ideologyhunter
Contributor
Abortion, fur, and statistics courses are murder. Suck up to it.
If there's no reason to be there, then it is literally impossible for their presence there to be suspicious. Besides, there 'not being a reason' for someone to be somewhere, is *not* a reason to be suspicious of them (much less call the cops on them). For all you know, their vehicle broke down and they're just hanging out there waiting for a repair truck to come along or a friend to pick them up. Maybe they're just taking a break from a long drive and decided they need some air. Are either of these valid reasons for you to call the cops on them? No. Do you in fact have *any* valid reason to call the cops on them? No, you don't. Unless there's an indication of actual wrongdoing, present or imminent, there's no reason whatsoever to call the cops; and doing so is some really bad paranoid profiling.
We have some neighbors who walk around the block (it's several miles) but there is no reason for anyone not a neighbor to be here. We are not on the way from anywhere or to anywhere. We are miles and miles from anywhere.
Oh I get it, you and your neighbors are the only people who have the right to just exist and hang out within your exclusive zone, right? You can't think of a legitimate reason why that person might be there, so they have to be doing or planning bad shit. This is *exactly* the same kind of reasoning the rich white dude uses to call the cops on the black guy in a hoodie walking down the block. "There's no reason for anyone who doesn't live here to be walking down the street; he clearly doesn't look like he belongs, so he must be up to no good."; it's bullshit reasoning and you ought to know better.
The next most common would be a theft or setting up a meth lab - casing a house. They look for unoccupied hunting cabins or houses where people are on vacation and they break in and set up a meth lab.
Right, of course. 'See someone you don't recognize in the neighborhood -> deduce that they must be there either to throw thrash in your proverbial backyard, looking to rob you, or searching for a place to set up a methlab'...
...go on, tell me again how you're not exactly like the rich white dude calling the cops on the black guy in the hoodie.![]()
“Unsafe” as in aggressive and violent toward those who walk in on them, like the homeowner coming home to a meth lab in the cabin. Urban areas have this problem in abandoned houses, too, usually a drug use place rather than drug manufacture, though.People who run meth labs are pretty well known for not being safe individuals.
And if they actually *were* unsafe individuals, there'd be a hell of a lot more random explosions on the news. Given the inherent dangers involved with mixing meth in quantity, and given that meth is in ample supply, I'm pretty sure that the people who set up meth-labs are actually a lot more safety oriented than you give them credit for.
Right. That’s why I don’t call, I just watch out a little bit for others.Nothing. But the kid will have had someone watching out for them. Plus it takes cops a while to respond.
If I were to call the cops on you for doing that, I'd be wasting their fucking time. Just like how 9 out of 10 times, if it isn't 10 out of 10 times, so do your calls.
So you’ll note that I do not and would not call on someone who is around a lot. You’ve mistaken my “style”. We have folks like that, too.I remember a few years back, there was this old man who lived in the neighborhood, and who'd walk around like he was drunk all the time. But he was completely harmless. One day, he was just hanging out near a local park that also happened to be frequented by kids. Then some overzealous paranoid housewife, taking style points from you, called the cops on him.
All that person making the call had to do was go and talk to the guy, and they'd have learned he was a threat to absolutely no one.
The moral of the story? What you *think* is suspicious, and what actually *is*, are two very different things.
I was talking about friends and acquaintances, not strangers. Drunk strangers are not so wise to confront (see “walking around with guns, above”).And not a judge in the county will convict me of it. Probably not a cop in the county will arrest me for it. And the drunk stays off the road.
How wonderful it must be to live in a country where all the cops and judges flaunt the laws they're supposed to uphold. Look, if you take the key from a drunk friend so they don't drive, great. No problem with that. To a stranger, not so much.
Just curious.
Rhea said:So… tone alert here. I’m not sure if you’re outraged by my answer or not, but I’m not outraged at yours, just so you know the tone here. I’m in a happy mood and perfectly willing to describe for you a situation that it appears is not one you can picture readily. It’s a description of the _different_ risks and dangers that a person may face in different places.
