California crime craziness

And when you aren't there, you trust anonymous sources for your "observable facts". Interesting.
When they fit what we can see with our own eyes, the logical consequences of removing the criminals, and other reports and statistics.
 
"But an anonymous source..." When did you decide you like those?
.

It’s just another huge lie. He and the bogus sources he cites are trying to imply that crime rose sharply due to significant increases in immigration, both legal and illegal.

The problem, for them at least, is that crime rates have been declining steadily and at times pretty sharply for almost 40 years, so their claim falls apart.

Just more mendaciousness from the official forum gas bag.
 

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Code:
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All? No Americans ever commit murders in LA? Never had you figured for an OJ Simpson fan.
 
San Francisco Hides TEEN Crime
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jcuhcIqrIw
{Actual Justice Warrior | 03 September 2025}

In this video, I discuss how the city of San Francisco has decided to let TEEN criminals attack innocent people rather than engage the public to hopefully arrest TEENS prior to them reoffending.

Sources:
 
San Francisco Hides TEEN Crime
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jcuhcIqrIw
{Actual Justice Warrior | 03 September 2025}

In this video, I discuss how the city of San Francisco has decided to let TEEN criminals attack innocent people rather than engage the public to hopefully arrest TEENS prior to them reoffending.

Sources:

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Due to a variety of circumstances, I stayed at a homeless shelter for a bit as an adult. I learned a lot while I was there. The kinds of laws that terrify suburbanites are null-and-void among the homeless, not because homeless are necessarily law-breakers, but because the enforcement doesn't matter to them. "Oh, OK, I owe a $250 fine to the county of Timbuktu. Yeah, I'll get right on that, it'll be paid sometime before... NEVER." Most of the laws on the books function on the implicit threat of taking away your toys (home, car, etc.) If you have toys that can be taken away, those laws are potentially terrifying. A minor infraction can escalate to a home-invasion, frozen bank accounts, years of legal distress and a small fortune in legal fees. But what are you really trying to save? The house, the car, the mortgage, the credit score, etc. etc.

Our legal system is a giant mirage. It is sold to us as this very serious, regal sort of thing, with very high ideals represented by some lady with a blindfold on, etc. In reality, it's just another PSYOP. If rent can be extracted from you by the law-industrial complex, or the police-industrial complex, or the prison-industrial complex, etc. etc. they will lobby the legislature to put such laws on the books. Those laws cause you to pay fines and fees on the implicit threat of what could happen to your other things -- your car, your home, etc. Psychologically, the repo-man is the ultimate boogey-man hiding under the bed of the average suburbanite. I'm not making light of the threat... these are all very real threats. But the range of human existence in which they apply is actually incredibly narrow.

This is one of the key "mental unlocks" that is required before you can understand how a vast, sprawling criminal network can (and does) go on existing undetected, in complete silence, with no "leaks" or "whistleblowers" nor even a central "headquarters" or "head-honcho". The never-ending swirl of homeless/etc. is a human grist mill. Countless go into it every year and are never seen again. I'm not saying that to amp up the fear of homelessness... in many ways, the entire idea is made-up and fake. Rather, I'm pointing out that the homeless / transient / migrant / etc. population is a permanent "interstitial tissue" of the nation and that many sub-communities that seem to be completely unrelated are actually communicating through this medium.

Most human trafficking is far too boring to make a movie out of, it's literally just people getting dragged off into prostitution or modern slavery without any means of escape. Any homeless person could walk up to a cop at the homeless shelter and tell him, "I'm being trafficked, I was kidnapped 3 years ago by a cartel and they drop by here every other week and take me to go do free labor on a nearby tree farm" and the cop will literally just laugh, but it could be 100% true. There are no amount of details or facts that would arouse any interest from the cop unless the homeless person were a young-ish woman (and not overly fat/ugly). Other than that, he isn't going to listen to a word of it because that's the nature of the thing. If you want to see where all the slaves and prostitutes and other human flesh are, that are being constantly trafficked through our system, just visit your local homeless shelter around check-in time and watch daily for a week. Do it several times a season. There are waves, the same faces are constantly moving in and out of town on cycles. Of course, not all of these people are being trafficked, I have no idea what the percentage is. The point is that you're looking directly at the "front face" of an entire abyss of unimaginable evil. It's all right there, looking all of us in the face, and we walk right by it, just irritated by the shit on the sidewalk. Real evil is boring. That's how it hides...
 
The kinds of laws that terrify suburbanites are null-and-void among the homeless, not because homeless are necessarily law-breakers, but because the enforcement doesn't matter to them. "Oh, OK, I owe a $250 fine to the county of Timbuktu. Yeah, I'll get right on that, it'll be paid sometime before... NEVER." Most of the laws on the books function on the implicit threat of taking away your toys (home, car, etc.) If you have toys that can be taken away, those laws are potentially terrifying. A minor infraction can escalate to a home-invasion, frozen bank accounts, years of legal distress and a small fortune in legal fees. But what are you really trying to save? The house, the car, the mortgage, the credit score, etc. etc.

 
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