Insurance covers loss.
Insurance costs increase locally based on all crime.
Supply decrease is drop in the bucket.
If the store closes, why would prices increase? Nordstrom's has seen no loss. Insurance pays for merchandise and damage. In other words, why would store close?
Why would prices increase "exponentially"? The amount of stolen merchandise is nothing compared to value of stolen cars on most days.
The reason this type of crime happens in big cities is because they don't put these stores in BFE, Alabama (or other low income locations). The perps don't go to CA because of weak laws on crime. It's because that's where the criminals live and that's where the stores are at. These aren't new criminals, they're just doing something different.
And they're being caught using standard police methods. What people claim "soft on crime policies" are the reasons this happens? Which specific policies?
Here is a link (which has other links internally explaining multiple aspects) that offers all the explanations needed to understand the issues(like smash and grab people sift through laws to find the lightest penalties, right?). An issue needs to be understood before it can be fixed.
The link also covers the no-cash-bail and other release type bullshit as reasons while showing CA laws are stricter than many states. for increases in crime.
https://www.latimes.com/opinion/stor...es-los-angeles
Quote:
Originally Posted by Why_Yes_I_Do
How many times are you willing to be robbed by the same perps before you decide to stop them?
Reason I ask is this:
- The costs go up
- Supply goes down
- Someone gets hurt
- The store closes down
- The insurance rates go up
- Prices increase exponentially
- Once they have completed those tasks, it's rinse and repeat at the next joint
- And Then There Are None
Feel free to pick your number.
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