Daniel Greenfield December 04, 2021@ Sultan Knish Blog
After
Proposition 47 effectively legalized stealing anything under $950 in
California, shoplifting, porch piracy, and all sorts of thefts took off.
San Francisco became the epicenter of what the Wall Street Journal
described as a “shoplifter’s paradise” with pharmacy chains and
numberless small businesses disappearing from the city at a pace
unmatched in the country.
But then the social justice looters went too far.
"Last
night what we saw was horrible," Mayor London Breed declared. What she
saw was gangs of thugs systematically looting Louis Vuitton,
Bloomingdale's, and Burberry to protest the Rittenhouse verdict.
"This is unacceptable," Chief Scott declared.
San Francisco DA Chesa Boudin, who had yet to find a criminal he wouldn't release, claimed to be outraged by the looting.
"We
are exploring every single possible criminal charge related to the
conduct. We will use every tool in our tool belt," he blustered.
Those
are harsh words from a progressive prosecutor who has been blamed for
singlehandedly enabling the robbery craze in the city.
"We're
gonna be making some changes to Union Square and how cars are able to
access. There will be limited access in terms of when you come to this
area," Mayor Breed vowed.
Why was looting luxury retail stores
“horrible” and “unacceptable” while looting local pharmacies wasn’t? The
cops showed up at Union Square guns drawn, smashing car windows, and
taking down the thieves even while shoplifters routinely haul garbage
bags of stolen goods out of CVS.
Without a police officer in sight.
Louis
Vuitton handbags go for upwards of $1,000 to over $15,000. That’s well
above the $950 limit. Rob a corner bodega of its stock and you get a
slap on the wrist, but steal a pricey purse and laws actually get
enforced. That’s the two tier system of social justice in San Francisco
that protects Breed’s handbags while leaving small businesses exposed
with no protection.
The legalization of looting means that San
Francisco’s progressive elites will have their luxury boutiques
protected even as seniors can’t get medications because the pharmacies
are closing.
It’s not just San Francisco. In Chicago, Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx raised the bar for felony retail theft to $1,000. The city's big bout of Black Lives Matter looting led to 392 arrests and only 7 prison sentences.
An elderly Korean store owner had stood in the doorway, pleading, "Please, don't loot this store. I don't want to look -- my heart is broken."
There were no arrests and no consequences.
But
when Magnificent Mile was looted, Mayor Lori Lightfoot warned, "Let's
be clear. We are coming for you. We are already at work finding you."
With
progressive prosecutors like Foxx, such threats were rather hollow, but
they came in sharp contrast to the daily toll of ordinary burglaries
which occasioned no such political grandstanding.
Pro-crime
supporters and criminal justice reformers claim that they’re putting
people ahead of property, but as the response to the looting of Louis
Vuitton shows, the French Laundry Democrat elite put their own property
ahead of the property of ordinary taxpayers.
It’s not that
they’re incapable of being tough on crime or at least talking tough. Nor
do they suffer from principles that leave them unable to be outraged at
retail theft. They just differentiate between Korean grocery stores
being robbed, and “horrible” and “unacceptable” robberies at luxury
boutiques that turn even a pro-crime prosecutor like Chesa Boudin into
Dirty Harry.
Stealing isn’t a problem. As long as you’re stealing from someone else.
“We will do what we need to do to put an end to this madness,” Police Chief Bill Scott warned.
The
madness here was allowing California lefties to legalize shoplifting
and then create a two-tier justice system in which crimes against
ordinary people go unpunished.
The amount of a theft should
factor into investigating and prosecuting a crime, but California’s
criminal justice reform legalized stealing from poor people and
criminalized stealing from the rich. That has been the overall effect of
all criminal justice reform, from police defunding, which strips public
safety from poor neighborhoods while its wealthy backers retreat behind
gated communities, high walls, and private security, to setting loose
criminals to return to their old minority neighborhoods where they shoot
each other, and any women and children in between.
Minorities
and the poor, the very people whom lefties claim to want to help, are
more likely to be victims of crime and suffer disproportionately from
the decriminalization of crime.
Under the pretext of creating a
fair justice system, the radicals have turned the formerly democratic
public safety systems of major cities into a medieval class system in
which only the wealthy reformers who legalize crime deserve to be
protected against those same criminals.
The noblesse oblige that
impels political elites to set criminals loose doesn’t extend so far as
tolerating the rabble when they look beyond the Korean markets to their
own establishments.
In the name of progress, the Left has turned back the clock to the dark ages.
While
Big Tech bosses, like Facebook’s executives, call for criminal justice
reform, they’re protected by 1,000 security officers in the Bay Area
alone. The San Francisco Police Department has less than 2,000 police
officers. Facebook’s force is half the size of the SFPD.
And the social media monopoly even funded its own private police station.
Facebook's private army,
whose Chief Security Officer is a former CIA agent, which uses one of
Biden's former Secret Service agents to protect CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and
which maintains a watchlist tracking anyone who criticises him, is why
elites can promote police defunding.
It’s not their police that are being defunded, it’s yours.
And
in the event that their security solutions don’t work, they know that
the politicians, the police, and even the most cringingly pro-crime
prosecutors will rush to their defense.
America’s public safety
system used to be based around equality under the law. And that meant,
among other things, that the same cops would answer your 911 call as
anyone else’s. The destruction of the law also brought down equality and
left a deeply unequal system.
While San Francisco elites have
their private armies, Kenosha small businesses had Kyle Rittenhouse.
When people can no longer rely on the systems of public safety and
criminal justice to protect them, they buy guns and they turn to anyone
who will protect them.
What does criminal justice reform look
like? It’s the police rushing to stop luxury handbag thieves after doing
nothing while the same thugs terrorized working class neighborhoods.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine.
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