Opinion Sorry, Mr. President: Adding cops will not reduce crime - Delusional tripe such as replacing cops with social workers, etc.

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Politicians love them some law-and-order policies. They seem to believe tough-on-crime rhetoric magically attracts that elusive center-independent voter. And sure enough, as the midterms approach, Joe Biden is promising to dump tons of cash on cops.

But the more-cops-yields-more-votes default is flawed.

But such spending doesn’t really reduce crime or increase safety. There are other ways to spend that can help people more.

Safer and happier people are more likely to keep the incumbent.

Spending on cops

Biden’s Safer America Plan proposes $35 billion in spending on law enforcement. That includes $13 billion over the next five years to hire 100,000 new cops. It also increases penalties for fentanyl use.

These proposals double down on long-failed policies.

Bill Clinton promised to put 100,000 cops on the street in 1994.

It was a debacle.

Clinton never actually managed to get 100,000 cops in place. Instead, federal money ended up increasing staffing levels by between 69,000 to 84,600 officers, falling short of the goal by 15 to 31 percent.

Even this overstates the actual number of police hired.

Some of the increase would have happened anyway. New officers were simply paid for with federal dollars, instead of state ones.

In addition, there was little effort to put cops in areas of high crime. The biggest urban centers actually got only two-thirds as much money per crime as rural areas and suburbs with low crime rates.

Anyway, more cops doesn’t mean less crime.

As the Post’s Philip Bump explained, there’s virtually no correlation between spending on police and crime rates since the 1960s.

Bump notes that in 2006, the US spent $386 per person on police, and violent crime rates were 474 per 100,000 people. In 2010 spending bumped up to $412 per person and crime rates dropped to 405 violent crimes per 100,000. In 2012, spending fell back to $389 per person and crime rates … fell again to 399 per 100,000.

Biden has also proposed tougher penalties for fentanyl trafficking, harking back to the war on drugs. Criminalizing drugs was a failure. It drove mass incarceration. It didn’t reduce overdoses or addiction.

More than a hundred health and racial justice organizations signed a letter in October 2021 begging the president to respond to fentanyl overdoses as a public health problem with public health solutions rather than with more cops. He appears to have ignored their pleas.

Spending on human services

Spending in other areas, however, can reduce crime.

A 2017 study found that each $10,000 increase in spending per person in poverty was correlated with .87 fewer homicides per 100,000. Areas that spent more on the poor had fewer murders.

Another study in 2018 found that an increase in drug treatment facilities reduced violent crime and financially-motivated crime.

Researchers estimated that an additional treatment facility reduced social cost of crime by about $4.2 million a year. Since the facilities cost about $1.1 million, opening one saves about $3 million a year.

There are of course numerous other problems that you could address rather than spending money on useless cops.

We are still in the middle of a serious, massive pandemic.

We could invest in vaccines, tests and treatment if we want to make people safer and healthier. We could re-pass the expanded child tax credit, which is proven to lift millions of children out of poverty.

These are policies that we know would help people directly.

When people’s lives improve, there’s evidence that they tend to vote for incumbents — as you’d expect. So why not do the things you know will help people, rather than things you know won’t matter?

Politics of spending

The problem is that politicians tend to hyperfocus on political messaging. Republicans have made law-and-order a central campaign issue, both this cycle and for the last 40 years.

Democrats are terrified of being painted as soft on crime. They think they can inoculate themselves by spending money on cops.

But the people paying close attention to political messaging tend to be political junkies who are already strong partisans.

And Republicans in particular, insulated in the right-wing media bubble, barely care about facts on the ground.

They cheerfully vote against funding police while attacking Democrats for defunding the police. Democrats call them hypocrites.

Republicans don’t care.

If you want to get people who are less partisan and less tuned in to politics to vote for you, you should help them.

Political messaging is mostly useful for inspiring and riling up your own supporters, who are listening to partisan leaders closely.

In this case, a lot of the Democrat’s base is actively alienated by pro-police and law-and-order rhetoric – with good reason.

They fear putting more cops on the street will exacerbate the problems of racist police violence and mass incarceration.

Biden isn’t entirely ignoring this base.

His Safer America Plan also includes $5 billion for community violence intervention programs and $15 billion for cities and states that use non-police responses to some emergencies.

It also boosts spending on mental health and substance abuse treatment, social workers and affordable housing.

