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It is just in cities, and specifically in SF/Oakland. Smashing a car window is not really going to be punished in any way in those cities, at most they will take you in and release you within 24 hours. Most likely police will not bother, even if they witness it occurring.

When I was younger and walked around at night me and my friends would get mugged fairly regularly (~6X over 4 years) and the police would maybe show up 24 hours later at a random time. One time I even had a clip from a gun the dudes dropped as they were running away (it was empty) and the police never came and took it. I probably still have it around somewhere.

I moved to the suburbs recently and it is amazing being able to park and walk around without being afraid of break ins or muggings.




It's important to note that violent crime in the United States has been at a low for about 29 years. I don't know how old you are, but for me, "feeling unsafe when you were younger" is a pretty meaningless observation with respect to present reality. Speaking personally, I feel totally safe in San Francisco parks with my children; we've got a lot of peaceful, blissful parks in this city, which in my understanding is substantially safer than it was in the 90s.


How do avoid all the needles? They’re everywhere in the parks and can be very hard to see sometimes.


Not really.

But, I've heard that risk from casual contact with hypodermic needles is rare. See: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2529409/

Risk is obviously much higher if you re-use the needles to inject drugs. Casual contact with the needle is low risk.

That's assuming lots of needles. I see needles sometimes. I use the 311 app when I see needles. But I don't see them in an area where my kids are going to play.


Fewer people are dying of cancer, but we still put effort into making better cancer treatments.


We don't go on screaming about how cancer is so much worse than it used to be either, though, do we?


This is called "coping" with your reality. Doesn't remove the fact that your city is still statistically unsafe.


San Francisco isn't anywhere near the top of US cities by violent crime.

You've been taken in by a lot of false media narratives. Trump said his bit about "American Carnage in our cities" and set about this revival of the tough on crime rhetoric from the 80s and 90s, a time when violent crime was much higher than today.

Your position is not backed by the statistics.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_cities_b...

Sort by total for property crime and it's 4th.


This is a thread about violent crime. SF is not, by any means, one of the most dangerous cities in the US - but it does have a big problem with "bipping" ie. theft from autos.


Who even mentioned Trump? That man lives in peoples minds so blatantly, it's insane. Crime is crime, and when you let property crime grow and go unpunished, it's a guarantee violent crime will also rise.


Trump has a lot to do with the perception today that San Francisco and cities generally are unsafe. He did more than anyone else to further that perception. You would have to be foolish to deny it.

I can 100% assure you it's not crime rates driving this perception. There were pandemic related increases but the trend of the last 30 years runs counter to the narrative.


> the perception today that San Francisco and cities generally are unsafe

Did Bob get killed by perception?


Trump gross but in 2007, 2008 and many other visits prior to him being president my visits to San Francisco were shocking/gross me out when compared to living life in Baltimore County and visiting Baltimore city MD frequently.


I don't think Trump has anything to do with that perception. I don't think I've ever made it through a full minute of listening to that clown talk.

I regularly stay in SF in SOMA, and the thing that gives the impression it is unsafe is all the violent, mentally ill addicts roaming around accosting people. The last time I was there, I couldn't go a single day of walking two blocks from hotel to office without encountering at least one.

You can deny that reality all you like, but it is a reality.


I make eye contact with mentally ill homeless, smile at them, talk to them, and I haven't had any issues.

Maybe you should work on this "you being afraid" problem rather than question my ability to deal with reality.

Fyi, my brother is a mentally ill homeless person in another part of the state.


Do you make eye contact with them while they are shitting on your porch? Do you smile at them while they're shooting up outside your kids school bus stop, and talk to them as they stab you to death?

You're a very tolerant individual.


yes, yes i do -- just like i would make eye contact with a sick individual or disabled individual who has shit themselves, and could use some help cleaning up.

to address your immediate example(s), ignoring your obvious hyperbole which shouldn't need to be addressed in this discussion, as it's not related to the types of human interactions the OP clearly described (which you've lumped into your comment in bad-faith, anyway).

i am not sure why you've filled your head with so much fear, or why you've lumped a certain population into a category of subhuman, inferior, and not deserving of compassion, help, respect, kindness, integrity, and understanding -- if you are finding it difficult to make eye contact with people in general, and regularly, let alone sick individuals, this might distinctly be a personal issue, and perhaps one governed more by trauma, fear and sociopathy than basic decency and human kindness.

i mean christ, imagine leveraging children in order to promote a rather uncaring and indifferent treatment about people, who were once also children. obviously there's a discussion here about appropriate behavior and whether or not someone, say a junkie, is behaving appropriately in a given context, but to somehow suddenly subscribe to this notion that once a person behaves inappropriately, they are no longer deserving of basic decency (eye-contact) is appallingly inhuman to me, and privleged.

since you're leveraging children, am i safe in assuming that i imagine you are okay with children being around alchohol, or even participating in the attending of sporting events (american football for example)?

like, am i safe in assuming you have seen children come into contact or be exposed to effects of alcohol or alcholism, where people behave (in)appropriately -- let's be real, the behavior of a lot of drunk fans at sporting events_in_front_of_children_is laughably appropriate at best

or do you stop the buck short once the lifestyle is a couple of standard deviations away from what you find.. "acceptable"?

perhaps if you started viewing people as well, human beings, perhaps... just perhaps, you'll start asking yourself: "how would i as an individual wish to be treated, if i were sick? would i like to be screamed at, ignored, condescended, looked down upon, shamed, ostracized, ridiculed, ..., or would i like to be treated with at least basic dignity?"

i wonder what would happen if we as a society shifted our attitude as a whole a few standard deviations back to a more compassionate middle ground, instead of constantly enabling, perpetuating, and encouraging fear-based/fear-driven relationships and interpersonal interactions.

also as a total aside, i am really curious: just how much personal time have you spent being around addicts/junkies/or anyone living a deviant lifestyle?


In my experience, the addicts/mentally ill are all bark no bite.

Most of the car theft crime comes from organized groups driving here from Oakland, not the addicts who largely are shoplifting from Walgreens, etc.


Perhaps that's the disconnect. Your odds of being physically assaulted by an addict or mentally ill person in SF might be low, but your odds of being verbally accosted or having your personal space invaded are much higher, which contributes to the feeling of being unsafe. (And is itself a problem.)


A lot of times they come from much further away than Oakland. I've seen Vallejo or Fairfield cited in the news articles about these suspects.

Uber and Lyft drivers in SF often come from similar places. Basically distant cities with less prosperity and fewer job prospects.




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