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San Francisco

Posted on 6/22/21 at 8:42 am
Posted by djmed
Member since Aug 2020
2587 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 8:42 am
The 'little things' are turning San Francisco bad in a big way
Bernard Goldberg, opinion contributor 28 mins ago
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I was based in San Francisco as a correspondent with CBS News in the late 1970s. I remember that, back then, more than a few of us referred to the city as "Halloween-by-the-sea" - a good-natured nod to the city's quirkiness.


Over the years, the progressives who ran the city government would weigh in on one foreign policy matter or another, which prompted one wise guy to write that it was the only city in America with both Rice-A-Roni ("the San Francisco treat," as the TV ad jingle put it) and a foreign policy.


Just between us, I was the wise guy who wrote that.

The quirkiness added to the beauty of the place, the most beautiful city in America as far as I was concerned. But that was a long time ago. Now, San Francisco is a very dark, sad place.

It's not only the homeless people whose tents line the streets and sidewalks. It's not only that they use the sidewalks as their bathrooms - or that they're at times violent. And it's not only that the city had twice as many fatal drug overdoses as deaths attributed to the coronavirus. It's also what we used to consider "small stuff" - relatively minor infractions, such as shoplifting.

Today, San Francisco apparently is the shoplifting capital of America. According to the New York Times: "At a board of supervisors hearing [last month], representatives from Walgreens said that thefts at its stores in San Francisco were four times the chain's national average, and that it had closed 17 stores, largely because the scale of thefts had made business untenable."

Today's shoplifters don't simply steal a candy bar when no one is looking. I saw a video recently that showed a man who rode his bicycle into a San Francisco Walgreens drug store, loaded up one of those large black trash bags with everything he could get his hands on, and then hopped on his bike and rode out of the store - right past a private security guard.

According to the Times, "Brendan Dugan, the director of the retail crime division at CVS Health, called San Francisco 'one of the epicenters of organized retail crime' and said employees were instructed not to pursue suspected thieves because encounters had become too dangerous."

"We've had incidents where our security officers are assaulted on a pretty regular basis in San Francisco," Dugan said.

In case you're wondering how this could happen - in broad daylight, no less, and on what has become a regular basis - here's one great big factor: In 2014, Californians passed Proposition 47 that reclassified nonviolent theft as misdemeanors as long as the stolen goods are worth less than - wait for it! - $950.

If you pretty much decriminalize shoplifting, don't be shocked when you get more shoplifting. Thieves may have no morals but they do have a modicum of intelligence, what we like to call "street smarts." They understand that the cops almost certainly won't respond to a call about shoplifting and that if, on some outside chance, the police did show up, they'd still be in the clear. They know that they'll never spend a day behind bars for loading up a garbage bag and casually riding their bicycle out of the store.

But if Proposition 47 applies to the entire state of California, why haven't other cities in the state seen the same spike in shoplifting? What is it about San Francisco that turned it into such a mecca for shoplifters?

One reason is that San Francisco long has had a bohemian, "anything goes" mentality - but, until recently, no one thought that meant thieves could walk into a store, take what they want, and casually walk out.

Enter the city's new district attorney, who took over in January 2020 and decided not to prosecute so-called "quality-of-life crimes" as part of his plan, as one local news report put it, "to help the city's more disenfranchised populations."

"We will not prosecute cases involving quality-of-life crimes," the DA, Chesa Boudin, said in an interview while he was campaigning for office. "Crimes such as public camping, offering or soliciting sex, public urination, blocking a sidewalk, etc., should not and will not be prosecuted." Despite that - or maybe because of it - he was elected.

Here's a handy rule of thumb: If a top city official doesn't think "quality-of-life" crimes are worth pursuing, then the people of San Francisco should expect their quality of life to hit the skids. And it has.

We rightly worry about all the big things - the kind of rioting and arson we witnessed last summer that a lot of journalists called "mostly peaceful demonstrations." We worry about viruses that may kill us. We fret over our ever-expanding national debt. We worry about the prospects of war.

But the "little things" matter too. Societies can't thrive, they can't go on indefinitely, when people can urinate (and worse) on the sidewalks, or block streets, or pretend that ransacking store shelves and walking out without paying is no big deal - because it is a very big deal. Once the little things become tolerated, it's not long before bigger, bad things start to happen routinely as well.

It takes time for societies to fall apart, to crumble. Laws matter; order matters. Believing that you live in a safe place where miscreants don't run free ... that matters, too.

If you want to know what America would be like if progressives ever took over the country, just go to San Francisco and look around. But be careful. Halloween-by-the-sea has become a very scary place.

LINK
Posted by Knight of Old
New Hampshire
Member since Jul 2007
10964 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 8:42 am to
San Franshitshow…
Posted by SECSolomonGrundy
Slaughter Swamp
Member since Jun 2012
15843 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 8:44 am to
quote:

San Francisco




Posted by Fessface
Member since Sep 2019
257 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 8:59 am to
Not just a top city official but the DA, straight from the horse's mouth! Law dog said all hell breaks loose and he ain't comin'. HIs mom killed people, yeah?
Posted by swolverine
Member since Jun 2020
1966 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 8:59 am to
quote:

Crimes such as public camping, offering or soliciting sex, public urination, blocking a sidewalk, etc., should not and will not be prosecuted.


