that, I just think there will always be some homeless unless they are basically jailed in an asylum or something. Didnt the homeless population jump pretty dramatically once those places were shutdown in the US in the 70s and 80s? I again point to the entire rest of the western world that is obviously not perfect but tends to be better then the US in dealing with homelessness, addiction and social security. This is not a new unsolvable problem. Its just the US being the US. And no the US is not doing good in outreach and stuff for mental health problems, in fact the US is kind of famous for just throwing their mentally ill in prison rather then actually try helping them. Wikipedia has the US somewhere in the middle of the pack. Ahead of The Netherlands, France, Germany, Sweden, UK, Austria, Czech Republic, Luxembourg, Australia, to name a few
From the wiki page you linked: "The numbers may take into account internal displacement from conflict, violence and natural disasters, but may or may not take into account chronic and transitional homelessness, making direct comparisons of numbers complicated."
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I do love the idea of a posted list of countries with comparative numbers associated with a blurb saying not to compare the numbers directly because the data is fucked.
On December 28 2023 09:30 Introvert wrote:Show nested quote +On December 28 2023 08:37 Liquid`Drone wrote: yeah that's just silly. Being homeless is so shitty that it obviously won't be incentivized by money. Maybe you can argue that it's bad policy for a city to give money to homeless people because it can attract homeless people to that city, but (virtually) nobody is going to choose being with a home in x/y location to being homeless in y location because of some stipend.
I mean I'm assuming the stipends aren't in the $100k per year class because in that case I guess hypothetically someone could do homeless on existence minimum for two years to save up for a home in idaho but I'm assuming it's in the 'this'll afford you some food/drugs so you won't have to resort to crime/you can get away with less crime' range.
You can also argue that it'd be better to spend the money on housing for homeless people than stipends, or on various programs to help them get back on track, but the idea that homelessness is incentivized by stipends needs way more work than some type 'scholarships incentivize studying thus stipends for homeless incentivize homelessness' brain exploding meme logic. I don't really intend to get too far into this conversation, but it's absolutely true that a large percentage of the homeless population choose homelessness rather than help if that help requires things like looking for work or getting off drugs. You can debate how much free agency a person really has when in the thrall of drug addiction, but merely having sufficient housing, for example, would still leave a very large number of homeless people on the street. There are people who panhandle for money and spend it on drugs and alcohol. Again, not saying these people don't need help, but by giving people cash with no conditions you are most definitely subsidizing at least some people's reckless behavior.
This feels like a strange conversation to not get far in, because I don't think anyone was saying 'nobody chooses to be homeless' and rather is a thing you wanted to bring up about how people totally do choose to be homeless.
Drone's post, which is the one you've quoted, seems to lean much closer towards 'stipends won't suddenly make homelessness appealing to someone not already homeless' and 'if you give an alcoholic money, he's going to spend it on booze. This way, he won't not have money and put his fist through a window to steal booze (or something for booze money), which ends up being much more expensive than buying him booze would have been.'
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On December 28 2023 14:43 BlackJack wrote:Show nested quote +On December 28 2023 14:01 KwarK wrote:On December 28 2023 13:53 BlackJack wrote:On December 28 2023 13:33 KwarK wrote: Your claim was that you couldn’t get the police to help you this year because the city bought into defund the police. Which part are you now contesting? What year it is? I've already answered that several pages ago. In 2021 Oakland City Council voted to reallocate $17 million from the police to other social programs for 2022. Part of the money was to be used for future police academies. It's quite obvious how you can get a downstream effect of fewer academies in 2022 to fewer police in 2023. Policy changes don't have instantaneous affects. We don't blame the President for the state of the country the day after he is inaugurated. Almost everything has lag times between policy enactment and when you will see the change. In 2021 they also didn’t defund the police. People said if they did it would cause issues and so they didn’t actually defund it. Your side whined until they won the argument, you got what you wanted, the police got funded, and you’re still complaining. And to make matters worse you're complaining about how progressives spend ever increasing amounts on policies that don't yield results. https://abc7news.com/amp/defund-police-oakland-crime-shooting/12311750/ Show nested quote +Fast forward a year later, city leaders celebrated what they called a 'historic vote' to defund the police. In June 2021, Oakland city council voted to cut nearly $20 million from its police force to other programs aimed to help prevent crime and address mental illness. But the headline at the time didn't reveal the full story.
