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On January 01 2024 08:36 Gorsameth wrote:Show nested quote +On January 01 2024 07:58 BlackJack wrote: The problem is obvious - crime is dramatically up and police manpower is down. Educating the public on which phone # to call when they are the victim of a crime is not a serious solution if you don't talk about why crime is way up in the first place. It's akin to telling starving people how to ration their grain better while ignoring the reasons for the famine. It's analogous to the Republican solution of "lets give every teacher a firearm" while ignoring why we have so many school shootings in the first place. It's a band-aid proposal while ignoring the actual problem. Forgive me if I perceive the discussions on the minutiae of which police department to call or which telephone # to use as deflection from the actual issues, whether conscious or unconscious. Admittedly, an international gaming site is probably not the best forum for a discussion on local crime and politics in the first place so perhaps it's time to move on. I think indeed this is not a great place because crime statistics tends to be a local focus and unless you happen to have someone here from the same area no one is going to have actual knowledge of the situation to meaningfully discuss it, but I will just add this, aren't you kind of doing the same thing your talking about here by just saying "we need more police" as a response to increased crime rather then looking at the deeper causes of said increase beyond "the city may or may not have reduced the budget for a single year"? maybe the increase in crime has more to do with social and economic factors then with police funding.
Not exactly. I think I've said a couple times that my position is not "more police --> less crime." I think we need more police because we have more crime. If we didn't have more crime we wouldn't need more police. Why crime is spiraling out of control is something nobody is offering a theory for except myself and the counter seems to be "I don't know why crime is up but I know your theory on why it's up is wrong" without realizing the paradox of that sentence.
Even though you're not local to my area I'm quite certain that you are well aware that the US has high incarceration rates and high recidivism rates. I have no problem with the logic behind the left's desire for criminal justice reform --> If we can reduce recidivism we can also lower incarceration rates without crime going up. Fine. Except reducing recidivism is a hard task. It's not like turning on a light switch. Then when you elect progressive DAs that say they support non-carceral forms of justice or they just flat out aren't going to prosecute certain quality of life crimes you're putting the cart before the horse. They are unilaterally deciding to keep people out of jail without ensuring the proper mechanisms are in place to help them be productive. You're repeatedly releasing repeat offenders with high recidivism back on the street and refusing to acknowledge that it might increase crime. That's just a failure of basic math.
But even then, I could be satisfied if someone would just say something like "Yes there will be some growing pains with our reform, we want to keep people out of the prisons where they become career criminals and while having them on the street will increase crime in the short term, we will eventually be able to get recidivism rates down and achieve our vision." But instead the higher crime is either ignored or it's insisted that is has nothing to do with revolving doors on jails and eliminating consequences for committing crimes. So I'm left either having to assume these people have been driven insane by their ideology or they are just attempting to gaslight me.
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I think theres way too much explosive language being used. Saying crime is spiraling out of control or using percentages can be really misleading. Saying crime is up 30% just seems like a way to push a narrative, is 30% alot? Whats the base number you are increasing from? How does it compare to cities if similar sizes or per 100k?
On the other hand, GH I am not sure what you are expecting BJ to do about his stolen car. It seems like the police are the correct person to call in this instance regardless how you feel about capitalism. What is he supposed to do? Go vigilante and kill these people or just let them go? How would this situation be handled in a communist society?
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On January 01 2024 10:20 Sadist wrote: I think theres way too much explosive language being used. Saying crime is spiraling out of control or using percentages can be really misleading. Saying crime is up 30% just seems like a way to push a narrative, is 30% alot? Whats the base number you are increasing from? How does it compare to cities if similar sizes or per 100k?
On the other hand, GH I am not sure what you are expecting BJ to do about his stolen car. It seems like the police are the correct person to call in this instance regardless how you feel about capitalism. What is he supposed to do? Go vigilante and kill these people or just let them go? How would this situation be handled in a communist society?
Here's what the Oakland Chapter of the NAACP has to say about the conditions in Oakland
Local elected leaders need to declare a public safety emergency in Oakland because of rampant crime in the city impacting minority communities the hardest, the Oakland branch of the NAACP said in a lengthy statement last week.
