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cemerick | 2 years ago
Saying stuff like "a lot of [violent] crime goes unreported" is straight up fanciful thinking, and leads one to make claims that aren't falsifiable. People aren't reporting assaults? Sounds completely absurd.
cemerick | 2 years ago
Saying stuff like "a lot of [violent] crime goes unreported" is straight up fanciful thinking, and leads one to make claims that aren't falsifiable. People aren't reporting assaults? Sounds completely absurd.
pclmulqdq|2 years ago
scarmig|2 years ago
One reason this explanation falls flat is that reported and recorded property crimes have risen more. If the city were exceptionally underreporting crimes compared to the past or other cities, you'd see those disappear from the statistics more than e.g. homicides; it's much easier to ignore a stolen phone than it is a dead body.
joncrocks|2 years ago
There might be a good reason people would report some crimes over others for reasons over and above simply for the sake of reporting them/having them solved.
mixmastamyk|2 years ago
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35531439
In that comment I didn’t even get to the new stories about a brick being thrown, creeps following her, or last night’s gun falling out of the pants of a meth head at the bus stop. I would feel unsafe as well, not like I’m immune to bullets.
Minimizing this stuff just because it was mentioned in the wrong thread is ignoring real problems. Two things can be true at once.
cscurmudgeon|2 years ago
https://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/San-Francisco-crime-Che...
> Rapes, robberies and assaults are still well below pre-pandemic levels, and because violent crime is generally less likely to go unreported than property crimes, it would not be inaccurate to say that general levels of violent crime are lower now than they were a few years ago.
bigtex88|2 years ago
Seriously what sort of weird ideological rant are you on in this thread? You have some really bizarre thinking regarding this issue.