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When Even Big Chain Stores Close Due To Rising Crime, Urban Blight Is Back — And It Will Get Worse
The Federalist ^ | 07/07/2021 | Christopher Bedford

Posted on 07/08/2021 7:45:58 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Six Target stores in San Francisco are adjusting their times, opening hours later and closing hours earlier to try to curtail soaring theft.

They join Walgreens, which has closed 17 stores over five years in direct response to criminal activity. Last month, a video went viral of a hooded and masked man riding his bike into a San Francisco branch of the chain, loading a trash bag with merchandise, and riding back out — past a powerless security guard and two others filming on their phones.

Early Monday evening, at least nine men and women smashed cases and stripped shelves in San Francisco’s high-end Neiman Marcus store, fleeing with a fortune in designer handbags. The brazenness is out of control, is goaded on by the normalization of masks, and is directly enabled by district attorneys and other politicians.

The Golden City is joined by nearby Sacramento and Los Angeles, where retail crime has spiked, but across the country as district attorneys from Massachusetts to Missouri to Texas have declared they won’t defend citizens from theft, the story has gone much the same.

While it’s insane that crime is so severe and law enforcement so nonexistent in a prosperous city that businesses must close their doors early or shut them entirely, there’s more in store. Far more ominous than a sign of how bad things have gotten, darkened windows and shuttered doors reveal just how much worse things are going to get.

In Washington, D.C., the Columbia Heights neighborhood struggled for years, mired in death, drugs, and the gangs that dealt freely in both. In 2004, when I moved to the city, it was changing but progress was slow. When our first group of friends moved there we knew when visiting that we would be unable to get a taxi to bring us home at the end of the night.

Then, after fighting to slowly bring commerce and foot traffic back, the neighborhood celebrated the opening of a Target superstore in 2008. The move, said then-Mayor Adrian Fenty, was “both the catalyst and the capstone to an unprecedented economic resurgence in Columbia Heights – where nearly $1 billion worth of new housing, retail and office space has moved through the development pipeline since 2001.”

Progress was sluggish but continued. There were robberies and murders, and even a gang war in the nearby projects, but the city worked to keep the remaining crime out of the papers because business was booming, condos were going up, and people were moving in.

In response to a retail rival’s possible move to the city, Target opened a grocery store in 2010, pushing along competition in a city where neighborhoods with high crime are also neighborhoods with no grocery stores. While activist reformers try to blame discrimination, in a business with slim margins, theft means bankruptcy. In Columbia Heights, things were safe enough to grow — and rich and poor alike benefitted.

Just as opening a retail business or a restaurant works to revitalize a neighborhood, a closure is a deathly sign of decline. While bright windows, visiting shoppers, and neighborhood jobs bring safety, vacant retail, with its boarded-up windows, graffiti, uncleaned sidewalks, and ugliness brings crime.

A University of Southern California study found that even with temporary closures, “The area immediately around a closed restaurant experienced an increase in property crime and theft from vehicles.”

“Furthermore,” the authors wrote in a Harvard Business Review article, “this increase in crime disappeared as soon as the restaurant reopened.”

There aren’t a lot of studies on this important matter, but our understanding of it goes back decades.

The elites of urban planning didn’t take the criticism well, when Jane Jacobs released her 1961 classic, “The Death And Life Of Great American Cities,” dismissing the author as a simple “housewife” uneducated in their schemes. Undeterred, one concept she famously developed was the “eyes on the street” theory of crime prevention, where she suggested mixed-use neighborhoods bring safety and vibrancy to city living.

Jacobs saw that those parks surrounded only by office buildings became a destination for criminals when the offices closed for the night and everyone with a legitimate reason to be there went home. She compared these with parks in mixed-use neighborhoods, where the diversity might include early morning coffee shops, offices, retail, homes, and the evening’s bars.

Mixed-use neighborhoods saw people on legal business at nearly all hours, and she saw the safety and vibrancy that brought with it. You could have all the pretty parks you like, she found, but in the end it is the neighborhood that confers “the boon of life and appreciation” on them — not the other way around.

Her critics pointed out that she didn’t have any degrees in urban planning, and that was true: She was a reporter, wife, and mother raising her three kids with her husband in the city. But Jacobs didn’t need a degree from some college to look out her window, see if it was safe or not, and observe why. She was right, and along with “broken windows theory” and a number of others, hard-headed reformers beat back the elites and made American safe again — for a time.

More than 50 years later, over-credentialed activists and politicians once again say they know better, and tell us our neighborhoods will be more just and “equitable” if we don’t enforce laws. Now business owners are telling those politicians they’ll need to close their doors. Residents are left to feel the pain of both the crime and the closures. The boon of life and appreciation is suffocating.

Crime begets crime begets crime, and changes to enforcement and prosecution policies are entirely to blame. In nearby Oakland, where murder is up 90 percent in the past year and car-jackings up 88 percent while the city council continues to cut police, city leaders dismiss the surge in crime as “a bump in the road,” but for the people who live there, strive to work there, and try to not be murdered there, it’s more than that. As with Jane Jacobs, you don’t need a degree to know it.