"Everyone is in danger" in Oakland, the NAACP argued in its statement released Thursday. "Failed leadership, including the movement to defund the police, our District Attorney's unwillingness to charge and prosecute people who murder and commit life threatening serious crimes, and the proliferation of anti-police rhetoric have created a heyday for Oakland criminals."
If criminals face no consequences for their actions, "crime will continue to soar," according to the NAACP.
I think the fact that the NAACP will release such a damning statement on the first black district attorney of Alameda County speaks for itself. Or they've just been captured by MAGA. 50/50.
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Northern Ireland22452 Posts
On January 01 2024 10:07 BlackJack wrote:Show nested quote +On January 01 2024 08:36 Gorsameth wrote:On January 01 2024 07:58 BlackJack wrote: The problem is obvious - crime is dramatically up and police manpower is down. Educating the public on which phone # to call when they are the victim of a crime is not a serious solution if you don't talk about why crime is way up in the first place. It's akin to telling starving people how to ration their grain better while ignoring the reasons for the famine. It's analogous to the Republican solution of "lets give every teacher a firearm" while ignoring why we have so many school shootings in the first place. It's a band-aid proposal while ignoring the actual problem. Forgive me if I perceive the discussions on the minutiae of which police department to call or which telephone # to use as deflection from the actual issues, whether conscious or unconscious. Admittedly, an international gaming site is probably not the best forum for a discussion on local crime and politics in the first place so perhaps it's time to move on. I think indeed this is not a great place because crime statistics tends to be a local focus and unless you happen to have someone here from the same area no one is going to have actual knowledge of the situation to meaningfully discuss it, but I will just add this, aren't you kind of doing the same thing your talking about here by just saying "we need more police" as a response to increased crime rather then looking at the deeper causes of said increase beyond "the city may or may not have reduced the budget for a single year"? maybe the increase in crime has more to do with social and economic factors then with police funding. Not exactly. I think I've said a couple times that my position is not "more police --> less crime." I think we need more police because we have more crime. If we didn't have more crime we wouldn't need more police. Why crime is spiraling out of control is something nobody is offering a theory for except myself and the counter seems to be "I don't know why crime is up but I know your theory on why it's up is wrong" without realizing the paradox of that sentence. Even though you're not local to my area I'm quite certain that you are well aware that the US has high incarceration rates and high recidivism rates. I have no problem with the logic behind the left's desire for criminal justice reform --> If we can reduce recidivism we can also lower incarceration rates without crime going up. Fine. Except reducing recidivism is a hard task. It's not like turning on a light switch. Then when you elect progressive DAs that say they support non-carceral forms of justice or they just flat out aren't going to prosecute certain quality of life crimes you're putting the cart before the horse. They are unilaterally deciding to keep people out of jail without ensuring the proper mechanisms are in place to help them be productive. You're repeatedly releasing repeat offenders with high recidivism back on the street and refusing to acknowledge that it might increase crime. That's just a failure of basic math. But even then, I could be satisfied if someone would just say something like "Yes there will be some growing pains with our reform, we want to keep people out of the prisons where they become career criminals and while having them on the street will increase crime in the short term, we will eventually be able to get recidivism rates down and achieve our vision." But instead the higher crime is either ignored or it's insisted that is has nothing to do with revolving doors on jails and eliminating consequences for committing crimes. So I'm left either having to assume these people have been driven insane by their ideology or they are just attempting to gaslight me. Why do you insist on this as if everyone who desires such policies isn’t shooting for such things?
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On January 01 2024 10:32 BlackJack wrote:Show nested quote +On January 01 2024 10:20 Sadist wrote: I think theres way too much explosive language being used. Saying crime is spiraling out of control or using percentages can be really misleading. Saying crime is up 30% just seems like a way to push a narrative, is 30% alot? Whats the base number you are increasing from? How does it compare to cities if similar sizes or per 100k?
On the other hand, GH I am not sure what you are expecting BJ to do about his stolen car. It seems like the police are the correct person to call in this instance regardless how you feel about capitalism. What is he supposed to do? Go vigilante and kill these people or just let them go? How would this situation be handled in a communist society?
Here's what the Oakland Chapter of the NAACP has to say about the conditions in Oakland Show nested quote +Local elected leaders need to declare a public safety emergency in Oakland because of rampant crime in the city impacting minority communities the hardest, the Oakland branch of the NAACP said in a lengthy statement last week.
