Soldato
Joined
3 Sep 2012
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P town
Educated people not to be stupid enough to take drugs and a lot of the violence will disappear.

Then again, still be left with the gun crime!
Exactly better law enforcement, education, opportunities etc and young people won't take this route.

Not sure what drug people are on to say it's not the government, do you really want it to become like American hoods?
 
Caporegime
Joined
30 Jun 2007
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68,784
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Wales
Educated people not to be stupid enough to take drugs and a lot of the violence will disappear.

Then again, still be left with the gun crime!
Educated people are famous for thier drug use though.

I mean drugs are undeniably a very positive feeling, no amount of education about anything is going to make ecstasy not feel good
 
Caporegime
Joined
1 Jun 2006
Posts
33,508
Location
Notts
Is the number actually that high compared to other areas with a population of over 8 million?
yes last two month the murder rate in london has been higher than new york.

drugs are the main reason.someone mentiones thatcher earlier no joke you could go back many years and say yes.goverment has had a effect on why uk is becoming like it is.

for eg notts.where im from it was mainly mining area.many where shut down and wernt that many jobs.also during early 90s drugs started to come in.povity or being poor and drugs go together.younger people no jobs.no chances.drugs = money and escape.so teens get involved.money is made.people making money dont want others making money.so they have to be stopped.so it ends up in violence.remember some of the people doing this are earning very large amounts of money.more than anyone will ever see in a life time.so the violence to match that is going to be bad.notts had lots of shootings.carried on for years.many put away for a long long time but all that happens is if the oppurtunity is there others will just take their place.

move on and we now have the same sorta scenario and bling mentality.for many youngsters.why work at mcdonalds when that same youth can earn 5x as much with drugs ? can buy all of he dreams of.to many that seems stupid.risky.dangerous.wrong ! but to someone who is either in a bad area got nothing or dont want the bottom wrung of the ladder job its a option.a better option for them.

there are loads of factors to consider.drugs are one of the main ones.jobs another.
 
Caporegime
Joined
23 Dec 2011
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32,921
Location
Northern England
yes last two month the murder rate in london has been higher than new york.

drugs are the main reason.someone mentiones thatcher earlier no joke you could go back many years and say yes.goverment has had a effect on why uk is becoming like it is.

for eg notts.where im from it was mainly mining area.many where shut down and wernt that many jobs.also during early 90s drugs started to come in.povity or being poor and drugs go together.younger people no jobs.no chances.drugs = money and escape.so teens get involved.money is made.people making money dont want others making money.so they have to be stopped.so it ends up in violence.remember some of the people doing this are earning very large amounts of money.more than anyone will ever see in a life time.so the violence to match that is going to be bad.notts had lots of shootings.carried on for years.many put away for a long long time but all that happens is if the oppurtunity is there others will just take their place.

move on and we now have the same sorta scenario and bling mentality.for many youngsters.why work at mcdonalds when that same youth can earn 5x as much with drugs ? can buy all of he dreams of.to many that seems stupid.risky.dangerous.wrong ! but to someone who is either in a bad area got nothing or dont want the bottom wrung of the ladder job its a option.a better option for them.

there are loads of factors to consider.drugs are one of the main ones.jobs another.

I think I speak for us all when I say...did you type that on a Samsing Galaxy by any chance?
 
Soldato
Joined
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23,769
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Lincs
yes last two month the murder rate in london has been higher than new york.

That was a typically misleading use of statistics by the papers (no surprise there then) using a very selective 2 month time frame.

If you take the whole of 2017, there were 116 murders in London and 290 in New York. And looking historically it's not that London is getting statistically more violent it's just that New York is getting less.
 
Associate
Joined
10 Feb 2006
Posts
882
Location
Nottingham
Is the number actually that high compared to other areas with a population of over 8 million?

Sky News said:
Using Office for National Statistics figures for homicide - both murder and manslaughter - in each British constabulary area (Sept 2016 - Sept 2017), we can see that London has a rate of 1.45 homicides per 100,000 people.

This is around the same as Leicestershire (1.5), West Yorkshire (1.45) and Derbyshire (1.6).

There are plenty of places with a worse rate and some may surprise you.

The worst is Greater Manchester where 61 deaths led to a rate of around 2.44 homicides per 100,000 people.

There were 12 homicides in Glasgow last year leading to a rate of about two per 100,000 and West Midlands Police recorded 44 homicides, giving the area a rate of about 1.76.

