Wow. This after the shooting last week in Noe over a cell phone. Why are criminals coming to San Francisco? https://twitter.com/Sfstreets415/status/1337806337627975680 …
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Replying to @sf_kerry
The FBI emphasizes that the crime rate is up nationwide.https://www.vox.com/2020/8/3/21334149/murders-crime-shootings-protests-riots-trump-biden …
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Nationwide? "A new report, by the Council on Criminal Justice, found homicides have increased sharply this year across 21 US cities" 21 cities would likely be linked to ....forget it we all know, pointless to beat a dead jackass, it's just who's willing to admit to the truth.
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Replying to @MikeWaxonWaxoff @sf_kerry
I can say what 21 cities crime rates are probably not linked to,
@chesaboudin ,@SFDAOffice or actually anything done at a local level. Yes there is a nationwide uptick in murder, that means no specific local policy is to blame.1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Paul, the "progressive" policies happening in SF are not siloed. There is a strong "correlation" to people's definition of "nationwide" issues. (in before skyscreaming "correlation not causation")pic.twitter.com/5OCgS5YuiK
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Replying to @MikeWaxonWaxoff @sf_kerry and
Ok so to be clear its the liberal policies that san francisco represents that you take objection with? Because those are of mass incarceration on a scale historically without precedent.
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If they are mass-ly incarcerated in jails/priosns....then who is on the streets committing the upticks in crime? And "to be clear" if we release all the incarcerated, crime will go down because the reason people were committing crime was due to over incarceration? Circular logic
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""Spending time in prison leads to increased criminal earnings," Hutcherson says. "On average, a person can make roughly $11,000 more [illegally] from spending time in prison versus a person who does not spend time in prison."https://www.npr.org/2013/02/01/169732840/when-crime-pays-prison-can-teach-some-to-be-better-criminals …
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