Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It means that in the past 4 decades, the cost of policing in the US has tripled and is now $115 billion.
To put that in perspective, in 2012 HUD best instead that it would cost $20 billion to END HOMELESSNESS in the US.
Our priorities are all jacked up.
If we used the money that we spend on homelessness programs directly on apartments, we could house people, but that isn't why people sleep on the street (plus, you forget about the industry that survives on that money)
Sure it is. The fact that people don't want to sleep in a filthy shelter doesn't mean that they wouldn't want their own apartment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It means that in the past 4 decades, the cost of policing in the US has tripled and is now $115 billion.
To put that in perspective, in 2012 HUD best instead that it would cost $20 billion to END HOMELESSNESS in the US.
Our priorities are all jacked up.
If we used the money that we spend on homelessness programs directly on apartments, we could house people, but that isn't why people sleep on the street (plus, you forget about the industry that survives on that money)
Anonymous wrote:It means that in the past 4 decades, the cost of policing in the US has tripled and is now $115 billion.
To put that in perspective, in 2012 HUD best instead that it would cost $20 billion to END HOMELESSNESS in the US.
Our priorities are all jacked up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:311 is a dispatch system. It still send armed officers, where it be auto accident, busted window or broken red light. That is a dramatic difference from the concept.
Do you really need a police officer with a gun and arrest powers to file a report on you car being broken into? Or to a crash, as opposed to an unarmed civil servant with the ability to summon the police if necessary? Do tell the village drunk to stop loitering? To tell a neighbor that the music is too loud? Yet these are the things police occupy themselves with on a daily basis. You save armed cops for things requiring that. For everything else you disarm and resolve.
That sounds very reasonable.
Indeed. Sounds very reasonable when you have no clue what you're talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:311 is a dispatch system. It still send armed officers, where it be auto accident, busted window or broken red light. That is a dramatic difference from the concept.
Do you really need a police officer with a gun and arrest powers to file a report on you car being broken into? Or to a crash, as opposed to an unarmed civil servant with the ability to summon the police if necessary? Do tell the village drunk to stop loitering? To tell a neighbor that the music is too loud? Yet these are the things police occupy themselves with on a daily basis. You save armed cops for things requiring that. For everything else you disarm and resolve.
That sounds very reasonable.
Indeed. Sounds very reasonable when you have no clue what you're talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:311 is a dispatch system. It still send armed officers, where it be auto accident, busted window or broken red light. That is a dramatic difference from the concept.
Do you really need a police officer with a gun and arrest powers to file a report on you car being broken into? Or to a crash, as opposed to an unarmed civil servant with the ability to summon the police if necessary? Do tell the village drunk to stop loitering? To tell a neighbor that the music is too loud? Yet these are the things police occupy themselves with on a daily basis. You save armed cops for things requiring that. For everything else you disarm and resolve.
That sounds very reasonable.
Indeed. Sounds very reasonable when you have no clue what you're talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:311 is a dispatch system. It still send armed officers, where it be auto accident, busted window or broken red light. That is a dramatic difference from the concept.
Do you really need a police officer with a gun and arrest powers to file a report on you car being broken into? Or to a crash, as opposed to an unarmed civil servant with the ability to summon the police if necessary? Do tell the village drunk to stop loitering? To tell a neighbor that the music is too loud? Yet these are the things police occupy themselves with on a daily basis. You save armed cops for things requiring that. For everything else you disarm and resolve.
That sounds very reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:311 is a dispatch system. It still send armed officers, where it be auto accident, busted window or broken red light. That is a dramatic difference from the concept.
Do you really need a police officer with a gun and arrest powers to file a report on you car being broken into? Or to a crash, as opposed to an unarmed civil servant with the ability to summon the police if necessary? Do tell the village drunk to stop loitering? To tell a neighbor that the music is too loud? Yet these are the things police occupy themselves with on a daily basis. You save armed cops for things requiring that. For everything else you disarm and resolve.
Anonymous wrote:311 is a dispatch system. It still send armed officers, where it be auto accident, busted window or broken red light. That is a dramatic difference from the concept.
Do you really need a police officer with a gun and arrest powers to file a report on you car being broken into? Or to a crash, as opposed to an unarmed civil servant with the ability to summon the police if necessary? Do tell the village drunk to stop loitering? To tell a neighbor that the music is too loud? Yet these are the things police occupy themselves with on a daily basis. You save armed cops for things requiring that. For everything else you disarm and resolve.
Anonymous wrote:^^ also, I should add, where I live (VA), the first time you’re charged with DV, you’re given a deferred finding (not a conviction) and placed on probation. VA Code 18.2-57.3
Anonymous wrote:^^ also, I should add, where I live (VA), the first time you’re charged with DV, you’re given a deferred finding (not a conviction) and placed on probation. VA Code 18.2-57.3