"Everyone is in danger" in Oakland, the NAACP argued in its statement released Thursday. "Failed leadership, including the movement to defund the police, our District Attorney's unwillingness to charge and prosecute people who murder and commit life threatening serious crimes, and the proliferation of anti-police rhetoric have created a heyday for Oakland criminals."
If criminals face no consequences for their actions, "crime will continue to soar," according to the NAACP. I think the fact that the NAACP will release such a damning statement on the first black district attorney of Alameda County speaks for itself. Or they've just been captured by MAGA. 50/50.
Its not about being MAGA, its about rhetoric being out of control in general. On one hand people feel the need to have to bombastic language to get attention, on the other hand its everyone screaming the sky is falling so in the end we just talk past each other.
It needs to be toned down by everyone.
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On January 01 2024 10:20 Sadist wrote: I think theres way too much explosive language being used. Saying crime is spiraling out of control or using percentages can be really misleading. Saying crime is up 30% just seems like a way to push a narrative, is 30% alot? Whats the base number you are increasing from? How does it compare to cities if similar sizes or per 100k?
On the other hand, GH I am not sure what you are expecting BJ to do about his stolen car. It seems like the police are the correct person to call in this instance regardless how you feel about capitalism. What is he supposed to do? Go vigilante and kill these people or just let them go? How would this situation be handled in a communist society?
GH wants him to recognize that police were useless and will always be useless in this situation.
BJ reported his car stolen to some authority. Did they find his car? No. Did they even attempt to search for his car? No. Do police often recover stolen goods? Not really. BJ found his own car and then reclaimed it. He didn't need to go vigilante and even if the police showed up they wouldn't have done anything except make a note in some file. Considering he drove away with it himself it must have been parked on a street somewhere accessible.
If we doubled the police force do you think his car would have been stolen still? Probably as police officers don't watch BJ's car as personal security. They're a reactionary force to crime not a preventative force. Best case scenario is that a police officer would have escorted him to maintain the peace while he recovered it. He still would have found it himself and it is basically impossible to prove who stole it and press charges in this case.
If the car was involved in an accident or got towed because it was parked illegally they may notify him as such that they found it, but they didn't really do anything in that case either.
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On January 01 2024 11:30 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:Show nested quote +On January 01 2024 10:20 Sadist wrote: I think theres way too much explosive language being used. Saying crime is spiraling out of control or using percentages can be really misleading. Saying crime is up 30% just seems like a way to push a narrative, is 30% alot? Whats the base number you are increasing from? How does it compare to cities if similar sizes or per 100k?
On the other hand, GH I am not sure what you are expecting BJ to do about his stolen car. It seems like the police are the correct person to call in this instance regardless how you feel about capitalism. What is he supposed to do? Go vigilante and kill these people or just let them go? How would this situation be handled in a communist society?
GH wants him to recognize that police were useless and will always be useless in this situation. BJ reported his car stolen to some authority. Did they find his car? No. Did they even attempt to search for his car? No. Do police often recover stolen goods? Not really. BJ found his own car and then reclaimed it. He didn't need to go vigilante and even if the police showed up they wouldn't have done anything except make a note in some file. Considering he drove away with it himself it must have been parked on a street somewhere accessible. If we doubled the police force do you think his car would have been stolen still? Probably as police officers don't watch BJ's car as personal security. They're a reactionary force to crime not a preventative force. Best case scenario is that a police officer would have escorted him to maintain the peace while he recovered it. He still would have found it himself and it is basically impossible to prove who stole it and press charges in this case.
Yes I recognize that police won't be able to un-steal my car. A police escort to safely recover my car is of course what I was looking for.
For context here's a google street view from the street my car was on
+ Show Spoiler +
Not exactly the safest of neighborhoods to "steal" back your own car from. I'm not ready to concede that the police would have been useless in this situation just because nothing bad happened when I proceeded without them.
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On January 01 2024 10:20 Sadist wrote: I think theres way too much explosive language being used. Saying crime is spiraling out of control or using percentages can be really misleading. Saying crime is up 30% just seems like a way to push a narrative, is 30% alot? Whats the base number you are increasing from? How does it compare to cities if similar sizes or per 100k?
On the other hand, GH I am not sure what you are expecting BJ to do about his stolen car. It seems like the police are the correct person to call in this instance regardless how you feel about capitalism. What is he supposed to do? Go vigilante and kill these people or just let them go? How would this situation be handled in a communist society?
