Quote:
Originally Posted by subterranean
There is, however, a direct correlation between police response time and incidence of burglary/theft/robbery. People are emboldened and are literally walking into Target, Fred Meyer and other department stores, loading up carts, and walking out. Also burglary, vehicle theft, catalytic converters...which I'm sure adds to homicides when caught in the act. Not exactly comparable to thug on thug violence, but a contributing factor.
|
That's an important point. Here in this forum we're mostly urbanites, somewhat liberal folk and it's a bit easy to overlook crime, to see it only as suburbia anti-urban fantasy.
However, there's another thing in common: we are all males here, and women have a very different perspective on this. We feel safe to walk late in the night, not worrying about minor crimes. For a woman, it's a bit more complex.
The overall feeling of unsafe, that even tolerance for petty crimes creates, ruin the urban experience for them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by badrunner
There's the obvious answer, previously discussed, which you are all too eager to sweep under the rug...
|
Again, São Paulo didn't reduce crimes by "killing all the bad guys". I didn't google it, but I bet police killed even more people back in the late 1990's when crime rates were gone through the roof.
It's quite surprising that you actually believe police killing criminals/allegedly criminals help to reduce crime. I don't.