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  1. #126
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    There is no justification for the brazen, unusual crimes in this thread, just as there is no justification for the everyday reality of wage theft.

    Only one of them is newsworthy though, and not the one that's the bigger crime.

    There's also a prexisting narrative that crime is an unusually bad problem right now. It's contrived bull .
    Ah. I wondered where you were going with this. Crime is an unusually bad problem in the sense that sensitivity to especially brazen crimes is cranked up high. That is a reaction that happens upon discovery whether or not media/social conflates/inflates these events.

  2. #127
    Got Woke? DMC's Avatar
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    There is no justification for the brazen, unusual crimes in this thread, just as there is no justification for the everyday reality of wage theft.

    Only one of them is newsworthy though, and not the one that's the bigger crime.

    There's also a prexisting narrative that crime is an unusually bad problem right now. It's contrived bull .
    Crime in Chicago?

    Well, there's no justification for that, but there's also no justification for the traffic situation in Houston. Why aren't people concerned about that?

  3. #128
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    Seriously?

  4. #129
    Got Woke? DMC's Avatar
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    Just another red herring. WH likes those.

    "You know, I'm glad you brought up crime in Chicago and we're concerned about that. We're also concerned about traffic jams in Houston, and if elected, I plan on introducing legislation to fund bring our roads and bridges into the 21st century"

  5. #130
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Annual proceeds from police forfeiture exceeds the value of all reported burglaries and thefts in the US.


  6. #131
    Got Woke? DMC's Avatar
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    Are you saying burglaries are not important?

  7. #132
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    You OK, DMC?

  8. #133
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Property crime hitting generational lows in the US rn


  9. #134
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Talk about fear porn

  10. #135
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Talk about fear porn
    teh brown people are gonna get you!! they aren't sending their best!! murders, rapists, thugs! riots! looters! burning down cities!! caravans!!

  11. #136
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  12. #137
    Got Woke? DMC's Avatar
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    Property crime hitting generational lows in the US rn

    Castle doctrine tbh

  13. #138
    Got Woke? DMC's Avatar
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    At least that's what the dealership is telling the insurance company.

  14. #139
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Castle doctrine tbh
    Samse is true for Chicago. Property crime at multi decade lows.

  15. #140
    Believe.
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    'It's just crazy': 12 major cities hit all-time homicide records

    "It's worse than a war zone around here lately," police official said.

    ByBill Hutchinson
    December 8, 2021, 5:08 AM
    • 11 min read








    1:14


    Many US cities surpass annual homicide records
    With less than a month still left in the calendar year, at least 12 U.S. cities have broken th...

    Jeff Faughender/Courier Journal via USA Today Network




    At least 12 major U.S. cities have broken annual homicide records in 2021 -- and there's still three weeks to go in the year.
    Of the dozen cities that have already surpassed the grim milestones for killings, five topped records that were set or tied just last year.
    Advertisement



























    "It's terrible to every morning get up and have to go look at the numbers and then look at the news and see the stories. It's just crazy. It's just crazy and this needs to stop," Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney said after his city surpassed its annual homicide record of 500, which stood since 1990.
    Philadelphia, a city of roughly 1.5 million people, has had more homicides this year (521 as of Dec. 6) than the nation's two largest cities, New York (443 as of Dec. 5) and Los Angeles (352 as of Nov. 27). That's an increase of 13% from 2020, a year that nearly broke the 1990 record.




    ABC News
    12 U.S. CITIES THAT HAVE BROKEN ANNUAL HOMICIDE RECORDS




    Chicago, the nation's third-largest city, leads the nation with 739 homicides as of the end of November, up 3% from 2020, according to Chicago Police Department crime data. Chicago's deadliest year remains 1970 when there were 974 homicides.
    Philadelphia's homicide record was broken in the same week that Columbus, Indianapolis and Louisville eclipsed records for slayings.
    Experts say there are a number of reasons possibly connected to the jump in homicides, including strained law enforcement staffing, a pronounced decline in arrests and continuing hardships from the pandemic, but that there is no clear answer across the board.


    5 cities surpass records set in 2020

    Other major cities that have surpassed yearly homicide records are St. Paul, Minnesota; Portland, Oregon; Tucson, Arizona; Toledo, Ohio; Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Austin, Texas; Rochester, New York; and Albuquerque, New Mexico, which broke its record back in August.




    Jeff Faughender/Courier Journal via USA Today Network
    Police investigators stand at the corner of Dr. W.J. Hodge and W. Chestnut streets in Loui...




    "The community has to get fed up," Capt. Frank Umbrino, of the Rochester Police Department, said at a news conference after the city of just over 200,000 people broke its 30-year-old record on Nov. 11. "We're extremely frustrated. It has to stop. I mean, it's worse than a war zone around here lately."

    Indianapolis, Columbus, Louisville, Toledo and Baton Rouge broke records set in 2020, while St. Paul surpassed a record set in 1992.
    Among the major cities on the brink of setting new homicide records are Milwaukee, which has 178 homicides, 12 short of a record set in 2020; and Minneapolis, which has 91 homicides, six shy of a record set in 1995.
    According to the FBI's annual Uniform Crime Report released in September, the nation saw a 30% increase in murder in 2020, the largest single-year jump since the bureau began recording crime statistics 60 years ago.
    'Nobody's getting arrested'

    Robert Boyce, retired chief of detectives for the New York Police Department and an ABC News contributor, said that while there is no single reason for the jump in slayings, one national crime statistic stands out to him.
    “Nobody’s getting arrested anymore," Boyce said. "People are getting picked up for gun possession and they're just let out over and over again."
    The FBI crime data shows that the number of arrests nationwide plummeted 24% in 2020, from the more than 10 million arrests made in 2019. The number of 2020 arrests -- 7.63 million -- is the lowest in 25 years, according to the data. FBI crime data is not yet available for 2021.
    MORE: Homicide record broken in Louisville with 2 slayings, including a teenager killed on Thanksgiving Day


    Christopher Herrmann, an assistant professor in the Department of Law & Police Science at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City, said the decrease in arrests could be attributed to the large number of police officers who retired or resigned in 2020 and 2021.




    Spencer Platt/Getty Images. FILE
    Police tape blocks a street where a person was recently shot in a drug related event in in...




    A workforce survey released in June by the Police Executive Research Forum found the retirement rate in police departments nationwide jumped 45% over 2020 and 2021. And another 18% of officers resigned, the survey found, a development which coincided with nationwide social justice protests and calls to defund law enforcement agencies following the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers.
    On average, the survey found that law enforcement agencies are currently filling only 93% of the authorized number of positions available and Herrmann said many departments have been hampered in hiring because of an inability to get large classes into police academies due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    "I think, unfortunately, police departments are just losing a lot of their best and experienced officers and then because of the economic crisis, because of COVID, are having difficulties in hiring or just delays in hirings," Herrmann said.
    Herrmann said he suspects that a confluence of other factors has also contributed to the e in lethal violence over the last two years. He said the COVID-19 pandemic not only prompted a shutdown of courts and reduction in jail population to slow the spread of the virus but also derailed after-school programs and violence disruption programs.
    Confluence of factors

    "I wish there was one good solid reason that I could give you for the increases, but the reality is there is none," Herrmann, a former crime analyst supervisor for the New York City Police Department, told ABC News.
    Herrmann said he was surprised to see the number of homicides going up in major cities across the United States after an overall 30% jump last year.




    Nuri Vallbona/Reuters
    Angela Hicks waits for police to finish investigating the scene of a mass shooting on Sixt...




    “I knew 2020 was going to be a bad year because of the (COVID-19) pandemic but I really thought that a lot of these numbers would come down in 2021 just because a lot of society reopened and reopened pretty quickly," Herrmann said. “We don’t have the unemployment problem, we don’t have a lot of the economic stresses, housing and food insecurities aren't as much of an issue. A lot of those things were leading to the mental health stressors that were plaguing the country."
    As part of a recent ABC News series "Rethinking Gun Violence," Dr. Daniel Webster, the director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research, said 2020 was the "perfect storm" of conditions where "everything bad happened at the same time -- you had the COVID outbreak, huge economic disruption, people were scared."
    MORE: America has a gun violence problem. What do we do about it?


    Webster added, "It's particularly challenging to know with certainty which of these things independently is associated with the increased violence. Rather it was the 'cascade' of events all unfolding in a similar time frame."




    Michael Conroy/AP
    A body is taken from the scene where multiple people were shot at a FedEx Ground facili...




    MORE: The type of gun used in most US homicides is not an AR-15


    Chief LeRonne Armstrong of the Oakland, California, Police Department told ABC News recently that the lack of resources to fight crime is one of the reasons he suspects is why his city is seeing the highest number of homicides in decades. Oakland police have investigated at least 127 homicides in 2021, up from 102 in all of 2020. The Bay Area city's all-time high for homicides is 175 set in 1992.
    Armstrong said his department's 676 officers is the smallest staff his agency has had in years, nearly 70 fewer officers than in 2020.
    "To have 70, nearly 70 less officers a year later," Armstrong said, "is definitely going to have an impact on our ability to address public safety."

  16. #141
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    MSM led you by the nose with that copypasta, tbh

  17. #142
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    That "copy pasta" was actually a bit revealing if you take time to read thru it. The drop in arrests and the seemingly subsequent rise in police retirements seem to be a factor.

  18. #143
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  19. #144
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    That "copy pasta" was actually a bit revealing if you take time to read thru it. The drop in arrests and the seemingly subsequent rise in police retirements seem to be a factor.
    I didn't see anything showing that police prevent violent crime, just a sneaky innuendo that crime goes up when they retire or quit. If they're refusing to make arrests because getting criticized for violent abuse and murder hurt their feelings, hiring more cops won't do .

  20. #145
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    Do you think these companies deserve punishment because they supported the idea that black people shouldn't be murdered by the government?

    Yes or no.

  21. #146
    Believe. Adam Lambert's Avatar
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    This dude's wife had a baby less than 24 hours ago but I'm glad he's still finding time to hate the blacks.

    Maybe the baby came out a little darker than expected.

  22. #147
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    WH....I'm just wondering if there's some kind of association there. Unlike you I haven't made up my mind and can consider other potential/possible factors.

  23. #148
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    And no. You obviously didn't read the article.

  24. #149
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    WH....I'm just wondering if there's some kind of association there. Unlike you I haven't made up my mind and can consider other potential/possible factors.
    open ears over here, what factors struck you as worthy of attention?

  25. #150
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    And no. You obviously didn't read the article.
    once through quickly. I found it underwhelming, plus it panders to a preexisting narrative and a manufactured moral panic.

    What impressed you?

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