This person was not in a car. If he had been in a car, I would have been able to see it. If he were taking a break from a long drive, he would not do it on a blind corner, he’d move 1/10 mile down the road and park safely. If someone broke down, they would hike to a house to make a call, because there is no cell service.
He was on a bicycle. Not a mountain bike or a racing bike or even a commuting bike as sometimes comes through here (my husband commutes on a bike, others come through maybe 5-6 times a year), but this guy was on a ratty old bike that would not be great for commuting.
We see folks down in the valley commuting on bikes of all sorts – some are fitness buffs, some look like people who lost their licenses for DUI and are doing whatever it takes to get to work. But none of them looks like this.
Bear in mind that this is a road with a fairly aggressive hill, although this spot is the flattest part of it; a one-mile stretch of only slight incline.
And it is not a commuting corridor from anywhere far away. Anyone who is not a neighbor would be more likely to take a better road.
It is a dirt road in the country that probably gets a total of 40 cars a day on it and maybe 5 bikes a year not counting my husband or the annual bike-team workout.
In this area, anyone who needs anything goes to a house to ask.
People who see people stop their pickups in the middle of the road to chat for 10 minutes.
This guy was sitting on a guard-rail looking at the year-round hunting cabin of my next door neighbor (1/2 mile from my place). Bear in mind that it is an area that has several meth lab busts per year. Guns and all.
Anyone has a right to be here. We acknowledge that our area is attractive to coyotes, bears and meth labs.
You misunderstand. Not “anyone”. We’ve had traveling sales people, people who are lost, people who are touristing, people who are exercising, people who are visiting. All of them make sense and are obvious. What we don’t have are people who are loitering. Loitering people do NOT ride their bikes for 5 miles to find a nice place to loiter.
In my neighborhood, people walking around with guns is not suspicious at all. But loitering is. Because that’s what normal around here.
Yes, I stand by my original sentiment; your attitude is morally repugnant to me.
No, you're just proving my overall point here. In fact, if you DID call the cops on EVERYONE you didn't know, *regardless* of how they looked or what you can deduce about their purpose for being there, I've have more respect for you. As it stands, I see no difference between what you're doing and the rich white guy calling the cops on the black dude in the hoodie walking down the street.
That's okay. I get that you can't really picture the scenario.
Question, is there anyone doing anything that would ever cause you to call the cops to PREVENT a crime?
Note that I did not find the person suspicious because of his clothes. Nor because of his bike. Nor because of where he was. Nor because of how he looked. It was because the combination of where he was AND what he was doing AND how he was doing it AND how long he stayed.
And while I get that you might not be able to see why this was suspicious, it nevertheless is very suspicious for this area.
Note also, that I didn't walk out and shoot the poor bastard, I merely called the cops to notify them that someone was acting very strangely in the 'hood, and later told the neighbor whose house he was watching that someone had been there.
looking further at this, I'm surprised you see no difference. Are you implying a scene where it's a street that practically no one ever walks (i mean, literally, 5 people a year, maybe?) and the hoodie-dude stops to hang out for a while in front of the house and the street is a 5-mile walk from anywhere?
Strawman argument. I'm obviously not saying that one can't call the cops on someone suspicious. I'm saying that your standards for determining who is and is not suspicious is woefully inadequate.
But if the neighbor that I called decided to make sure his place was locked that week, and had a friend stop by to make it look occupied, then that could indeed have changed things. Well, maybe you don't think so. But those are things neighbors do around here to deter crime. Maybe in your neighborhood, if you know of a string of crimes being committed nearby you do nothing. I dunno.I think the point is that you weren't actually preventing crime.
'kay.
I really am curious if anything would ever induce you to call the cops on the possibility of preventing crime. What would an "adequate" justification look like?
I called once on a building engulfed in flames, too. Turned out it was a deliberate fire, but I felt it was right to call and check that, and I'd do it again.
Dispatch just informed me that it was a "controlled burn" and we were all fine. Sadly, I previously had not, and my neighbor's house burned to the ground. I had smelled something, but I thought it was just someone burning trash so I didn't call. Then I saw some smoke and thought, must be a brush pile. Finally, when ashes started falling out of the sky onto us was about the time I heard the fire engines.
