helmuth_hubener
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2007
- Messages
- 9,484
security still is provided by police. Otherwise how do you explain the Ferguson effect? Cops are more afraid to go into troubled neighborhoods and now crime is going up.
It has more, nay all, to do with the temperament and culture of the people. The world really contains virtually no security nor safeguards against crime. Civilization is a wide-open candy store. Oh yes, we make token shows of defense against certain crimes, mostly against theft by putting locks on things. But how defended are any of us against murder? Murder is a much more serious crime. Your car may have a security system protecting it somewhat from theft. But what devices do you have on you as a murder-prevention? If someone were to come up behind your back and shoot you, what would happen? I'll tell you: you will die*. That's it! You had implemented no security measures against that possibility whatsoever.
So how come there's more theft than murder? Ponder that.
If even 5% of the population decided "forget the rules, all rules, I'm a gangsta and gangstas gonna spree" that would be the end of civilization. Nothing would be able to operate as it does today any longer.
So crime-ridden places, like Ferguson, it's a result of the temperament, upraising (lack thereof), genetics, and intelligence (lack thereof) of the people, and then temperamental network effects.
Events, such as a withdrawal of police, can activate a network effect and exacerbate the problem. If consequences for armed robbery suddenly plummet to negligible levels due to a decision to withdraw from the area and stop enforcing laws against armed robbery, then that behavior will increase in short order, due to the bad character of the people. In another location, however, the withdrawal of the police might actually have a salutary effect, due to the good character of the people. For in addition to increasing consequences for real crime -- that is, for enforcing real laws, which, we will all admit, police do do -- police also often have a symbiotic relationship with the criminal element, most especially due to the drug war. In this, their ubiquitous presence and enforcement actions actually perversely increase the dangerousness and criminality of a neighborhood.
Anyway, it's a complicated situation. There are instances where police departments have been on strike or otherwise indisposed, and when it's happened in places with somewhat better quality people the crime rate has not always gone up. Civilization's lack of crime is not, in the end, dependent upon enforcement of laws, whether by monopolists or market participants. It is a fragile thing entirely dependent upon the temperament of the people. The quality of the people. Which, allow me to ominously note: is plummeting.
* Assuming adequate caliber and organ-targeting.