Originally posted by chellim1: It won't be much of a Shoplifter’s Paradise after all the stores close...
That's when the shoplifter will turn to those local residents who were unable or unwilling to escape, for his/her thefts.
That's when the fun really begins. There will be vigilantism.
May 11, 2023, 02:19 PM
oddball
quote:
Originally posted by corsair: The swarming of the area was after a series of high-profile smash n'grab robberies, the brazenness continued to escalate to the point where SFPD caught a crew in-the-act. They tried to drive-off, police swarmed the vehicle yanking out the suspects, breaking out the windows, this was all during the recall effort of the soft-on-crime DA.
I actually spoke to a couple of cops in Union Sq last summer while smoking a cigar (illegal in U.Sq) and talking about living in TX, and one them said the kids that were apprehended after the Louis Vuitton robbery were all let go the next day, no charges.
"I’m not going to read Time Magazine, I’m not going to read Newsweek, I’m not going to read any of these magazines; I mean, because they have too much to lose by printing the truth"- Bob Dylan, 1965
May 11, 2023, 02:39 PM
Russ59
quote:
Originally posted by oddball: I actually spoke to a couple of cops in Union Sq last summer while smoking a cigar (illegal in U.Sq) .......
So, at Union Square where the city put fencing around to keep the police out....it's legal to shoot heroin, smoke meth and weed, and pop any pill known to man.....but you can't smoke a cigar? San Fran is truly lost.
P229
May 11, 2023, 08:22 PM
corsair
quote:
Originally posted by oddball: ...and one them said the kids that were apprehended after the Louis Vuitton robbery were all let go the next day, no charges.
Chesea Boudin
April 12, 2024, 02:06 PM
chellim1
quote:
Originally posted by chellim1: It won't be much of a Shoplifter’s Paradise after all the stores close...
Apparently unsatisfied that the City isn’t being demolished fast enough, a maniac on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors now seeks to criminalize businesses closing because they are being criminalized.
The lunatic proposal would require grocery store owners to give six months written notice before closing to the Board of Supervisors and to the Office of Economic and Workforce Development. The store would also have to post notices at all entrances and exits to inform the general public. If they don’t comply, the owners would be subject to class action lawsuits.
They aren’t called the Laws of Supply and Demand for nothing. They are called “laws” because they are LAWS, not just theories or good ideas. I don’t know who needs to hear this, but you can’t just pass an ordinance and change the way the laws of economics work.
Forcing businesses to stick it out for six months and do all these notices when things aren’t working out is a great way to convince new businesses not to open stores in San Fransisco. Nice job, morons.
Perhaps the Board of Supervisors deserves partial credit for trying. Or maybe not. Is it possible — just spitballing here — is there any chance they are trying to fix the wrong problem? I mean, do we have any clues as to what else might be making stores close, apart from ‘greed?’ I don’t know whether this means anything, but the following paragraph from the article caught my eye:
Last year, a Whole Foods location in San Francisco closed a little more than one year after it opened. Records indicated that the Market Street location was the scene of 568 emergency calls in a 13-month period due to incidents such as vagrants throwing food, yelling, fighting and attempting to defecate on the floor, according to the New York Times. At least 14 arrests were made at the location.
My goodness. San Fransisco sounds a lot like the inside of the monkey cage on a particularly restless day. But note the numbers: five hundred and sixty-eight emergency calls, but only fourteen arrests. So. Fox was telling us without telling us.
Why is San Fransisco’s Board of Supervisors afraid of punishing small crimes? If Florida can stop a drunk from sitting half-naked in a garbage can, why can’t San Fransisco stop lunatics from fighting in and trying to defecate on its grocery stores? For Pete’s sake.
It might be, as I’ve suggested before, this is coordinated enemy action. It might be a plot to lower property values through non-enforcment of crimes and destroy valuable urban centers, designed to help billionaire oligarchs buy up big cities for pennies on the dollar. It could be that. But after watching this video clip from Atlanta’s most recent Board of Commissioners meeting, I’m teetering back toward the explanation being a national crisis of incompetence.
"Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." -- Justice Janice Rogers Brown
"The United States government is the largest criminal enterprise on earth." -rduckwor
April 12, 2024, 04:12 PM
Russ59
quote:
Originally posted by chellim1:
Yesterday, Fox News ran a widely-reported story headlined, “San Francisco proposal would allow lawsuits over grocery store closures.”
Apparently unsatisfied that the City isn’t being demolished fast enough, a maniac on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors now seeks to criminalize businesses closing because they are being criminalized.
"We should enact more laws to threaten and penalize businesses who are being harmed by vagrants and miscreants who are violating the laws that we are not enforcing!"
Got it.
P229
April 12, 2024, 04:25 PM
divil
Of course the new laws will be enforced on the regular citizens. Sounds like moth to a flame trajectory to anarcho tyranny.
April 12, 2024, 04:31 PM
71 TRUCK
How can they force a business to stay open if their inventory is constantly being stolen? At one point when there is nothing left in the stores to steal will they solve the problem?
The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution.
A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
As ratified by the States and authenticated by Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State
NRA Life Member
April 12, 2024, 04:39 PM
divil
Then the merchant gets in trouble for not restocking.
April 12, 2024, 04:40 PM
.38supersig
Six months?
Thinking they could leave the store open, but have two employees safely in the back.
Only stock three bags of Cheetos for the 'teens' to fight over who gets to steal them?
April 12, 2024, 04:47 PM
gearhounds
^^^ I was thinking along the same lines- except stock random products that are glued to the shelves with JB Weld and covered with Vaseline so they can’t get a good grip on them- record the ensuing hilarity and post on X
“Remember to get vaccinated or a vaccinated person might get sick from a virus they got vaccinated against because you’re not vaccinated.” - author unknown
April 12, 2024, 04:57 PM
trapper189
If I had a business there and was previously contemplating closing up shop, I think that law would be the final nail and I'd get it done before the law was enacted.
April 12, 2024, 05:50 PM
jed7s9b
The left has warped government into an enforcement arm that insures the have nots can do whatever they please to those actually try to be part of society. Prosecute the victim and protect the criminal.
“That’s what.” - She
April 12, 2024, 06:05 PM
corsair
The two supervisors are well known, loud-mouth Lefties on SFBoS; not a surprise these two brain surgeons gin'd up this proposal. Peskin is the ultimate in entitled, affulent Lefty embracing all the ethos of NIMBYism, he's also running for mayor. Preston is a full-blown socialist, one of the most polarizing members, and is one of the leading voices in gov that has allowed the soft-on-crime, open-drug usage environment going on in SF. He's up for re-election and is at-risk of loosing his seat.
A proposed ordinance would empower people to sue supermarkets that close without giving the city six months' advance notice.
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors is considering a remarkable policy that would allow people to sue grocery stores that close too quickly.
Earlier this week, Supervisors Dean Preston and Aaron Peskin introduced an ordinance that, if passed, would require grocery stores to provide six months' written notice to the city before closing down.
Supermarket operators would also have to make "good faith" efforts to ensure the continued availability of groceries at their shuttered location, either through finding a successor store, helping residents form a grocery co-op, or any other plan they might work out by meeting with city and neighborhood residents.
Lest one thinks this is some heavy-handed City Hall intervention, the ordinance makes clear that owners still retain the ultimate power to close their store. It also creates a number of exemptions to the six-month notice requirement. If a store is closing because of a natural disaster or business circumstances that aren't "reasonably foreseeable," it doesn't have to provide the full six months' notice.
Still, should stores close without providing the proper notice, persons affected by the closure would be entitled to sue the closed store for damages.
Preston has been floating this ordinance since January when a Safeway in the city's Fillmore neighborhood announced it was closing before city officials intervened to keep it open a little longer. The policy itself is decades old.
