@glyph@mastodon.social
@dangoodin@infosec.exchange @EverydayMoggie@sfba.social
3. You're making an implicit policy argument (and linking to a journalist platforming a conservative making that policy argument explicitly), claiming that the current (overly lenient) policy results in more crime. Except, if the current policy is being evaluated, we should look at the current data, the article itself points out a 27% drop in YoY property crimes. Sounds like enlightenment is winning!
@glyph@mastodon.social
@dangoodin@infosec.exchange @EverydayMoggie@sfba.social
4. This entire article is framed around a single individual, and your argument is framed around a single retail location which maybe gets robbed all the time or maybe just doesn't restock frequently enough. Are these problems real? Of course. That's why I preemptively conceded that point in my reply. But Willie Horton was also a real, individual guy. So was Marinus van der Lubbe. Singular, extreme examples do not make good, broad-brush policy arguments.