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Important new study by two men from Oxford University explodes the “trans vulnerability myth.” Trans identified individuals are more likely to be PERPETRATORS of crimes rather than victims!

67,337 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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1% of the population is responsible for more than 60% of violent crime. And a disproportionate share of that 1% happens to come from marginalized or dispossessed groups. And because of this the logic some people seem to think well, we just shouldn’t enforce laws anymore. But the problem is, criminals usually victimize people around them. And the people they’re victimizing also tend to be disproportionately poor, disproportionately marginalized, disproportionately from deprived backgrounds too. Compared to Americans who earn more than $75,000 a year, the lowest-income Americans are 7 times more likely to be victims of aggravated assault, 7 times more likely to be victims of robbery, and 20 times more likely to be victims of sexual assault and homicide. Virtually every crime you can think of — the poor are the most likely to be victimized by it. And what gets lost is that poor people are much more likely to be victimized by crime than to be perpetrators of crime. But we focus so much of the attention on the perpetrators — and how they come from marginalized and deprived backgrounds — and we just don’t think nearly as much about the victims. What happens to them. What their lives look like afterward. And I think that’s a shame. I mean, if there’s a criminal who commits an act, we should spend more time thinking about how to help the victim than the perpetrator. From my conversation with Garry Tan

Rob Henderson

36,879 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад