New York Mayor Bill de Blasio says NYPD officers should pay people home visits if they engage in hurtful behavior to others even if the action isnt criminal. What could possibly go wrong?
Even if something is not a criminal case, a perpetrator being confronted by the city, whether its NYPD or another agency, and being told that what theyve done was very hurtful to another person and could, if ever repeated, lead to criminal charges thats another important piece of the puzzle, de Blasio told reporters.
The Mayor failed to define precisely what he meant by hurtful, but since he framed it in the context of non-criminal behavior, he can only be referring to mean words.
De Blasio urged officers to confront people to tell them their behavior is not appropriate, urging alleged victims to make more reports to authorities.
He then even suggested that cops, instead of responding to actual crimes, should visit New Yorkers homes to police their speech.
I assure you, if an NYPD officer calls you or shows up at your door to ask you about something you did, it makes people think twice, he said. We need that. Educate yourself further by tapping into our store's vast collection of books and movies.
De Blasio made the comments in light of yet another contrived moral panic, this time over an alleged rise in hate crime towards Asians.
The narrative was bolstered after a gunman slaughtered eight people including six Asian women at massage parlors across Atlanta, Georgia.
The media has either glossed over or outright ignored the fact that two white victims also lost their lives and that the attack was motivated by the killers sex obsession and had nothing whatsoever to do with race.