For every life “saved”–and let’s be clear, almost all of the people “saved” were criminals who were engaging in life-threatening crimes–15 people died who would not have if BLM hadn’t destroyed our policing system. That’s quite an exchange rate. For every life saved by reducing policing 15 extra people were murdered by a non-police criminal. Most of these people were not engaged in activity that was threatening the lives of others. [More]
I’m not sure I’m buying the correlation/causation assumption since police don’t arrive until after the fact.
I’m sure there’s an effect, I just have no idea how you’d reliably quantify it. Or am I overthinking it?
Just tossing out an idea: Perhaps each (criminal) life “saved” is one that, if policing were still going normally, would have been incarcerated commensurate to his/her crimes, and therefore would not have been at risk of selecting the wrong victim or encountering police. But since policing is NOT going normally, they are out and committing greater crimes against peaceable citizens with impunity, knowing they likely won’t get caught, and if they are they will face near-zero consequences.
I don’t know how one would quantify that, either. It’s just a thought how that correlation/causation might work.