Or is this so obviously "morally repugnant" because no person who commits a crime is ever detectable before they do it?
I do get that neither of you think that a person just sitting down and looking around in the middle of seriously nowhere looks at all like a person who does the kinds of crimes that people looking for uninhabited building in the middle of seriously nowhere seek to do.
I'm okay with that, really. Our number 1 major crime here is meth labs. Our sheriffs come to towns and schools to tell people what to look for and ask for tips and calls if any of these things appear, but I do get that you think a person should not consider the local Sheriff's department a reliable source of information,
But if the neighbor that I called decided to make sure his place was locked that week, and had a friend stop by to make it look occupied, then that could indeed have changed things. Well, maybe you don't think so. But those are things neighbors do around here to deter crime. Maybe in your neighborhood, if you know of a string of crimes being committed nearby you do nothing. I dunno.
Okay. What’s “obvious”?Seeing an actual crime in progress or obvious preparation thereof. You did not describe either.
I called once on a building engulfed in flames, too. Turned out it was a deliberate fire, but I felt it was right to call and check that, and I'd do it again.
Well whoop. How is this relevant to the discussion? Obviously when you see a building on fire you call the fire department. 99 out of a 100 times, a building on fire is not going to be a controlled burn.
I try to learn from my past actions.A past failure in judgement does not justify an overzealous approach today.
It's also ironic that you ignored it because you thought it was someone burning trash; since that is in fact illegal in many places and potentially hazardous to the environment.
Or is this so obviously "morally repugnant" because no person who commits a crime is ever detectable before they do it?
The reason I called it such is because the attitude perpetuates a certain mentality that is harmful to overall societal cohesion. When a society is paranoid and suspicious of strangers; don't be surprised if society develops in ways to justify that paranoia and suspicion. If, however, society assumes the best of strangers, we'll find that generally, the strangers will reciprocate even if some do not.
I described a whole lot more than that. I’m surprised you only noticed this part.You previously stated that you did not call the cops on him because of *how* he looked. Now you're describing him as 'the kind of person who does crimes'. What exactly does a person who does crime look like? Oh, right, you already described such a person for us in a previous post: "Somebody scruffy looking sitting on a ratty bicycle"
In other words, a poor person?
I'm okay with that, really. Our number 1 major crime here is meth labs. Our sheriffs come to towns and schools to tell people what to look for and ask for tips and calls if any of these things appear, but I do get that you think a person should not consider the local Sheriff's department a reliable source of information,
I do not put a lot of trust in the competence or fairness of some backwater American sheriff, no; they don't exactly have a positive reputation in either of those areas. If your sheriff tells you to call the cops whenever you see 'somebody scruffy looking sitting on a ratty bicycle'; then there's a few civil liberties groups you might want to consider contacting.
In my neighborhood, we don't call the cops just because we see a poor person; and our cops certainly don't tell us to call them whenever we see poor people hanging around.
In my neighborhood, when there's a string of crime being committed, we expect the cops to do their jobs and we don't then engage in witch hunts against anyone 'suspicious looking'.
I think I begin to see why you are so strident about this. You think that I labeled that person as “poor” and therefore “beneath me” or “not allowed in my neighborhood” and that makes me mean and arrogant and elitist and bigoted.
Oh. Oh, no. No no no. You have seriously misunderstood. MOST of the people are poor here. Almost all of the people who go by here are poor. This is the land of the porch refrigerator and the bathtub in the field to water the cows.
But all of them are _purposeful_.
We get people who are scruffy looking on ratty bikes. They are on their way to work, usually on a bike because they lost their license to drive a car for DUI. They are on their way somewhere. We get some spandex-clad adventurers from time to time. And they are on their way to somewhere. We get people walking, or riding quads (illegally). We get people in camo with a rifle slung over their shoulder on their way to a woods for hunting. We get (not all the way up here, but down the street) scruffy looking young couples from the trailer park looking for a place to enjoy talking without interruption. My kids are often out there looking scruffy.
But all of them are _purposeful_.
