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Do you have any idea how easy it is to wind up with 100 bikes? My God if you let BSOs in the door they start to breed. Have you ever sold anything on craigslist? Dealing with hundreds of craigslist buyers is not a way to dispose of stolen goods, it's a way to go mad. What's going on in this thread is chainlinkers running away with their imaginations and indulging their fear of The Other. Sure there are hot bikes on CL. Pin down one hot bike. One. Not maybe, not slander. Pin one hot bike. Then do something. Until then give it a rest.
Do you have any idea how easy it is to wind up with 100 bikes? My God if you let BSOs in the door they start to breed. Have you ever sold anything on craigslist? Dealing with hundreds of craigslist buyers is not a way to dispose of stolen goods, it's a way to go mad. What's going on in this thread is chainlinkers running away with their imaginations and indulging their fear of The Other. Sure there are hot bikes on CL. Pin down one hot bike. One. Not maybe, not slander. Pin one hot bike. Then do something. Until then give it a rest.
Thieves want to be rid of stolen property. ASAP. Five dollars. They don't hoard it. They certainly don't pay rent and advertise and clean bikes and invest in trucking inventory city to city. The thesis being tested here is just ridiculous. If there is a roomful of stolen bikes just sitting there it is pathetically easy for the police to crack the case and the perps are sitting there waiting to be arrested. It all comes down to the "suspects" are Mexican and lowerclass and don't behave like Anglos. It's the same frame of mind that got edited a bit at the top of the thread where someone accused Ron at NearlyNew of fencing. Ron has been right on that spot 15 years doing Chicago bikers right. And I don't go a month without hearing a tale about the spot on Broadway where they sell hot bikes. It comes down to nothing except Ron is black.
The guy didn't understand you. Sounds suspicious.
Thieves want to be rid of stolen property. ASAP. Five dollars. They don't hoard it. They certainly don't pay rent and advertise and clean bikes and invest in trucking inventory city to city. The thesis being tested here is just ridiculous. If there is a roomful of stolen bikes just sitting there it is pathetically easy for the police to crack the case and the perps are sitting there waiting to be arrested. It all comes down to the "suspects" are Mexican and lowerclass and don't behave like Anglos. It's the same frame of mind that got edited a bit at the top of the thread where someone accused Ron at NearlyNew of fencing. Ron has been right on that spot 15 years doing Chicago bikers right. And I don't go a month without hearing a tale about the spot on Broadway where they sell hot bikes. It comes down to nothing except Ron is black.
The guy didn't understand you. Sounds suspicious.
I find it interesting how the same cast of characters constantly harps on Walmart and Olive Gardens blighting the urban landscape with suburban sprawl -yet will come down on folks "flaunting the laws and regulations" and daring to try and eek out a living and make a buck with a small independant business and creating their own jobs.
In a world where the rules only apply to the little guy a big corporation like McDonalds can end-round rules like Pedestrian Streets on the 2700 block of Milwaukee and get their new mega-drivethru built by greasing the local alderman, but the small guys need to play by the rules and get buried.
Big corpas like Walmart, Olive Garden & McDonalds have teams of lawyers to bend the bevy of rules that exist, armies of accountants to tame all the regulations and red tape, and finally platoons of lobbyists to grease the wheels of Federal, State, & City government to let them do whatever they need to do.
Yet some poor schmuck who wants to buy and sell a few beat-up used bikes out of a garage gets people on the local bike forums all bent of shape and contemplating what to do to shut them down.
It is ANY WONDER most bikes sold in this country roll out the door of a Walmart? They are the only ones bi enough to cut through all the regulations and red tape and still sell something that the poor folks who aren't allowed to make their own jobs and end up working for mini um wage at some big corporation can afford.
I find it interesting how the same cast of characters constantly harps on Walmart and Olive Gardens blighting the urban landscape with suburban sprawl -yet will come down on folks "flaunting the laws and regulations" and daring to try and eek out a living and make a buck with a small independant business and creating their own jobs.
In a world where the rules only apply to the little guy a big corporation like McDonalds can end-round rules like Pedestrian Streets on the 2700 block of Milwaukee and get their new mega-drivethru built by greasing the local alderman, but the small guys need to play by the rules and get buried.
Big corpas like Walmart, Olive Garden & McDonalds have teams of lawyers to bend the bevy of rules that exist, armies of accountants to tame all the regulations and red tape, and finally platoons of lobbyists to grease the wheels of Federal, State, & City government to let them do whatever they need to do.
Yet some poor schmuck who wants to buy and sell a few beat-up used bikes out of a garage gets people on the local bike forums all bent of shape and contemplating what to do to shut them down.
It is ANY WONDER most bikes sold in this country roll out the door of a Walmart? They are the only ones bi enough to cut through all the regulations and red tape and still sell something that the poor folks who aren't allowed to make their own jobs and end up working for mini um wage at some big corporation can afford.
Thank you James.
Since I'm being personally attacked (I can take it) I'll have to eat more bandwidth later but Happy Easter everyone.
Thank you James.
Since I'm being personally attacked (I can take it) I'll have to eat more bandwidth later but Happy Easter everyone.
Buying and selling bikes & bike parts on CL for the pure joy of bikes over the past few years I've seen many "hoarders" and flippers just like this guy. They exist in Humboldt, the South side, Wicker Park/Bucktown, The South side like that dude in West Elsdon, in the burbs like that guy up in McHenry. They are all regular folks and I've dealt with most of the major ones around times many times. I get to talking to most folks I deal with (anyone who has met me IRL knows I like to talk) and I like to make sure the folks I'm dealing with are not thieves. I've met a few that I was pretty sure were and I refuse to deal or associate with them but for the most part the hoarders are NOT thieves as others have said. I shudder to think of what someone would think if they saw my own garage.
I'm not making money on my hobby -unless you call bike tools and really nice bikes put together out of the choicest of the choicest of the parts I scrounge. But I could use a serious culling of my junk pile this spring.
This thread only makes me more cautious to NEVER EVER let anyone I deal with see my garage and to always deal out of a neutral area with only the parts or bikes I've listed. I so don't need Gladys Kravitz or Mrs. Grundy coming down on me or involving the constabulary over BS like this.
spencewine said:
I'm not going to get involved with your soapbox rant, but this is more than "just a few beat up used bikes out of a garage." Why don't you go have a look for yourself, perhaps you'll find your next project.
100%
Match a bike with a victim and it is stolen -but even then is the guy who happens to be in possession of it suddenly a criminal?
Nobody, not the "authorities" or the bike industry takes bike serial numbers or following up on theft with even a modicum of importance. Bike theft is one step below littering and we can see how much people care about THAT in this filthy city.
Anybody who has ever bought or sold a used bike could have been "guilty" of dealing in stolen bikes. It's almost as impossible to prove that a bike is NOT stolen as it is to prove it has.
This thread is ridiculous because it is just Gladys Kravitz and Mrs Grundy wringing their hands and pointing fingers on "hunches." It's beyond ridiculous and is bordering on a witch hunt.
h' 1.0 said:
I don't see much point to asking whether they were acquired. Someone needs to match a bike with a victim, and then we can get police involved.
This site had best take down it's Marketplace section forthwith. Everything there or that has been there is in violation of the above.
I don't have a bicycle for sale at the moment and two of the three bikes in the basement I purchased new and I am still guilty of several hundred counts above just from my parts collection. If that is the standard you want us to live by better to drive a car.
Don't even want to think of how much I am guilty of and my partner is guilty of from the bikes we keep upstairs. I still have the 1959 Schwinn Typhoon my parents bought me for my seventh birthday and I could rot in prison a long time for that one.
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