40% of Americans dread walking alone at night; fear of being murdered nears record-high



The percentage of Americans afraid of taking an evening stroll alone in their own neighborhood has skyrocketed, reaching a three-decade high.

A new Gallup poll conducted last month found that 40% of 1,009 adult respondents fear walking alone at night within a mile of their homes. This was true of 53% of women and 26% of men.

Beside gender, another apparent correlate concerning fear was wealth. Whereas 49% of those making less than $40,000 admitted being fearful of ambling around at night, 39% of those making $40,000 to $99,999 and 31% of those banking over $100,000 expressed similar concern.

The last time dread was this high was in 1993 when America's violent crime rate was 741.1 (per 100,000 inhabitants). According to the FBI, the forcible rape rate for that year was 41.1; the robbery rate was 256; the aggravated assault rate was 440.5; the property crime rate was 4,740; the burglary rate was 1,099.7; the larceny-theft rate was 3,033.9; and the motor vehicle theft rate was 606.3.

The violent crime rate dropped precipitously to 380.7 in 2022 — a year where 47.7% of crimes took place at home and 20% took place on a street, highway, alley or sidewalk. 44% of perpetrators were white; 43% were black; 1.4% were American Indian or Alaska native; less than 1% were Asian; and nearly 10% were marked "unknown."

Fearful particulars

The latest Gallup poll revealed that falling prey to identity theft was the most common crime concern, with 72% of respondents indicating they frequently or occasionally worry about it.

50% indicated they worried about having their car broken into, which makes sense granted motor vehicle theft offenses jumped to a 13-year high in 2022. 44% said they worried about their home being burglarized when they were out and 37% expressed concern about getting mugged.

The fear of being murdered is at a near-record high. Morbid fears began to jump in 2020, rising from 17% that year to 29% in 2022. This year, 28% of American adults surveyed suggested they frequently or occasionally worried about becoming a murder victim.

The FBI Uniform Crime Reporting Program put the murder rate at 6.3 per 100,000 people last year, just slightly lower than in 2021, which saw the highest rate in 23 years.

Bound by concern

For some Americans, it appears these fears can be greatly limiting and possibly even debilitating.

28% of all respondents indicated that fear of crime has prevented them from going to social events like concerts or fairs as well as from talking to strangers.

45% of women told pollsters that fear of crime prevents them from taking walks, jogging, or running alone near their homes. 36% indicated fear of crime precluded them from driving around various parts of their towns or cities.

Gallup also found that 63% of Americans say crime is an extremely or very serious problem — an increase of almost 10 points since 2021 and the highest it has been since the polling outfit began asking in 2000.

77% of Americans said there is more crime across the nation than there was a year ago, and 55% said the same about crime in their area.

These responses do not appear to be based simply on speculation.

17% of respondents indicated they were the victim of a crime over the past 12 months, which could mean anything from rape and assault to being mugged. 28% indicated a member of their household had been victimized.

There is a significant partisan skew to the perception of increased crime across the United States. 58% of Democrats said there was more crime this year than in 2022. 78% of independents and 92% of Republicans indicated there had been an increase.

The polling outfit noted that despite what the FBI data and Bureau of Justice Statistics National Crime Victimization survey say, "Gallup trends indicate there has been an increase in crime victimization since 2020, according to Americans' reports of their own experiences in the past year."

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Video: Stores use decoys and pictures of food to trick customers into believing barren shelves are fully stocked



America's grocery stores are reportedly using decoys and cardboard cutouts of food to persuade customers that the supply chain emergency isn't as grave as some think.

What are the details?

Some stores, according to a Tuesday report from "Inside Edition," are filling previously food-stuffed shelves with hordes of seasonal items in order to make up for the large gaps in product and even placing cardboard sheets of pictures of grocery items and price tags over bare shelves.

Retail analyst Phil Lempert told the outlet that he believes retailers are attempting to stem panic shopping and quell fears that may lead people to begin hoarding items as they did in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.

"What a supermarket is trying to do is hide the fact that there are shortages. They don't want to scare consumers at all," he explained. "They also want to prevent hoarding from take place the way it did in the beginning of COVID. ... We better get used to it. We're gonna see higher prices, we're gonna see more shortages, and frankly, we're going to see retailers try even harder to be able to mask the fact that their store is empty."

Reporter Jim Moret added, "It's a tactic many stores are using to fill empty shelves at a time when the nation is experiencing major shortages of pretty much everything due to the supply chain crisis."

Other examples of such practices include spreading out items of abundance in order to make up for empty space.

Inside Edition shared video of the apparent trickery on Tuesday, and at the time of this reporting, the video has been viewed more than 1.7 million times.

Fake Food Covers Empty Grocery Store Shelves to Hide Shortageswww.youtube.com

What else?

Earlier this month, the U.K.'s Guardian reported that similar incidents are taking place across the pond.

The report read, "Supermarkets are using cardboard cutouts of fruit, vegetables, and other groceries to fill gaps on shelves because supply problems combined with a shift towards smaller product ranges mean many stores are now too big."

One such store is popular U.K. chain Tesco, which has reportedly begun using cardboard and paper images of asparagus, carrots, grapes, and oranges in order to give the appearance of bountiful produce sections amid the supply chain crisis.

"Shoppers have spotted fake carrots in Fakenham, cardboard asparagus in London, pictures of oranges and grapes in Milton Keynes, and 2D washing liquid bottles in Cambridge," the outlet added. "Sainsbury's has also used outline drawings of packaging to fill shelves."

Retail analyst Bryan Roberts told the outlet that the practice has become commonplace over the last year.

"It is not only because of shortages, but because a lot of the larger stores are now simply too big," he said.

Roberts added that cutouts aren't the only tactic grocery retailers are using — some are also "filling meat fridges with bottles of tomato sauce or mayonnaise, spreading packs of beer out across whole aisles, and erecting large posters or other marketing material."