If the crime has gone up, but less than expected, it really means the crime has gone down.
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On January 01 2024 11:52 BlackJack wrote:Show nested quote +On January 01 2024 11:30 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:On January 01 2024 10:20 Sadist wrote: I think theres way too much explosive language being used. Saying crime is spiraling out of control or using percentages can be really misleading. Saying crime is up 30% just seems like a way to push a narrative, is 30% alot? Whats the base number you are increasing from? How does it compare to cities if similar sizes or per 100k?
On the other hand, GH I am not sure what you are expecting BJ to do about his stolen car. It seems like the police are the correct person to call in this instance regardless how you feel about capitalism. What is he supposed to do? Go vigilante and kill these people or just let them go? How would this situation be handled in a communist society?
GH wants him to recognize that police were useless and will always be useless in this situation. BJ reported his car stolen to some authority. Did they find his car? No. Did they even attempt to search for his car? No. Do police often recover stolen goods? Not really. BJ found his own car and then reclaimed it. He didn't need to go vigilante and even if the police showed up they wouldn't have done anything except make a note in some file. Considering he drove away with it himself it must have been parked on a street somewhere accessible. If we doubled the police force do you think his car would have been stolen still? Probably as police officers don't watch BJ's car as personal security. They're a reactionary force to crime not a preventative force. Best case scenario is that a police officer would have escorted him to maintain the peace while he recovered it. He still would have found it himself and it is basically impossible to prove who stole it and press charges in this case. Yes I recognize that police won't be able to un-steal my car. A police escort to safely recover my car is of course what I was looking for.+ Show Spoiler +For context here's a google street view from the street my car was on + Show Spoiler +Not exactly the safest of neighborhoods to "steal" back your own car from. I'm not ready to concede that the police would have been useless in this situation just because nothing bad happened when I proceeded without them . It's wild to me that you even think this is a thing, but if they did show up, you'd also be operating with a false sense of security.
That's part of why I mentioned the fact that they don't have an obligation to protect you.
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I would expect them to bring it to me.
WTF is your police actually doing?
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Social control and protection of property.
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United States41385 Posts
Killing dogs. Frequently their own.
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On January 04 2024 00:28 Velr wrote: I would expect them to bring it to me.
WTF is your police actually doing? No clue what would happen here, but the police wouldn't bring it to my home, that I'm pretty sure of. They'd either tow it and phone that you can pick it up, or tell you where it is and either take you there or meet you there. Either way, they'd dust it for prints and search for other evidence for whom took it. They'd definitely treat both returning it and catching the perpetrator seriously, though.
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Norway28443 Posts
Yeah i wouldnt expect them to bring it to me, but i would expect them to bring it somewhere i could pick it up, and certainly that theyd prioritize retrieving it if i could point them to the location on a map stating that it had been stolen and that i didnt want to risk confronting whomever stole it. (Id assume theyd want to run some investigation/prints/possibly look for suspects, or otherwise escorting me might be an option.)
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On January 04 2024 00:28 Velr wrote: I would expect them to bring it to me.
WTF is your police actually doing? That's a reasonable question. The answer is underwhelming.
In 2019, 88% of the time L.A. County sheriff’s officers spent on stops was for officer-initiated stops rather than in response to calls. The overwhelming majority of that time – 79% – was spent on traffic violations. By contrast, just 11% of those hours was spent on stops based on reasonable suspicion of a crime.
In Riverside, about 83% of deputies’ time spent on officer-initiated stops went toward traffic violations, and just 7% on stops based on reasonable suspicion.
Moreover, most of the stops are pointless, other than inconveniencing citizens, or worse – “a routine practice of pretextual stops,” researchers wrote. Roughly three out of every four hours that Sacramento sheriff’s officers spent investigating traffic violations were for stops that ended in warnings, or no action, for example.
Researchers calculated that more of the departments’ budgets go toward fruitless traffic stops than responses to service calls -- essentially wasting millions of public dollars
One irony here being that Biden agrees with BJ despite the research.
The prevailing political myth about police work was echoed again in August, when President Joe Biden announced his administration’s “fund the police” measure to support hiring more cops around the country over the next five years.
