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    18 Kommentare

    1. Alive_Internet on

      This map confuses me, as it is the opposite of the homicide one posted recently. How is it that Western and Northern Europe have higher robbery rates, but lower homicide rates than Eastern Europe? Instead of all crimes being correlated together, does each region just pick and choose which types of crime they prefer to commit?

    2. for the umptillionth time, comparing crime statistics across jurisdictions makes no sense, the definition of robbery may aswell be different

    3. Ghost_of_Syd on

      Comparing the number of robberies to the population doesn’t make much sense since so much theft happens to tourists, who don’t count toward the base population on the map.

    4. Warcelona.

      I don’t think this is very representative of the reality anyway. Maybe some countries are more honest than others, or maybe the definition of robbery is different.

    5. Top-Grapefruit8099 on

      And now Eastern Europe is safer

      Sweden, a country that was once safer than most if not all European countries, is now one of the most dangerous countries in Europe

      That’s what happens when you vote for liberal woke parties

    6. Fit_Swordfish5248 on

      When you look at the rate of tourism for each of these areas the numbers really aren’t all that surprising. Paris gets 3x more people visiting than nearly anywhere else in Europe.

    7. Weird_Bookkeeper2863 on

      Inevitable „oh people in the east just don’t report theft“ comments incoming.

    8. BornPraline5607 on

      I doubt this represents the actual numbers. When I was in Italy, my wallet was stolen and the italian academy said no to report the theft because the police weren’t going to do anything about it

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