Finally getting it

It’s heartening to see the Democratic Party moving toward solutions for crime that actually have some record of being effective.

But it’s disturbing that they continue to double down not just on failed policies, but on failed messaging.

Instead of helplessly trying to prove that Democrats can be more Republican than Republicans to Republican voters who don’t care, it’s past time to focus on winning people over by actually helping them.

And if you don’t win them over?

Well, you’ve still helped lift them out of poverty or you’ve helped keep them disease-free or you’ve helped reduce crime.

When you help people, at worst you’ve helped them.

Isn’t helping people the reason politicians get into politics?
 
Look, as long as the social workers don't intervene in school shootings, but are cheaper than cops, they're a fine option because all you do is save money.
 
The whole post-BLM world has shown that every "non-cop" "solution" to crime pushed by the far left is an abject failure. (Are there ways to reduce crime without cops? Sure--solid families, stop promoting criminal activity, etc.)

Biden and his cronies absolutely took these idiots for a ride, yet they're dumb to realize they've been had.
 
Putting aside that the Federal government shouldn't be funding state or local cops for separation of power reasons...

Sure, more cops doesn't necessarily reduce crime, especially if you tell them they can't actually do their jobs, which is the current problem.
 
The whole post-BLM world has shown that every "non-cop" "solution" to crime pushed by the far left is an abject failure. (Are there ways to reduce crime without cops? Sure--solid families, stop promoting criminal activity, etc.)

Biden and his cronies absolutely took these idiots for a ride, yet they're dumb to realize they've been had.
It’s funny to see it play out too. Most of their DAs have lost ground or their positions. Hahahahahaha
 
Bump notes that in 2006, the US spent $386 per person on police, and violent crime rates were 474 per 100,000 people. In 2010 spending bumped up to $412 per person and crime rates dropped to 405 violent crimes per 100,000. In 2012, spending fell back to $389 per person and crime rates … fell again to 399 per 100,000.
Oh look the author is ignoring the fact that certain crimes that were previously charged are no longer charged or even reported by victims!

If the increased police presence in 1994 on did not result in positive outcomes explain NYC from 1995-2012
 
Watch the social workers quitting their jobs asap suffering from PTSD....
All you have to do is say "I Disagree" and these SJWs get PTSD. I'd imagine they'd kill themselves if they had to replace cops and see the more awful shit they come across.
 
we dont need more cops, just need to have less revolving door "soros" DA who basically turn most arrests into catch and release for career criminal.
 
It does no good for a cop to make an arrest if there's a group taking up a collection to bail the criminal right back out of jail the minute they get arraigned. Judges facilitate this bullshit by setting bail insanely low.

I just wonder who is benefitting from this system. Who profits by having violent criminals not only out on the streets, but unafraid of any consequences, no matter what they do?
 
Sorry, (((Berlatsky))), but there will never be a world in which some fat dyke social worker with dangerhair will effectively talk down some psycho on PCP who has a knife to a child's neck.
 
If you're going to expect social workers to do the job of cops, you're going to have to pay them like cops, train them like cops, and arm them like cops. Plus compensate them for any student loans they have.

Let's look at job opportunities for the Sacramento area:

Human Services Social Worker and Human Services Social Worker with Special Skills Classes

$64,623.60 - $78,550.56

POLICE OFFICER

$77,219 - $130,644

 
If you're going to expect social workers to do the job of cops, you're going to have to pay them like cops, train them like cops, and arm them like cops. Plus compensate them for any student loans they have.

Let's look at job opportunities for the Sacramento area:

Human Services Social Worker and Human Services Social Worker with Special Skills Classes

$64,623.60 - $78,550.56

POLICE OFFICER

$77,219 - $130,644

Watch for the "$" sign appearing suddenly in the eyes of social workers. :story:
 
A 2017 study found that each $10,000 increase in spending per person in poverty was correlated with .87 fewer homicides per 100,000. Areas that spent more on the poor had fewer murders.

Wow, .87 fewer homicides. Amazing! That's like, almost 1! Is this really the best they can do?

I could cite three studies, along with the Obama administration itself, indicating that more police presence reduces homicides and crime.