While those cuts did happen, the I-Team found OPD's budget still increased more than $5.7 million in the following 2021-2022 fiscal year. Your source literally says the cuts did happen. The budget was supposed to go up by $23 million and it went up by $5.7 million instead. It went up less becomes funds were reallocated away from the police department and into other social programs which is exactly the premise behind the defund movement.
How is a 5 million increase in budget a 'budget cut'?
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On December 29 2023 16:09 Salazarz wrote:Show nested quote +On December 28 2023 14:43 BlackJack wrote:On December 28 2023 14:01 KwarK wrote:On December 28 2023 13:53 BlackJack wrote:On December 28 2023 13:33 KwarK wrote: Your claim was that you couldn’t get the police to help you this year because the city bought into defund the police. Which part are you now contesting? What year it is? I've already answered that several pages ago. In 2021 Oakland City Council voted to reallocate $17 million from the police to other social programs for 2022. Part of the money was to be used for future police academies. It's quite obvious how you can get a downstream effect of fewer academies in 2022 to fewer police in 2023. Policy changes don't have instantaneous affects. We don't blame the President for the state of the country the day after he is inaugurated. Almost everything has lag times between policy enactment and when you will see the change. In 2021 they also didn’t defund the police. People said if they did it would cause issues and so they didn’t actually defund it. Your side whined until they won the argument, you got what you wanted, the police got funded, and you’re still complaining. And to make matters worse you're complaining about how progressives spend ever increasing amounts on policies that don't yield results. https://abc7news.com/amp/defund-police-oakland-crime-shooting/12311750/ Fast forward a year later, city leaders celebrated what they called a 'historic vote' to defund the police. In June 2021, Oakland city council voted to cut nearly $20 million from its police force to other programs aimed to help prevent crime and address mental illness. But the headline at the time didn't reveal the full story.
While those cuts did happen, the I-Team found OPD's budget still increased more than $5.7 million in the following 2021-2022 fiscal year. Your source literally says the cuts did happen. The budget was supposed to go up by $23 million and it went up by $5.7 million instead. It went up less becomes funds were reallocated away from the police department and into other social programs which is exactly the premise behind the defund movement. How is a 5 million increase in budget a 'budget cut'?
"budget cut" is the word you chose to use. We can call it a "cut" because the proposed budget was supposed to go up $25 million and it went up $5 million instead. The $20 million less was cut out.
The $5 million which represents a <2% increase doesn't keep up with inflation or costs. When things don't keep up with inflation or costs you have to make cuts in the services you provide. You have to make cuts in the services you provide because you don't have the funding to provide them.
What phrasing do you prefer to describe voting to remove $17-18 million from the police budget and place it in other services? A budget increase?
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This is all very commonly accepted parlance.
Let's say the CBO estimates the budget for food stamps will increase by $200 million over the next 10 years. Trump gets reelected and he decides he wants the budget to increase by only $50 million over the next 10 years.
It would be considered extremely acceptable to say that "Trump wants to cut funding for food stamps."
Would you be saying "well the budget is still going up by $50 million so how is a $50 million dollar increase a cut?" Fat fucking chance.
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I see there was a bridge at the top of the hill.
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Norway28443 Posts
There appears to be a difference between a 'funding cut' and a 'budget cut'. This makes sense to me, too - if something was expected to increase by $100 mill but then it's decided that it'll increase by $50 million instead, that's a funding cut, but not a budget cut.
I personally don't think this particular semantical discussion is worth more time nor effort.