Even North Wales Police, who recorded 13 homicides, has a higher rate than London at about 1.88.

All of this, of course, does not detract from problems the capital faces.

If the current rate of homicides continues at the pace we have seen so far, there could be as many as 180 people killed on the streets this year.

The bigger picture is that about 750 people were killed either by murder or manslaughter in the UK last year.

Of course these aren't statistics from this year, however, if the rate continues London will be about on par with Greater Manchester.
 
Caporegime
Joined
26 Dec 2003
Posts
25,666
Even in my small town there has been quite a large spike in beggars over the past 1-2 years, 3 hooded thugs are going around robbing businesses and an empty shop in the middle of the town centre was raided by police and they found 1.5m worth of Cannabis being cultivated. I've never known anything like it. The whole country is going down the toilet.
 
Caporegime
OP
Joined
29 Jan 2008
Posts
58,912
Harsher sentences can have an effect, but less so for the more serious ones/longer sentences*... and so you have to consider if the impact is worth the cost... especially as our current costly prison system has awful outcomes in terms of recidivism etc. The chances of them being caught is the thing that's worth going for, imo - basically you deter crime through a combination of the severity of the sanction mixed with the chances of actually being caught/facing that sanction. Mandatory fifty year terms would be a rubbish deterrent if the odds of being caught were tiny.

Then is police and criminal justice the way to go, or are the problems indicative of social problems/poverty/etc... where just pumping money into the police would be less effective than programmes to help sort out societal problems? (I don't know, it just seems like an obvious question...)

Yeah mandatory 50 year terms would indeed be rubbish if the chances of being caught were tiny, I think things like longer probationary periods and a big escalations in sentencing for repeat offences/offences within those probationary periods would be good to see. It isn't just the deterrent effect either, for people who clearly aren't rehabilitated then simply keeping them away from society for longer serves a useful purpose in itself - for example the hither green burglar, someone who lives in a community where being a criminal is normal/culturally a common choice and for whom all the male family members make a living that way then there is only so much that can realistically be done and after repeat offences it seems they still end up only serving a bit of their sentence then are back out again and after more elderly victims... whereas someone who is perhaps being caught for a first offence, isn't in a family of criminals is perhaps going to have a much higher chance of being able to move away from crime.

Sure there are social issues too but the cut in police numbers has IMO had a fairly obvious impact on their ability to deal with crime - there is also the psychological impact too perhaps, if criminals are aware that the police are overstretched then does there perception of risk then change? If we're talking about the deterrent effect and the chances of getting caught then presumably for some the chance of being caught perhaps is being perceived as being a bit lower.
 
Caporegime
Joined
26 Dec 2003
Posts
25,666
They just need to get their priorities sorted, the London Mayor is always talking about cuts in police numbers but at the same time he's making speeches about the dangers of 'hate speech', obviously some girl quoting offensive lyrics and a dog doing Nazi salutes is more dangerous and worthy of police/cps time than moped gangs, acid attackers and the increase in gang warfare and 'real world' criminality in general. We're just clogging up an already stretched system with stupid things that in most cases can be solved with a quick word or service suspension/ban rather than a two year investigation/court case and criminal conviction.
 
Caporegime
Joined
12 Mar 2004
Posts
29,913
Location
England
Not sure your comment was clever enough to warrant a Whoosh ;)

No it wasn't clever but I was being facetious when I said the death toll should be celebrated. ;) Obviously we don't want people killing each other in the streets but at the same time it's not the governments fault that people behave in a certain way, what is being described in the article is not a case of innocent people being stabbed but people going at each other. It's true that the governments policy on drugs does result in violent crime, but on a case by case basis you can't directly blame the government.
 
Soldato
Joined
3 Jun 2005
Posts
7,586
It's black culture. Along with the violence, the drugs and poverty are also a product of black culture. Being a decent human being and trying hard at school makes you a lame coconut, but being a violent thug gets you respek.
 
Man of Honour
Joined
29 Nov 2008
Posts
12,853
Location
London
It's black culture. Along with the violence, the drugs and poverty are also a product of black culture. Being a decent human being and trying hard at school makes you a lame coconut, but being a violent thug gets you respek.

None of those things are black culture, thats gang culture which a disproportionate number of black people in the UK seem to be involved in.
 
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