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Yes of course, there are means by which creditors are supposed to be able to address outstanding debts and by which government departments can attempt to recover money owed @Hippo My point is that I am seeing a good deal of firsthand anecdotal evidence (as well as these things being widely reported in the news) that the mechanisms for making it all work are not being applied, or at least the application is patchy. One more anecdote from an acquaintance who is homeless and has been stealing food, concerns the way that she's been telling the shop concerned what she's doing and inviting them to call the police. The police don't turn up, apparently, despite her waiting around to be apprehended. Eventually as time goes by it gets to closing time and the people in the shop want to go home so she wanders off. This is very much in line with recent press reports concerning shoplifting. So there are significant glitches in the system. The reek of weed in the centre of our local town is pervasive, and whilst you occasionally see police on patrol, they do not appear to challenge the people from whom it is emanating, despite it recently having been recategorised from a class C to a class B.
There are certainly examples of where they've gone after people with considerable vigour. All those subpostmasters and mistresses who've been in the news again lately, for example. But the mechanisms for maintaining order more often resemble a house of cards rather than the iron fist of the carceral state.
There are certainly examples of where they've gone after people with considerable vigour. All those subpostmasters and mistresses who've been in the news again lately, for example. But the mechanisms for maintaining order more often resemble a house of cards rather than the iron fist of the carceral state.