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If the sole objection to my contention that soft-on-crime DAs, anti-police sentiment, and lack of police presence due to budget constraints is whether or not I'm using the word "cut" correctly, I'm happy to concede that immaterial portion of my argument entirely and use whatever verbiage people prefer.
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I mean, it’s reflective of a larger innumeracy issue with the “law and order” conservative position. They’re constantly insisting crime is up when it’s not, murder is up when it’s not, shoplifting is up when it’s not, and whether the numbers are up or down the answer is always the same: more prosecutions, more cops, more mandatory minimums.
I’m not following crime stats in SF specifically, but it wouldn’t matter even if I was, because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway (even, say, homicide numbers, which seem much harder to fake). “Crime is out of control” is often a conclusion reached entirely on vibes, and the causal link between brutalizing accused criminals and reducing crime is simply axiomatic, no proof necessary.
My impression is that SF *is* going through a crisis right now (at least, it was last time I checked in which was probably a while ago), but attributing the problems to “soft-on-crime DAs” or insufficient police funding is pretty much entirely unsupported. The argument over what constitutes a “budget cut” is largely a distraction from more important questions like “why is crime up, assuming that’s even accurate?” or “what actually is the right societal response to petty crime?”
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United States41385 Posts
On December 30 2023 05:29 Liquid`Drone wrote: There appears to be a difference between a 'funding cut' and a 'budget cut'. This makes sense to me, too - if something was expected to increase by $100 mill but then it's decided that it'll increase by $50 million instead, that's a funding cut, but not a budget cut.
I personally don't think this particular semantical discussion is worth more time nor effort. If we’re not engaging in things that aren’t worth the time or effort then I honestly don’t know what any of us are doing in this topic.
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Norway28443 Posts
A discussion can be worth some time and effort while not being worth more time and effort at the same time
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On December 30 2023 05:49 ChristianS wrote: I mean, it’s reflective of a larger innumeracy issue with the “law and order” conservative position. They’re constantly insisting crime is up when it’s not, murder is up when it’s not, shoplifting is up when it’s not, and whether the numbers are up or down the answer is always the same: more prosecutions, more cops, more mandatory minimums.
I’m not following crime stats in SF specifically, but it wouldn’t matter even if I was, because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway (even, say, homicide numbers, which seem much harder to fake). “Crime is out of control” is often a conclusion reached entirely on vibes, and the causal link between brutalizing accused criminals and reducing crime is simply axiomatic, no proof necessary.
My impression is that SF *is* going through a crisis right now (at least, it was last time I checked in which was probably a while ago), but attributing the problems to “soft-on-crime DAs” or insufficient police funding is pretty much entirely unsupported. The argument over what constitutes a “budget cut” is largely a distraction from more important questions like “why is crime up, assuming that’s even accurate?” or “what actually is the right societal response to petty crime?”
Can you clarify what you mean by it doesn't matter what the crime stats say because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway?
I agree that crime data can be faulty as a lot of crimes go underreported like rape and petty theft, but surely we have enough decent data to establish that crime is going significantly up, particularly in Oakland.
As of early July, Oakland’s homicide count was up by 37% compared with 2019 and reported robberies were up by about 30%. Property crime jumped too, particularly car-related crimes: Car break-ins were up by over 40%, while vehicle thefts had more than doubled. source
Homicides are at 118 on the year, or 119 if you include the Oakland police officer that was shot and killed this morning.
Sure maybe there are some people whose opinions on policy will remain unchanged regardless of what the stats show but for others that's not the case. If we can't even agree on whether or not crime is actually up or down then a conversation about what to do about it seems pointless.
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On December 30 2023 06:28 BlackJack wrote:Show nested quote +On December 30 2023 05:49 ChristianS wrote: I mean, it’s reflective of a larger innumeracy issue with the “law and order” conservative position. They’re constantly insisting crime is up when it’s not, murder is up when it’s not, shoplifting is up when it’s not, and whether the numbers are up or down the answer is always the same: more prosecutions, more cops, more mandatory minimums.
