Canada
Related: About this forumMore poverty means more crime. Alberta proves it.
https://www.ctvnews.ca/mobile/canada/alberta-saw-huge-spike-in-crime-last-year-statistics-canada-1.2994380"SNIP.......
Researchers at Statistics Canada say this jump could stem from an increase in break-and-enters, thefts under $5,000 and motor vehicle thefts across Alberta.
But Edmontons top cop has a different theory. As Albertas energy-dependent economy continues to suffer from falling oil prices, Edmontons police chief drew a direct link between the sputtering oil industry and rising crime.
Our rates are all driven by property crime, and they are significant, Edmonton Police Chief Rod Knecht told CTV Edmonton on Wednesday.
And I talked about it 18 months ago when we said there seems to be a correlation between the drop in the price in oil and the increase in crime in Edmonton.
.......SNIP"
Look out America. More inequality means more crime. Windfall going to only people who work for AT&T or own stocks. GOP wants none of it to go to the poor.
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)people to jail when not warranted. ... big money in more jails and crooked judges.
applegrove
(123,625 posts)more dangerous..look at all the crimes they cause".
appalachiablue
(43,115 posts)Ebenezer:
applegrove
(123,625 posts)slumps. So poverty and crime are much less than they would be if people could not move to healthier economies where they were originally from and have extended families.
appalachiablue
(43,115 posts)use situations like that here, in many areas!
applegrove
(123,625 posts)who were making enough money that they could afford to move.
appalachiablue
(43,115 posts)and the no. 1 middle class as you know. I've been many places, but to Canada only briefly, Ontario from Detroit and Vancouver from Seattle. That was a blunder, but maybe I'll have another go. Cheers!
applegrove
(123,625 posts)some social programs before we did (like income taxes). I think you got lost. But we all do. Time to roll up your sleeves and get to work joining the middle class back together again.
True Dough
(20,915 posts)I wonder if there was a corresponding rise in Alberta crime rates at that time as well?
applegrove
(123,625 posts)less oil sands development and oil sands employment before. That would be interesting to find out.
applegrove
(123,625 posts)before I look up crime rates. Can't find it. What years exactly was there a bust. Do you remember. I don't.
applegrove
(123,625 posts)down everywhere in north america. Freakanomics said it was the advent of and access to abortion twenty or 30 years earlier that played a role.
True Dough
(20,915 posts)Oil sank to $18.17 per barrel during that year. Throughout much of the '90s it wasn't all that much stronger, in the mid-$20s to low-$30s.
Interesting that crime wasn't out of hand at that time.
applegrove
(123,625 posts)to when recession hit alberta. Plus crime was dropping everywhere in north america.
True Dough
(20,915 posts)has some strong views that may not be well-grounded, perhaps not borne out by evidence:
I dont think were going to be ready, Knecht said during a year-end interview at Edmonton Police Service headquarters. Theres a lot of work thats got to be done in the next few months.
Legalization is one of the biggest issues facing police services across the country next year. Police chiefs including Knecht have warned that the timelines are too tight and there are too many outstanding issues, including ambiguity around roadside tests for marijuana intoxication.
The federal government has left details such as where marijuana will be sold to the provinces. It also proposes stiff penalties for people who operate outside of the regulated system, including a proposed 14-year maximum sentence for selling cannabis to youth.
http://edmontonjournal.com/news/crime/marijuana-legalization-doesnt-mean-possession-charges-going-away-edmonton-police-chief
applegrove
(123,625 posts)high you are not doing crimes of aggression or anything that requires energy: like going to another location.
True Dough
(20,915 posts)there are going to be some major adjustments for police forces and, undoubtedly, some initial headaches. But what never seems to be mentioned by law enforcement is that they are no longer going to be wasting time and resources writing up and prosecuting charges for minor possession. There is definitely a trade-off here, but only one side is emphasized by the police.
applegrove
(123,625 posts)kids will be high rather than going to clubs and then rumbling outside with other testosterone filled young males. If they are at the clubs high they will be looking for food once they close. And after eating they will be filled with satiation hormones and feel like sleeping.