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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 21, 2022

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If anything, an inflated fear of being the victim of crime (esp after a publicized incident) despite its statistical unlikelihood tends to be right-coded.

I don't think so. It's endemic from women, for instance, who are less likely to be victims of overwhelmingly most types of crime.

I think you are mistaken. It has been right-coded for decades, and virtually every person I have met in my life who has expressed such sentiments has been conservative leaning. In fact, being overly concerned with crime is one of the attributes of conservatism -- hence, the old saying that a conservative is a liberal who has been mugged.

That isn't usually framed in terms of "oooh it makes me feel less safe" though -- safetyism is absolutely left and female coded. Additionally, only certain sorts of crime are worth consideration -- the aversion to talking about gang shootings and drug crime is notable.

Right wing concern about crime tends to be more of an "it's bad for society and symptomatic of a failing social contract" objection, by comparison. Less personal, most of the time, because conservatives by and large don't live in the (mostly left-controlled) cities where crime is most epidemic. So the specific personal safetyist concerns OP is talking about are absolutely leftist as far as I can tell.

The OP was writing about people who said, "because of this incident, I am afraid of being harmed if I do X." I am talking about the exact same thing: people who say, "I refuse to ride the subway" or "I refuse to go to neighborhood X" or what have you. I am not talking about policy discussions.

That isn’t usually framed in terms of “oooh it makes me feel less safe”

sure it is. how else would you even frame it? the impression i get from right-wingers who support “tough-on-crime” policies is that their desired outcome is to make things safer.