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There is a real danger of "victim blaming" here. A similar thing occurred recently for the South Korean car makers Kia and Hyundai, which experienced soaring car thefts in the US due to relatively low car security standards and the high US crime rate. Some US American journalists, politicians [0] and judges [1] blamed the car makers for the steeply rising car thefts.

However, these manufacturers come from a country where there are much fewer car thefts than in the US and where these cars didn't cause a comparable theft problem. The people blaming Kia and Hyundai would have been well-advised to identify at least as a major part of the problem the US-specific crime rate, not just the South Korean car manufacturers which weren't sufficiently adapted to to this crime.

It's kind of similar to a young naive woman from South Korea doing her vacation in the US, and walking home at night, alone through a dark park in a shady neighborhood. A thing she could expect to safely do in South Korea. But in the US, the worst thing happens. Who is to blame? The women may bear some part of the responsibility by wrongly assuming the US is as safe as South Korea. But I think it's clear the main fault lies with the US criminals, not the victim.

People easily get used to things like that and don't notice it. Until they travel to a country where very different things are normal, and get a culture shock.

[0] https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/hyundai-kia-stolen-car-thef...

[1] https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/hyunda...




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