I’m not following crime stats in SF specifically, but it wouldn’t matter even if I was, because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway (even, say, homicide numbers, which seem much harder to fake). “Crime is out of control” is often a conclusion reached entirely on vibes, and the causal link between brutalizing accused criminals and reducing crime is simply axiomatic, no proof necessary.
My impression is that SF *is* going through a crisis right now (at least, it was last time I checked in which was probably a while ago), but attributing the problems to “soft-on-crime DAs” or insufficient police funding is pretty much entirely unsupported. The argument over what constitutes a “budget cut” is largely a distraction from more important questions like “why is crime up, assuming that’s even accurate?” or “what actually is the right societal response to petty crime?” Can you clarify what you mean by it doesn't matter what the crime stats say because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway? I agree that crime data can be faulty as a lot of crimes go underreported like rape and petty theft, but surely we have enough decent data to establish that crime is going significantly up, particularly in Oakland. As of early July, Oakland’s homicide count was up by 37% compared with 2019 and reported robberies were up by about 30%. Property crime jumped too, particularly car-related crimes: Car break-ins were up by over 40%, while vehicle thefts had more than doubled. sourceHomicides are at 118 on the year, or 119 if you include the Oakland police officer that was shot and killed this morning. Sure maybe there are some people whose opinions on policy will remain unchanged regardless of what the stats show but for others that's not the case. If we can't even agree on whether or not crime is actually up or down then a conversation about what to do about it seems pointless. The bolded is usually the case when this stuff gets discussed. At the national level, certainly, you regularly get Republicans shouting about Americans being murdered in the streets as the actual statistics are nearly as low as they’ve ever been. If you call them on it they either cite one specific location where the numbers are up (you’d expect that to be true somewhere at any given time) or just say the numbers are fake and everybody knows crime is *actually* up.
In this case though, specifically regarding the Bay Area I don’t particularly doubt your numbers, so we can skip that part. Everything I’ve heard from people in the Bay Area is that things are bad and getting worse. To me the obvious culprit is the fact that your cost of living has been highest in the nation for years and years, a problem with no obvious solution. This fills me with some dread, considering I believe my own town of San Diego had recently overtaken you in cost of living, and while I personally profit from that, it bodes ill for my city.
In my own local politics it seems like everybody’s biggest issue is homelessness, and hardly anyone is able to look much past “well at least don’t let them anywhere near *my* home,” which is gonna go downhill fast. El Cajon already has some pretty aggressive laws against feeding the homeless, and a guy I know in Hillcrest (otherwise a pretty left-leaning guy) can’t stop ranting about how the cops need to just drive all the homeless out of Hillcrest to some other part of town.
I don’t know the solution, but I’m fairly confident the cause is not funding cuts to SDPD, and the solution is unlikely to be more cops.
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United States24449 Posts
On December 30 2023 06:54 ChristianS wrote: At the national level, certainly, you regularly get Republicans shouting about Americans being murdered in the streets as the actual statistics are nearly as low as they’ve ever been. I've also seen the reverse situation, back in the middle of the Trump administration as I read various statements from him and his spokespeople about how the U.S. economy was the best it's ever been, and the next article I clicked on was covering the President's proposed budget which included a 0.00% annual pay increase for federal employees because the currently constrained fiscal environment couldn't support it, or something like that. Congress ultimately adjusted the wages to be more reasonable, but it was a pretty laughable contrast.
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On December 30 2023 06:54 ChristianS wrote:Show nested quote +On December 30 2023 06:28 BlackJack wrote:On December 30 2023 05:49 ChristianS wrote: I mean, it’s reflective of a larger innumeracy issue with the “law and order” conservative position. They’re constantly insisting crime is up when it’s not, murder is up when it’s not, shoplifting is up when it’s not, and whether the numbers are up or down the answer is always the same: more prosecutions, more cops, more mandatory minimums.