In 2002, economist Steven D. Levitt published a paper in which he summarized four recent studies of the impact of police presence on crime, including two of his own:

Estimating the causal impact of police and crime is a difficult task. As such, no one study to date provides definitive proof of the magnitude of that effect. Nonetheless, it is encouraging that four different approaches … have all obtained point estimates in the range of 0.30–0.70. The similarity in the results of these four studies is even more remarkable given the large previous literature that uniformly failed to find any evidence that police reduce crime — a result at odds with both the beliefs and the behavior of policymakers on the issue.
When Levitt says the studies all obtained point estimates in the range of 0.30–0.70, he is talking about what economists call “elasticity”; i.e., the extent to which one economic variable changes in response to a change in another variable. An elasticity in that range means a 10% increase in the size of a police force should result in a 3% to 7% reduction in crime.

That estimate of the extent to which crime declines as police presence increases has held up remarkably well. Using changes in police presence related to terror alert levels in Washington, D.C., in 2006, Jonathan Klick and Alex Tabarrok published new findings about the effect of police presence on crime in the Journal of Law and Economics. They found that “an increase in police presence of about 50 percent leads to a statistically and economically significant decrease in the level of crime on the order of 15 percent, or an elasticity of 0.30.” They also found that, “Most of the decrease in crime comes from decreases in the street crimes of auto theft and theft from automobiles, where we estimate an elasticity of police on crime of 0.86.”

In per capita terms the effects are approximately twice as large for Black victims. In short, larger police forces save lives and the lives saved are disproportionately Black lives.
In 2015 Klick, along with John M. MacDonald and Ben Grunwald, published the results of another study that reached very similar conclusions using a different methodology. They compared neighborhoods that benefitted from regular patrols by the University of Pennsylvania Police Department with similar neighborhoods that did not receive this additional level of police presence and found that “UPPD activity is associated with a 60% … reduction in crime.” According to their calculations, that reduction represented an elasticity of 0.33 for aggregate crime and an elasticity of 0.70 for violent crime.

Summarizing a variety of studies, including the Klick and Tabarrok study described above, a 2016 Obama administration report stated:

Economic research has consistently shown that police reduce crime in communities, and most estimates show that investments in police reduce crime more effectively than either increasing incarceration or sentence severity. … This research shows that police reduce crime on average, and estimates of the impact of a 10 percent increase in police hiring lead to a crime decrease of approximately 3 to 10 percent, depending on the study and type of crime [and] that larger police forces do not reduce crime through simply arresting more people and increasing incapacitation, instead, investments in police are likely to make communities safer through deterring crime.

In 2020, Aaron Chalfin, Benjamin Hansen, Emily K. Weisburst, and Morgan C. Williams, Jr., reported the results of another study of the relationship between police presence and crime. Unlike previous studies, this one disaggregated its results by race:

We find that expanding police personnel leads to reductions in serious crime. With respect to homicide, we find that every 10-17 officers hired abate one new homicide per year. In per capita terms the effects are approximately twice as large for Black victims. In short, larger police forces save lives and the lives saved are disproportionately Black lives.
The implication of all this research is clear. If we want to save Black lives and ensure that the current spike in violent crime does not spiral out of control, we need to deploy more police officers in high-crime, high-disorder neighborhoods. Future installments in this series will discuss how that can be accomplished.
 
I wonder how many social workers will have to get shot, stabbed or raped by some tweaker or hobo before these morons understand that most criminals aren't really interested in "talking things out" but rather are inherently violent people who do not or cannot work within the society we have.

I'd guess it'd really depend on the skin color. A few cracker deaths here and there wouldn't bother them much but if a darkie got stabbed they'd be hollering for sweet jesus in minutes.

Yah...stupid ideal all around.
 
There's a guy on angel dust walking around nude and punching through a fence. Pretty sure a social worker can handle that.
 
Putting aside that the Federal government shouldn't be funding state or local cops for separation of power reasons...

Sure, more cops doesn't necessarily reduce crime, especially if you tell them they can't actually do their jobs, which is the current problem.
I think the police are actually within the same branch of government as the white house - executive.
 
If our government and criminal justice system weren't complete jokes, things would be different.
THIS.

If the criminals didn't have more rights than the law-abiding, things would be different.

If people weren't being made criminals for bullshit things due to some idiotic law, things would be different.

If REAL criminals had to serve all their sentences instead of being let go almost on a whim, things would be different.

If death sentences, including all appeals, were carried out within one year of the sentence being imposed, things would be different.

If the government, at every fucking level, put what was right for the people as a whole first, things would be different.
 
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