Why does he call them crimes if they are not being prosecuted?
Posted by mightyMick
Member since Aug 2018
3067 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 9:10 am to
Posted by jimmy the leg
Member since Aug 2007
34009 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 9:12 am to
quote:

Why does he call them crimes if they are not being prosecuted?


Purveyors of unplanned donations...from the public.
Posted by kennypowers
AR
Member since Mar 2009
505 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 9:17 am to
I was out there in Oct of 2019 for a week. The theft problem was just insane. I was in line getting coffee at a starsucks and watched a dude roll in, grab two arms worth of random shite from the cooler,(sandwiches and random foods) and just walk out. I looked at the people behind the counter and they just shrugged it off. They said they can't call the police because they wouldn't do anything about it. I also purchased a pair of shoes from a store in the mall there.(bloomingdales maybe? can't remember) Anyway, the lady helping me with the shoes made a HUGE deal about me setting my backpack down in the seat next to me while I was trying on shoes. She said EVERYTHING that isn't nailed down could/would be snatched from you when you're not looking. The funny thing is, I don't think she was putting 2 and 2 together on how they got to this point. Years of voting for progressively far left leadership was dragging that whole city in to the shitter.
Posted by 14&Counting
Eugene, OR
Member since Jul 2012
37592 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 9:19 am to
I will be there in about three weeks and staying downtown....its been a minute since I have been out there so interested to see.

I was in Santa Moncia not along ago and took a stroll down to Venice and its unbelieveable.
Posted by mightyMick
Member since Aug 2018
3067 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 9:33 am to
So non-prosecuted theft doesn't just apply to retail stores, but to any business or any person. A thief could steal your $800 watch and the police wouldn't do anything and the DA wouldn't prosecute anyway, right? Well, there is another solution to this.
Posted by HubbaBubba
F_uck Joe Biden, TX
Member since Oct 2010
45707 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 9:42 am to
quote:

Well, there is another solution to this.
Posted by BurntOrangeMan
Dallas TX
Member since May 2021
5628 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 9:57 am to
4 years ago in Denver had my car broken into wallet in particular stolen. Visited the retail stores where the thieves purchased goods ($1200ish total) & was able to get video captures at the register & the license plate (local resident) of the offender.

Detective came to my house to verify if I recognized them which I did not. He told me they had the address of the offender based on registration of the vehicle, but would not pursue the case. In short they were too busy with bigger cases.

Two takes here, initially it’s supply/demand priority based law enforcement. Hate to hear it but I understand. Secondly it’s insane that “Defund the police” movement was/is in play.
Posted by bad93ex
Member since Sep 2018
27005 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 9:59 am to
Let it burn
Posted by TheHarahanian
Actually not Harahan as of 6/2023
Member since May 2017
19495 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 10:02 am to

I bet Bernard Goldberg has been writing propaganda for the left his entire career, and just now sees an end result of the policies that he’s favored.
Posted by NPComb
Member since Jan 2019
27261 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 10:04 am to
A free $950 gift card for every store you visit and you get to shite on the sidewalk on your way out. Wins for everyone.
Posted by SouthEndzoneTiger
Louisiana
Member since Mar 2008
10595 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 10:09 am to
quote:

I bet Bernard Goldberg has been writing propaganda for the left his entire career, and just now sees an end result of the policies that he’s favored.


You may be giving him too much credit. Yes, he wrote a "retraction" in his final column. But he didn't JUST NOW realize all this. This dude was knowingly writing lies for a loooooong time to a loyal fan base so he would keep receiving a paycheck. He's no better than the rest of them, IMO.
Posted by ctiger69
Member since May 2005
30589 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 10:34 am to
California is a shite hole. Everyone with a brain should flee.
Posted by Great Plains Drifter
Member since Jul 2019
4343 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 10:43 am to
It’s crazy we are in the year 2021 and these are actual things going on in some of our cities that are written about/discussed.

I’ve mentioned before and will say again - There is not a more ironic misnomer to me than the term “Progressive”.
Posted by alphaandomega
Tuscaloosa
Member since Aug 2012
13489 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 10:59 am to
quote:

Once the little things become tolerated, it's not long before bigger, bad things start to happen routinely as well.



Even if worse things (crimes) were not committed, the fact that many retailers are pulling out of the city is concerning. In the areas where the shoplifting is the worst, the stores are closing. Then the shoplifters have to go further around town to "steal" their necessities. So those stores close too.

You will end up with no retailers in the city, no way for honest people to buy groceries and other necessities.

Then you city will resemble Mogadishu.

That is the expected Democrat Utopia that they want for all of America.
Posted by alphaandomega
Tuscaloosa
Member since Aug 2012
13489 posts
Posted on 6/22/21 at 11:03 am to
quote:

I bet Bernard Goldberg has been writing propaganda for the left his entire career, and just now sees an end result of the policies that he’s favored.




When I first read this my brain thought you were talking about Bernhard Goetz.

That would have had a different outcome.
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