Wouldn't it be great if they actually resourced community services to handle these "violent or insane people" to get them on-the-ground, before-the-crime resources so that they wouldn't commit crimes? Like actually give them what they need rather than just arresting them, which does no one any good? Kind of like, oh, I don't know, reallocating those police dollars to community services that will actually at least attempt to solve the problem and not just put a band-aid on it? |
What are these "community services" that would be as effective at preventing crime as law enforcement? |
Yes, empathy for them so hard that there is nothing left, but us! https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2023/09/26/business/target-retail-theft-store-closures/index.html |
|
Sorry, insurance doesn't cover theft from criminal gangs. Theft shows as a loss on the P&L statement. Ultimately the stores close if they are not profitable due to neighborhood theft. The community loses out. |
+1 Target is closing some of their stores due to high theft. The people who suffer are the workers and the honest people who shop there. |
How has law enforcement in Philadelphia done so far in preventing these crimes? Law enforcement actually sucks at crime prevention. They're not so great in post-crime work, either, but they really head into the crapper when you're talking about crime prevention. |
How do you expect law enforcement to “prevent crimes” from happening? Shouldn’t people just not loot and maaaaaybe sort of be accountable for their own behavior and not commit the crimes? Or is that too much to ask for? It’s always someone else’s fault and not the criminal with progressives. |
How long do you think insurance will keep them? How much will it affect insurance payments? Where will insurance get money after so many large pa? |
I believe you are referring to public services that are designed to give kids growing up in poverty a better chance at equal opportunity from birth such as universal pre-K, and universal pre-pre-K and so on. Public support for disadvantaged kids is much more effective when those kids are reached out to ages younger than 5. That's a no-brainer. I can't think of a more logical and effective way of using public resources to help in giving all kids an equal opportunity at success in life and a better chance of being steered away from a life of crime than the availability of publicly funded pre-school for children starting at the earliest age possible. There's just one problem- young children can't vote and therefore don't have votes to buy. Our politicians are more interested in things like tax breaks to large corporations and handouts to those that were lucky enough to go to college because those types of actions can be politically beneficial either as return back scratch for a prior election or a vote buy ahead of the next election. Otherwise, reaching out to help young children in an attempt to steer them away from crime and towards success is exactly what we should be doing. This being said; reallocating funds from policing services is definitely not a step to be taken at this time and shouldn't be part of the conversation anytime soon. We as a nation have the money and resources to do more to lift children out of poverty and by lifting those kids up, the American taxpayer will effectively be on the hook for less welfare/social safety net spending in the future. All of this is theoretically possible with the help of future government leaders of higher quality. |
They need iPhones, sneakers and designer purses. Which social services department is in charge of those? |
Why can't both be done? I'm all for community resources from a birth to help kids growing up among poverty escape that poverty and lead a better life. Those types of resources must absolutely be provided. But I'm not naive enough to think everyone will use those resources to better their lives/to escape a certain lifestyle. I realize that there will be people who even though they have access to those resources will still choose a life of crime. There is only so much society can do for those people if their parents are failing them this much. To those people - help us help you. Society tried but you still chose a life of crime so you will get the consequences. |
I mean we can all pack up and go home now. The answer is so clear, if we dump an unknown sum of money into amorphous services for under resourced communities, for an endless periods of time, in 50 years the crime crisis might slow. But in the interim it’s unfair to arrest and prosecute violent criminals because they live in under resourced communities. |
A right winger supporting a right winger pp. You guys are adorable. |