I didn’t know his name - I heard the story from a chap who sits next to me at the Amex when we got talking about Brighton logos on stuff .
I didn’t know his name - I heard the story from a chap who sits next to me at the Amex when we got talking about Brighton logos on stuff .
Haven't seen a good "oooo chinny reckon" in a long old time.
Nothing at all, dear.By these people I meant shop lifters - what’s funny about that ..
Did you start it. By “you” I mean any one of the three user ids you use on here, including to vote twice on the same poll?Hmm - so why is a blog started on 11th June on GB News is in the Bear Pit?
I’d get out of your glass house if I were you.
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Just see how many posts you can go before you feel compelled to mention the price of somethingI don’t mean too , I’ll try to be more careful how I write
You should see the stuff he writes in the Argus comments!Fair enough. I also like nice things.
Some of your posts do come across as a little highfalutin though and more than a little insular.
If it's easy to walk into a shop and browse around while stealing, and then walk out with no consequences, then people will do it. The large chains can employ security to limit this. You can't expect a police officer to stand on the shop door for free, and they're hardly going door-to-door to catch someone for stealing a bottle of alcohol.Its not a case of 'I'm poor so i steal', lots of poor people don't steal and certainly not all theft is done by poor people, neither should they need to put their own security in place they need the police and courts to do the job properly.
Nice little pile on developing here, come on peeps back off a little eh
it is too easy because the police are ineffective and the punishment is not enough of a deterrent. The thing is a lot of these people are repeat offenders ,often but not always to feed a habit, get them off the streets and crime goes down significantly. We have become too tolerant of poor standards and before anyone accuses me of being a right wing extremists I can assure you I am not . I am left of centre and see crime (and the Tories) as a threat to the majority of people.If it's easy to walk into a shop and browse around while stealing, and then walk out with no consequences, then people will do it. The large chains can employ security to limit this. You can't expect a police officer to stand on the shop door for free, and they're hardly going door-to-door to catch someone for stealing a bottle of alcohol.
Until people report these things then they will continue though agree I might be reticent given the ineptness of the police and judiciary.About 20 years ago, I drank fairly regularly in a pub, that was just outside a large Thames Valley town. Shoplifters made a beeline for this place. One lad used to jump on the train, visit Basingstoke every saturday, steal a bicycle and return to the pub. The Landlord would offer up cash and keep these bikes in his cellar. The cleaner told me that he had about 20 at any given time, selling to regulars. I saw women coming in with whole racks of clothing from well known department stores. One night, a lad came in carrying about 6-8 video recorders. They were gone in less than 5 minutes. I saw a couple one night, she carrying boxes of chocolates, him about 6 bottles of champagne. Perfume, watches and jewelry were pedalled constantly.
It was so often you just got used to it. I refused every time. Locals used to say to me..." the big stores can afford it ".....I used to reply....." Yep...because we are all paying for it, through higher prices "
It was shameless stealing and made worse by most of the locals who lapped it up. Some of it was stolen to order. The Landlord was a fence and made no secret of it. I drank there because I knew some guys who frequented it but eventually it just became too distasteful, too tawdry and I took my custom elsewhere.
( This was well before the influx of certain Eastern Europeans, who now dominate this town and many others. So....god knows what it is like now!!! )
it is too easy because the police are ineffective and the punishment is not enough of a deterrent.
As said its not just the police its the whole judicial system, neither are helping to solve the problem sand nor is the attitude 'its only a bottle of alcohol'The punishment is dictated by governments, not the police. And are we seeing this same level of theft from all shops, or are we particularly seeing more of it from that one shop? It appears to be the latter, which suggests that other shops have found a better way to prevent it.
yep, security guards.The punishment is dictated by governments, not the police. And are we seeing this same level of theft from all shops, or are we particularly seeing more of it from that one shop? It appears to be the latter, which suggests that other shops have found a better way to prevent it.
It really isn't a deterrent hence tesco giving people body cams https://news.sky.com/story/tesco-staff-offered-body-cameras-following-rise-in-assaults-12953829.yep, security guards.
You should see the stuff he writes in the Argus comments!
in response to attacks on staff, not shopplifting. shoplifters respond to likelihood of being seen and stopped in the act. police and courts are an afterthought. you need better security to deter them. we could have police on every shop entrance but think we can all agree that might not be best use of them.It really isn't a deterrent hence tesco giving people body cams https://news.sky.com/story/tesco-staff-offered-body-cameras-following-rise-in-assaults-12953829.
Read this several times before I realised you really did say 'raise it with your councillor and with the council housing officer'. Go on then, what do you expect them to say (taking it for granted they would DO FA)?I agree with your dismay. I think here the best course of action is to raise it with your councillor and with the council housing officer. Explain the whys and where.
The staff are being attacked often because they challenge the shop lifters .in response to attacks on staff, not shopplifting. shoplifters respond to likelihood of being seen and stopped in the act. police and courts are an afterthought. you need better security to deter them. we could have police on every shop entrance but think we can all agree that might not be best use of them.