this post was submitted on 05 Dec 2024
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Any evidence for either number?
No, but you also never see a homeless man's death make international news.
The police didn't control the news though.
Didn't they raise bridges and try to create checkpoints all around the area? That never happens for anyone else.
I haven't heard about that yet. An excellent counterpoint if true though.
The ambiguity of your comment leaves space for the reader to guess whether you are blaming the police for their (alleged) comparative spending or blaming the journalists for their comparative coverage.
My intent was to convey that the existence of a media frenzy is not proof that the police are spending disproportionate resources on the investigation.
There was a media frenzy around the murder of George Floyd, but hardly any spending by the police in the investigation.
They could also just be saying a statement without forcing blame on anyone. If I say the sky is blue, I'm not blaming the sky for having moisture nor blaming my eyes for perceiving it as blue.
It is possible to state a fact without having evaluated it and pushing that as a narrative. I know it's hard to imagine on the Internet but it happens with me all the time. People get really mad that you haven't judged a fact and in the same way they have. It's fucking annoying.
But the NYPD doesn't control the news? Like, that has nothing to do with how much their spending on the investigation as far as I can tell.
I guess my point is, society thinks it's a big deal and news worthy, which means society also expects more effort in finding the killer.
Indisputably true and society's moral failure on its own, but the OP is questionable.
Well for one, they've said they're investigating literally every person who's had a claim denied lately, and that can't be cheap.