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Metropolitan DC Local Politics
Reply to "Crime was DOWN everywhere in DC in 2022… except Ward 3 where it increased"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Typical of many discussions of crime. Perception is not reality. Cue someone posting that DC police don't ever take police reports seriously so statistics are meaningless.[/quote] Well, the reality is that people in Ward 3 who perceive that crime is getting worse are in fact correct, because they are experience higher violent crime. While people in the rest of the city are experience lower violent crime, which is what spurs comments like yours. It might be worthwhile to consider that there can actually be a factual basis that drives peoples perceptions.[/quote] On the other hand, there are also other people in Ward 3, like me, who are not experiencing higher violent crime (I have not been a victim of violent crime in 20+ years living in D.C., whether I lived in Ward 2, Ward 1, Ward 4, or Ward 3). So... sure, if it's all just down to perception based on personal experience, you're going to have a wide range of beliefs. But a .6 percent increase in violent crime is not likely to be noticeable to anyone except the relatively small number of people who were victims of the crimes, especially in a context where overall violent crime citywide is down. What's DEFINITELY up is discussion of crime and rhetoric around crime increasing, even if the stats don't really back that up.[/quote] That’s awesome. Congratulations on not being a crime victim. However, your attitude of “If it doesn’t affect me, then it’s not a problem” is quite selfish and disrespectful to crime victims. In all honestly, it sounds pretty Republican. Everyone looking out for themself. [/quote] No, my point was that you can't make policy based on perception -- some people perceive crime to be worse, some people don't. [/quote] That’s a fascinating viewpoint when you are saying that your perception is that the increase in crime is NBD because you weren’t a victim and that people who were victims or concerned about the increase in crime in their neighborhood have a false perception? Except actual data to the contrary? [/quote] No, I replied to one person who said that yes, Ward 3 crime is up so therefore people's perception of crime being up is accurate, by pointing out that there are a lot of people whose perception of crime did not go up. Perception is totally subjective and hard to measure; actual crime is easy to measure. If crime is up in Ward 3, that's a policy problem that can be addressed. If people's perception of crime is up — even more than crime is up — that's a political problem. But regardless, the policy solution should deal with what the stats are, not what people think about crime.[/quote] Measured violent crime went up and you said that the amount it went up was insignificant. So… not sure what your point is aside from believing that you don’t perceive to be at risk because you have not been a crime victim. That’s a very selfish and Republican attitude. [/quote] Measured violent crime in Ward 3 went up, by a very small amount. That's a fact that policymakers can work with. (MPD's crime mapping tool for some reason is showing me it went down in 2022 -- there were 79 violent crimes in Ward 3 in 2021 and 75 in 2022 -- but let's assume that's wrong.) What policymakers cannot do much useful with is people's feelings about crime. We all approach this issue with different perspectives based on our own experiences. Some people might say, "I feel as if crime is worse here, and it did go up, therefore, my feelings are correct," and my point was that I or people like me might say, "Oh, but I don't perceive crime to be worse." If we start making policy concerned primarily with people's opinions about crime rather than with the crime stats, whose opinions or feelings do we prioritize? For whatever it's worth, I understand you're trying to win the argument by calling me a Republican, but I don't really think saying that urban crime is less of a problem than people think it is is a standard GOP talking point.[/quote] I get it now. An intolerable level of violent crime for you will be when you are a victim but not before. Thanks for the clarification. I’m sure that all of the violent crime victims are relieved to know that what happen to them was only a “little bit” more crime that their government could not have protected them from in any case. Meanwhile, they must be stare at Western Avenue and wonder why it’s so magical at reducing violent crime when their own “policy makers” cannot seem to figure it out. Applying utilitarian arguments to violent crime is pretty disturbing. [/quote] It isn't a utilitarian argument, and who says I'd change my views on crime if I were a victim? (I support a lot of policies that don't benefit me personally.) And anyway, [b]violent crime in Montgomery County was up in 2022[/b], so I don't see what your point about Western Avenue is supposed to be. I'm not saying crime doesn't matter. I'm saying what matters is the crime rate, not what people think about it. That cuts both ways: If crime spikes, then my personal experience not being a victim of it would also be unimportant. But an increase of .6 percent in one ward as crime falls citywide probably isn't going to prompt the type of response you seem to be hoping for. (Or, actually, it probably will, because our ward has plenty of clout to get what people here want.)[/quote] First of all, people in Montgomery County are pretty upset about violent crime being up. They are not doing what you are doing, which for them would be saying something like “well it only looks like it is up a lot because it from such a low base, but benchmarking against DC and the country…” So you see how odd and contradictory it is for you to use Montgomery County as some kind of cudgel to promote your nihilistic viewpoint. Second, you are now all over the place and have nothing coherent to say. As another PP pointed out, to borrow an approach that you may be familiar with, why are you so willing to decide that an important goal should be zero “traffic violence” but you equivocate, hem-and-haw and justify violent crime. Or alternatively, I would love to hear what you have to say to the DC cycling community about why their perceptions of risk are not consistent with risk and that policy makers cannot eliminate traffic deaths so they just need to get over it and anyway, you’ve been cycling in the city for years and have never been hit.[/quote] You, or someone who agrees with you, brought up Western Avenue as if there was no crime on the other side of it. I'm not using it as a cudgel, I'm pointing out that there is also violent crime outside of D.C. And I'm not justifying violent crime at all! I'm saying that what matters is not whether I think there's not a lot of violent crime, or whether you think there is a lot of it, but rather how much of it there is. We obviously shouldn't make policy decisions as if no one had ever been a victim of violent crime and never will. But we also shouldn't make them as if everyone is in grave danger all the time. No one person's individual experience with crime should become the lens through which the whole city makes decisions about how to respond to it. I don't think your analogy to traffic planning works, though -- bike lanes, etc., are designed to make it so everyone can use the roads safely, not just cars. But the idea is that cars and bikes and pedestrians and buses can all operate more or less freely and in harmony. No one, by contrast, wants criminals to be able to operate freely, and they can't operate in harmony with their victims. Here, too, my personal experience is irrelevant: [b]I've been hit by cars[/b] both in my car and [b]on my bike[/b] (not yet as a pedestrian, and so far, I've never hit anyone while driving), but I don't think that gives me any special insight into how to write the rules of the road.[/quote] And there it is :lol: [/quote]
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