In 1984, the board of supervisors passed an identical policy to what Preston and Peskin are proposing now, but it was vetoed by then-Mayor Dianne Feinstein. At the time, Feinstein described the policy as "an unnecessary intrusion of governmental regulatory authority."
Preston is more comfortable with the intrusion.
"It was a good idea then, and it's an even better idea now," he told the San Francisco Chronicle in January. "We need notice, we need transparency, community input, and a transition plan when major neighborhood grocery stores plan to shut their doors."
Grocery store executives argued back in the 1980s that layering a bunch of process on stores shutting down would make it less likely that they'd open in the first place.
The exemptions in the ordinance would seem to give supermarkets enough wiggle room to stay within the letter of the law, even if they didn't provide six months' advance notice that they were closing down. One wonders how much of a payout someone could expect from suing a store that's closed down.
Whatever the impact of this proposed policy, it does provide a telling insight into just how much micromanagement San Francisco politicians think their city needs.
One would think that grocery store owners would want to stay open as long as they were profitable and wouldn't close their businesses for frivolous reasons. Likewise, one would think that residents whose regular grocery store does close could pretty quickly figure out alternative places to find food. Competing grocery chains could make up their own minds on whether they could make a store work in place of another one that failed.
Preston and Peskin aren't as confident in San Franciscans' capacity for self-organization. Their ordinance is premised on the idea that change of any significance needs to be paired with an elongated public process and enforced with the threat of third-party lawsuits, lest people make their own decisions and do something too rash.
This is effectively how San Francisco already treats anyone's effort to start anything, be it a new business, a new technology, or a new home. That isn't a coincidence.
All that process and red tape on the front end makes it more difficult for businesses to start and more jarring when they close.
Still, if one has to get a million signoffs and permission slips to start doing something, is it really that much more ridiculous that the city would apply the same red tape to something shutting down?
April 12, 2024, 06:13 PM
oddball
Wow, Aaron Peskin is still around, he's been a commie douchebag in SF for decades.
"I’m not going to read Time Magazine, I’m not going to read Newsweek, I’m not going to read any of these magazines; I mean, because they have too much to lose by printing the truth"- Bob Dylan, 1965
April 12, 2024, 08:01 PM
Gustofer
quote:
Originally posted by 71 TRUCK: How can they force a business to stay open if their inventory is constantly being stolen? At one point when there is nothing left in the stores to steal will they solve the problem?
The city and/or state will then step in to give them subsidies. All part of the plan.
________________________________________________________ "Great danger lies in the notion that we can reason with evil." Doug Patton.
April 12, 2024, 08:33 PM
Pipe Smoker
quote:
Originally posted by divil: Then the merchant gets in trouble for not restocking.
Sadly, that’s probably correct.
Don’t argue with fools.
April 12, 2024, 08:47 PM
Greymann
Albuquerque Police after a shoplifter on horseback.
.
May 30, 2024, 01:01 PM
chellim1
Boston On The Brink As Millennial Mayor Pushes Decriminalization
Boston's 39-year-old Mayor, Michelle Wu, wants to follow in the footsteps of San Francisco, Philadelphia, Seattle, Denver, New York, and other liberal strongholds - where property crimes, including grand larceny and motor vehicle theft, have seen a sharp increase in recent years. Boston's progressive Mayor Michelle Wu wants to decriminalize certain offenses
As the Daily Mail reports, Wu wants to make crimes including shoplifting and disorderly conduct off-limits to prosecution. She also wants to include certain categories of breaking and entering, wanton and malicious property destruction, larceny under $250, and trespassing as non-prosecutable crimes. She did toss in drug possession - which is fine as long as crimes like disorderly conduct and disturbing the peace are enforced.
"Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." -- Justice Janice Rogers Brown
"The United States government is the largest criminal enterprise on earth." -rduckwor
May 30, 2024, 01:29 PM
Russ59
quote:
Boston On The Brink As Millennial Mayor Pushes Decriminalization