by Workingman » 16 Mar 2021, 19:57
Cops on the streets... perhaps. Ours tend to be in vans of five to seven and mostly at the Co-op or the the petrol station with the Gregg's and Subway at break times.
Today's numbers for murders are very similar to those of the early 1970s.
They started to rise to a peak in 2002,when the deaths attributed to the monster, Harold Shipman (179). were included, but since then there has been a steady decline back to 1973 levels.
The population since then has grown from 55mn to 68mn so the percentage has dropped - we have fewer murders per capita now than for a long time. Find that in the placards of the protesters.
The figures for rape, sexual assault and sexual abuse are harder to define. Since 1956 there have been many Acts to try to define what is what. Things that were once accepted as a part of life are now 'crimes against the person' or 'hate crimes'. That does not mean that women are less safe, it means that their legitimate concerns are logged and recorded, as they should be.
Another thing is modern day 24hr reporting. In the 60s or 70s if a murder was committed in, say, Norwich, it would get into the local press and maybe into the wider Norwich area. People in Carlisle or Bath would never hear of it. If it did go national it might be a few lines in the inner pages of the dailies unless it was something horrific like the Moors Murders or the Yorkshire Ripper. Today every murder is national and that does tend to drive the fear.
For women the streets are now as safe or as unsafe as they have ever been. Just as they are for men.
Since 2010 some 2000 women have been murdered. I challenge anyone to name ten of them. I also challenge anyone to name even three of the 4500 murdered men.
In general terms the UK is not an unsafe place for either men, women or children. It has its risks, all places do, but we really do have to get over this idea that a bogey man is round every corner and that we will be mugged, raped, beaten up or murdered if we step out the door.