“When it comes to fighting crime, we know what works: officers on the street who know the neighborhood,” Biden said.
Of course they're both wrong.
Most of the existing research flatly contradicts that account.
In 2016, a group of criminologists conducted a systematic review of 62 earlier studies of police force size and crime between 1971 and 2013. They concluded that 40 years of studies consistently show that “the overall effect size for police force size on crime is negative, small, and not statistically significant.”
“This line of research has exhausted its utility,” the authors wrote. “Changing policing strategy is likely to have a greater impact on crime than adding more police.”
Decades of data similarly shows that police don’t solve much serious and violent crime – the safety issues that most concern everyday people.
Over the past decade, “consistently less than half of all violent crime and less than twenty-five percent of all property crime were cleared,” William Laufer and Robert Hughes wrote in a 2021 law review article. Laufer and Hughes are professors in the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania’s Legal Studies and Business Ethics Department. Important to note "cleared" just means that police might have arrested and charged somebody.
But this isn't a new phenomena:
Police “have never successfully solved crimes with any regularity, as arrest and clearance rates are consistently low throughout history,” and police have never solved even a bare majority of serious crimes, University of Utah college of law professor Shima Baradaran Baughman wrote in another 2021 law review article, including murder, rape, burglary and robbery.
Existing research also affirms the findings in the recent report on police work in California.
Law “enforcement is a relatively small part of what police do every day,” Barry Friedman, a law professor at the New York University School of Law wrote in a 2021 law review article.
Also, still racist
Records provided by the sheriff’s departments in Los Angeles, Sacramento, San Diego and Riverside showed the same longstanding pattern of racial disparities in police stops throughout the country for decades. Black people in San Diego were more than twice as likely than white residents to be stopped by sheriff’s deputies, for example.
More notably, researchers analyzed the data to show how officers spend their time, and the patterns that emerge tell a striking story about how policing actually works. Those results, too, comport with existing research showing that U.S. police spend much of their time conducting racially biased stops and searches of minority drivers, often without reasonable suspicion, rather than “fighting crime.” www.reuters.com
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I am very salty about the general defense of Claudine Gay on the left right now. I know I am beating a dead horse and just repeating myself, but I absolutely can't stand the reflexive defense of ideas/people/etc attacked by republicans.
Once it became clear she was 100% guilty of plagiarism, this should have been like flicking an "off" switch where everyone totally ditched her and agreed she needs to go.
Even if we think she is targeted for bad reasons and even if we hate the people going after her, she is so clearly a totally buffoon and behaving unethically that it feels insane for her to be defended in any way. Even if we assume other people have done the same or whatever, it is important for us to always be rigidly strict and cut-throat when it comes to putting "our own" down. I would say I am extra enthusiastic and extra aggressive when it comes to punishing folks "on my side". I am insanely intolerant of even the slightest bit of defense of clearly shitty people "on my side".
Broadly speaking, no one should feel like they identify with her or that she's on your team or something. Throwing her straight under the bus should feel as easy as taking a bite of a cupcake. "Oh, they are shitty and in a position of power or influence? Straight to the fucking trash can ya go" should be the beginning and end of the internal monologue.
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On January 04 2024 06:59 Mohdoo wrote: Even if we think she is targeted for bad reasons and even if we hate the people going after her, she is so clearly a totally buffoon and behaving unethically that it feels insane for her to be defended in any way. Even if we assume other people have done the same or whatever, it is important for us to always be rigidly strict and cut-throat when it comes to putting "our own" down. I would say I am extra enthusiastic and extra aggressive when it comes to punishing folks "on my side". I am insanely intolerant of even the slightest bit of defense of clearly shitty people "on my side". I can't tell if you're trying to convince us, or yourself. She isn't on your side and this isn't about the impardonable crime of improperly citing some paragraph in a 20 year old article, it's about Israel-Palestine. You've made it abundantly clear how uncomfortable people with the "wrong stance" on it make you.
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If Trump wins it‘s a good time to leave Europe cause he‘s going to pawn it off to the Russians some more.
It‘s probably only my vivid imagination but the US main exports to Europe under him were crime, cocaine and support for right wing extremists.
It‘s lonely at the center these days.
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Man, things have really come a long way around here. I engaged in a lot of silly arguments and pushed a lot of silly ideas in my youth. Glad to see the energy here still lives.
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