Rising crime is a direct threat to our towns, our neighborhoods, and our families. Already in great American cities, urban blight is setting in. We’ve down this path before for virtually the exact same bleeding-heart reasons, and we lived through the tremendous pain it brought. We cannot let it happen again — unless we do.


Christopher Bedford is a senior editor at The Federalist, the vice chairman of Young Americans for Freedom, a board member at the National Journalism Center, and the author of The Art of the Donald.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: anarchotyranny; bidenvoters; chainstores; obamalegacy; sanfrancisco; theft; urbanblight
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1 posted on 07/08/2021 7:45:58 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: All

bump


2 posted on 07/08/2021 7:48:02 AM PDT by foreverfree
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To: SeekAndFind

Will the last Civilized man please turn off the lights before they go.


3 posted on 07/08/2021 7:48:09 AM PDT by Nateman (If the Left is not screaming , you are doing it wrong.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Open early. Thugs sleep in late.


4 posted on 07/08/2021 7:48:27 AM PDT by bgill
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To: SeekAndFind

Biden voters don’t care. They’ll just whine about being victims of store owner’s racism. The Joe Stolen admin will step in and give them more of your and my money.

It’s all part of the plan.


5 posted on 07/08/2021 7:49:19 AM PDT by brownsfan (Term limits! Without term limits, we are doomed.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Urban blight. Try to improve things and you are guilty of racist gentrification. Leave things as they are and you are, of course, a racist white supremacist. Damned if you do, and damned if you don’t. Embrace your “racism”.


6 posted on 07/08/2021 7:50:04 AM PDT by bk1000 (Banned from Breitbart)
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To: SeekAndFind

Riot, pillage and burn, then claim you are a victim of White Supremacy......................got it.......


7 posted on 07/08/2021 7:50:25 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: SeekAndFind

Who wants to do ANYTHING (legal) in a City after Dark? That’s a problem.


8 posted on 07/08/2021 7:50:57 AM PDT by 1Old Pro (Let's make crime illegal again!)
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To: SeekAndFind

‘Hey kids, are you noticing all this plight?’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4sDuKDoDYf4


9 posted on 07/08/2021 7:51:11 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: bk1000

Time to fully separate.


10 posted on 07/08/2021 7:51:32 AM PDT by Levy78
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To: SeekAndFind

Good article.

The problem with “experts” is that they ignore stuff that is right in front of their noses.


11 posted on 07/08/2021 7:51:53 AM PDT by cgbg (A kleptocracy--if they can keep it. Think of it as the Cantillon Effect in action.)
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To: SeekAndFind

While I lived in New York city, everyone hated Giuliani, everyone hated his policies and everyone said that would never vote for him.

But the streets and neighborhoods were safe, people could walk at anytime of day or night with their children, and Disney put money into 42nd street. The porn shops, peep shows and drug users disappeared, and the city had a renaissance.

Everyone hated Giuliani, but he won all his elections and the Democrats had to change the laws to get rid of him. The same people who hated him voted for him while their lips were reviling him. because the streets were safe.


12 posted on 07/08/2021 7:52:15 AM PDT by wbarmy (I chose to be a sheepdog once I saw what happens to the sheep.)
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To: bk1000

Yep, I’ve heard this from activist types. First the activists complained about “white flight” from decades ago, and claimed that city neighborhoods went downhill when whites moved out.

Then those same activists decry “gentrification”, because they claim wealthy whites are pushing out blacks to whom the neighborhoods allegedly belong.


13 posted on 07/08/2021 7:53:31 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: bgill

“Thugs sleep in late”

...very true. The hours of 5am-12noon would be perfect.


14 posted on 07/08/2021 7:55:13 AM PDT by albie
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To: bgill

When I lived in Seattle there was a McDonalds down around 2nd and Cherry. (rough area with homeless and addicts very common) It was only open 7am to 2pm. Employees cleaned up and gates were down and locked by 4pm. It was too much of a pain and a risk to serve even a bit into the evening. Smart owner.


15 posted on 07/08/2021 7:55:17 AM PDT by BBQToadRibs2
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To: SeekAndFind

The US in particular and the West more generally seems hellbent on self destruction.

How you turn tbis around I have no idea. The irony if it exists is that to the extent that communist China is held up as some kind of ifeal - they wouldn’t stand for this crap for 2 seconds.


16 posted on 07/08/2021 7:55:18 AM PDT by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
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To: SeekAndFind
Mayor Adrian Fenty

While you might think the man is black, he isn't. He is Italian on one side and not one of Marion's people. They hated him and hounded him out. Thankfully we now have a more enlightened woman of the people - the right people - as Mayor, Bowser.

17 posted on 07/08/2021 7:55:30 AM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: SeekAndFind

What the “Golden City” really needs to do is DEFUND THE POLICE.!!! That’ll fix it... /s


18 posted on 07/08/2021 7:56:50 AM PDT by unread (Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities - Voltaire)
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To: SeekAndFind

back to the 60s and 70s....everything old is nu again


19 posted on 07/08/2021 7:57:11 AM PDT by xp38
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To: SeekAndFind

San Francisco...the new Detroit!


20 posted on 07/08/2021 7:59:13 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Trump: "They're After You. I'm Just In The Way")
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