And there are some things that go together and some that don’t. A purposeful person on a bike might stop to rest or drink water. But they don’t do it on the flat, and they don’t do it when going _down_ the hill. A scruffy person in the neighborhood is _more_ likely to wave, chat and go to a house because they are more like to be from a neighborhood like this. Someone from down in the city is very unlikely to feel comfortable just hanging out in the country. So unlikely that they do not do it.
This turns out to not be at all true. I’d say more than half of burns in our town are purposeful destructions of old barns. Interesting that you think it’s obvious when other people would not. Different places have very different “normal” activities. I get that you think all places are exactly the same, but I don’t see that as being accurate.
And I am not the trash-burning police. It would be nice to stop it, but it’s not at the top of my list.
This is an interesting interpretation. We are not paranoid of strangers. We talk to folks we don’t know on the street, step out of the house to give directions when needed, offer to give rides to people we see walking. I would say there is a much _much_ greater acceptance of the safety of strangers here than in any more dense place I’ve lived.
I described a whole lot more than that. I’m surprised you only noticed this part.
Things, it turns out, are a little different. I get that you have a different societal model than we have. That’s okay, I don’t call you morally repugnant for having lots of different worries in your place than I have in mine.
The way you described him, it was painfully obvious that his appearance *was* indeed a contributing factor to your decision; and the way you described him, it was clear that his poverty or appearance thereof was important to you AND that you considered him poorer than you (why else would you have drawn attention to his 'ratty bike'? You'd have just called it a 'bike'). Even if you genuinely believe(d) that you're both at the same level of poverty, it still obviously matters because now you're saying it's about "purposefulness". In other words, it's okay to be poor so long as you're doing something useful, but the moment you're not you get treated like a criminal.
I've described what I was thinking and you've just told me that I was thinking something else.
I'm trying to describe to you how unusual and out of place something is. But since it's normal in Amsterdam you think I'm out of line.
Ironically, while claiming that if some of my peeps came to your area, you'd be very alarmed.
I can understand your objections to that, on a privacy/freedom point of view, but you have to compromise.
There's a kind of social contract with neighbours in such parts that they will look out for each-other, and the lack of such society, the "alone in a crowd" thing, is often what is criticized of big cities.
The police might or might not come to see, depending on what other things they've noticed or have reported, or just make a note to "check that house more closely next time you patrol there". As long as they do it respecfully, I'm on Rhea's side of the compromise. I don't want to live in a place where nobody watches out for me.
rhea said:Ironically, while claiming that if some of my peeps came to your area, you'd be very alarmed.
You're joking right? Do you know how many American tourists we get? You really think they're all from the east and west coasts? Some American hick coming to Amsterdam would alarm absolutely nobody; though he might annoy people depending on how ignorant he acts.
dystopian said:People walking around with guns = perfectly fine. Okay, this is already pretty disturbing to me, but fine, let's give them the benefit of the doubt and assume they're all responsible individuals and properly trained.
rhea said:Question, is there anyone doing anything that would ever cause you to call the cops to PREVENT a crime? If you own a convenient store and a person comes in and hangs out, and hangs out, and looks outside down the road, then comes back in, maybe ducks when police go by. Is there any scenario where you can envision yourself thinking, "if I make a call, this might prevent a problem"?
dystopian said:Unless there's an indication of actual wrongdoing, present or imminent, there's no reason whatsoever to call the cops; and doing so is some really bad paranoid profiling.
dystopian said:Strawman argument. I'm obviously not saying that one can't call the cops on someone suspicious. I'm saying that your standards for determining who is and is not suspicious is woefully inadequate.
rhea said:So what does someone who is actually suspicious look like? School me. What should I wait for before I'm justified?
Tom Sawyer said:Well, curious about your take, too, Tom. Do you think it's possible to detect any activity that, when reported or shared among neighbors has the possibility of reducing crime? Or is this so obviously "morally repugnant" because no person who commits a crime is ever detectable before they do it?
dystopian said:Seeing an actual crime in progress or obvious preparation thereof. You did not describe either.
What is an actual Dystopian or Tom Sawyer approved description of a call about a suspicious person that is justified, if ever?