Why did crime rise in the 60s
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April 26, 2024, 03:43:10 PM
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Bootes Void
iamaganster123
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« on: April 27, 2022, 11:38:38 AM »

I’m thinking it cause of the social unrest of the 60s and it’s aftermath or increase of the baby boomer population reaching adulthood.
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TransfemmeGoreVidal
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« Reply #1 on: April 28, 2022, 12:16:13 PM »

I’m thinking it cause of the social unrest of the 60s and it’s aftermath or increase of the baby boomer population reaching adulthood.

This, plus the fact that many grew up in abject poverty. People have an image of the 1950s as a prosperous time but it wasn’t for everyone. I’ve also heard it theorized that because led paint was commonly used in building materials at the time and a lot of children were exposed to it from a young age it may have had a negative impact on brain development. 
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Cassandra
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« Reply #2 on: April 28, 2022, 05:44:07 PM »

US factories began restructuring in the 50s as increases in automation allowed companies to lay off workers. Because, well, because it was the 50s, the workers chosen to be laid off were overwhelmingly black. Poverty begets crime. And by the sixties, enough of a powder keg had been built for something like Watts to happen.
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Amenhotep Bakari-Sellers
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« Reply #3 on: April 28, 2022, 07:12:26 PM »

Because soldiers were dying in Wars WWII and people took to the street in protest and used arks as a way to protest and it got violent during the Civil Rights era the Blk Panthers were just as violent as the KKK back then, so for revenge killings each side retaliated and they killed 4 Civil Rights leaders under Jay Edgar Hoover watch whom was an R not a D the same DOJ whom is laxed on Prosecution of Trump that have Don Jr a pass on Trump Towers meeting with Russia and getting dirt on Hillary

The George Floyd protests were back to the 90s and so was the Insurrectionists but we as citizens have COVID unlike the sixties it was open back then, You as a citizen can see Oswald up in person you can't do that now with prisoners that's why Rubee was allowed to kill Oswald he was allowed to Police

People aren't dying like they use to during Nam era we value life more

40 K got killed in Nam so of course convicts didn't value life like npw
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Agonized-Statism
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« Reply #4 on: April 29, 2022, 03:39:17 AM »
« Edited: April 29, 2022, 12:19:47 PM by Atomic-Statism »

The largest generation of disaffected teens and young adults in history- many of them combat veterans with unresolved trauma finding themselves on the fringe of society- with fewer electronic distractions and more of an inclination to be a part of something born to a generation of parents themselves psychologically effected by the most cataclysmic war in history, economic restructuring including suburbanization and the reemergence of German and Japanese industry beginning to hurt select members of the working class (urban black people were the first to get hit with layoffs and obviously urban decay), proliferation of drugs and reemergence of cocaine. The Great Society programs, intended to be a preventative measure for problems like crime, were strained by the economic stresses of Vietnam and the Space Race and the irreconcilability of capitalism's profit motive with welfare. As for the prominence of serial killers, though they and their media attention were more of a '70s and '80s phenomenon:

Serial killing was especially prominent during that time due to urbanization and relative affluence (harder to be Michael Myers when you're busy fighting World Wars/Korea/Vietnam, working over 40 hours a week, or dead from Polio), and stories circulated more due to advancements in communications technology (TV). [...] The number of active serial killers in the country peaked in 1989 and has trended downward ever since: less frequent use of parole, improved forensic technology, more cautious parenting, and as with other violent crimes, the first post-Baby Boom generation coming of age.
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Del Tachi
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« Reply #5 on: May 09, 2022, 01:39:30 PM »

The end of de jure segregation created White flight and urban decay.
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