I’m not following crime stats in SF specifically, but it wouldn’t matter even if I was, because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway (even, say, homicide numbers, which seem much harder to fake). “Crime is out of control” is often a conclusion reached entirely on vibes, and the causal link between brutalizing accused criminals and reducing crime is simply axiomatic, no proof necessary.
My impression is that SF *is* going through a crisis right now (at least, it was last time I checked in which was probably a while ago), but attributing the problems to “soft-on-crime DAs” or insufficient police funding is pretty much entirely unsupported. The argument over what constitutes a “budget cut” is largely a distraction from more important questions like “why is crime up, assuming that’s even accurate?” or “what actually is the right societal response to petty crime?” Can you clarify what you mean by it doesn't matter what the crime stats say because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway? I agree that crime data can be faulty as a lot of crimes go underreported like rape and petty theft, but surely we have enough decent data to establish that crime is going significantly up, particularly in Oakland. As of early July, Oakland’s homicide count was up by 37% compared with 2019 and reported robberies were up by about 30%. Property crime jumped too, particularly car-related crimes: Car break-ins were up by over 40%, while vehicle thefts had more than doubled. sourceHomicides are at 118 on the year, or 119 if you include the Oakland police officer that was shot and killed this morning. Sure maybe there are some people whose opinions on policy will remain unchanged regardless of what the stats show but for others that's not the case. If we can't even agree on whether or not crime is actually up or down then a conversation about what to do about it seems pointless. The bolded is usually the case when this stuff gets discussed. At the national level, certainly, you regularly get Republicans shouting about Americans being murdered in the streets as the actual statistics are nearly as low as they’ve ever been. If you call them on it they either cite one specific location where the numbers are up (you’d expect that to be true somewhere at any given time) or just say the numbers are fake and everybody knows crime is *actually* up. In this case though, specifically regarding the Bay Area I don’t particularly doubt your numbers, so we can skip that part. Everything I’ve heard from people in the Bay Area is that things are bad and getting worse. To me the obvious culprit is the fact that your cost of living has been highest in the nation for years and years, a problem with no obvious solution. This fills me with some dread, considering I believe my own town of San Diego had recently overtaken you in cost of living, and while I personally profit from that, it bodes ill for my city. In my own local politics it seems like everybody’s biggest issue is homelessness, and hardly anyone is able to look much past “well at least don’t let them anywhere near *my* home,” which is gonna go downhill fast. El Cajon already has some pretty aggressive laws against feeding the homeless, and a guy I know in Hillcrest (otherwise a pretty left-leaning guy) can’t stop ranting about how the cops need to just drive all the homeless out of Hillcrest to some other part of town. I don’t know the solution, but I’m fairly confident the cause is not funding cuts to SDPD, and the solution is unlikely to be more cops.
I'm also no stranger to criticizing NIMBYism, zoning laws, and barriers to build that have facilitated a housing shortage in the Bay Area. But the uptick in lawlessness, urban disorder, and crime does seem to be quite a recent phenomenon based on what I'm seeing in statistics and hearing first-hand. SF Bay Area being a high cost of living area is not that recent of a phenomenon. It's obviously a multi-faceted issue with many variables as I've said many times despite the repeated strawman's of "just give the police money and all the problems will go away." I've also said I think the problems are as much cultural as they are policy at this point which makes it all the more difficult to address.
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On December 30 2023 08:22 BlackJack wrote:Show nested quote +On December 30 2023 06:54 ChristianS wrote:On December 30 2023 06:28 BlackJack wrote:On December 30 2023 05:49 ChristianS wrote: I mean, it’s reflective of a larger innumeracy issue with the “law and order” conservative position. They’re constantly insisting crime is up when it’s not, murder is up when it’s not, shoplifting is up when it’s not, and whether the numbers are up or down the answer is always the same: more prosecutions, more cops, more mandatory minimums.
I’m not following crime stats in SF specifically, but it wouldn’t matter even if I was, because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway (even, say, homicide numbers, which seem much harder to fake). “Crime is out of control” is often a conclusion reached entirely on vibes, and the causal link between brutalizing accused criminals and reducing crime is simply axiomatic, no proof necessary.
My impression is that SF *is* going through a crisis right now (at least, it was last time I checked in which was probably a while ago), but attributing the problems to “soft-on-crime DAs” or insufficient police funding is pretty much entirely unsupported. The argument over what constitutes a “budget cut” is largely a distraction from more important questions like “why is crime up, assuming that’s even accurate?” or “what actually is the right societal response to petty crime?” Can you clarify what you mean by it doesn't matter what the crime stats say because any inconvenient stat can be dismissed as fake anyway? I agree that crime data can be faulty as a lot of crimes go underreported like rape and petty theft, but surely we have enough decent data to establish that crime is going significantly up, particularly in Oakland. As of early July, Oakland’s homicide count was up by 37% compared with 2019 and reported robberies were up by about 30%. Property crime jumped too, particularly car-related crimes: Car break-ins were up by over 40%, while vehicle thefts had more than doubled. sourceHomicides are at 118 on the year, or 119 if you include the Oakland police officer that was shot and killed this morning. Sure maybe there are some people whose opinions on policy will remain unchanged regardless of what the stats show but for others that's not the case. If we can't even agree on whether or not crime is actually up or down then a conversation about what to do about it seems pointless. The bolded is usually the case when this stuff gets discussed. At the national level, certainly, you regularly get Republicans shouting about Americans being murdered in the streets as the actual statistics are nearly as low as they’ve ever been. If you call them on it they either cite one specific location where the numbers are up (you’d expect that to be true somewhere at any given time) or just say the numbers are fake and everybody knows crime is *actually* up. In this case though, specifically regarding the Bay Area I don’t particularly doubt your numbers, so we can skip that part. Everything I’ve heard from people in the Bay Area is that things are bad and getting worse. To me the obvious culprit is the fact that your cost of living has been highest in the nation for years and years, a problem with no obvious solution. This fills me with some dread, considering I believe my own town of San Diego had recently overtaken you in cost of living, and while I personally profit from that, it bodes ill for my city. In my own local politics it seems like everybody’s biggest issue is homelessness, and hardly anyone is able to look much past “well at least don’t let them anywhere near *my* home,” which is gonna go downhill fast. El Cajon already has some pretty aggressive laws against feeding the homeless, and a guy I know in Hillcrest (otherwise a pretty left-leaning guy) can’t stop ranting about how the cops need to just drive all the homeless out of Hillcrest to some other part of town. I don’t know the solution, but I’m fairly confident the cause is not funding cuts to SDPD, and the solution is unlikely to be more cops. I'm also no stranger to criticizing NIMBYism, zoning laws, and barriers to build that have facilitated a housing shortage in the Bay Area. But the uptick in lawlessness, urban disorder, and crime does seem to be quite a recent phenomenon based on what I'm seeing in statistics and hearing first-hand. SF Bay Area being a high cost of living area is not that recent of a phenomenon. It's obviously a multi-faceted issue with many variables as I've said many times despite the repeated strawman's of "just give the police money and all the problems will go away." I've also said I think the problems are as much cultural as they are policy at this point which makes it all the more difficult to address. I mean, I agree it’s multifaceted, it’s cultural, etc. But that’s only so useful to say, right? At the end of the day you’re pretty directly saying “they didn’t fund the police enough and liberal DA’s aren’t draconian enough, and that’s why the city’s crime problem is bad.” Implied solution is “they should fund the police and DAs should be more draconian,” alongside an implied prescription for everyone to be nicer to cops.
Is that a strawman? I’m happy to be corrected if that’s not what you think, but it didn’t seem terribly ambiguous to me. Generally speaking you’re pretty inclined to blame problems on fuzzy-headed “woke” people, but even to the extent that’s an accurate causal story, so what? Our culture foreverwar certainly promotes a fair amount of stupidity on both sides, but what exactly can be done to stop it?
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