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On this episode of Inside Politics, host Kevin Klein and Winnipeg Sun columnists Lawrence Pinsky and Royce Koop took on a story that has sparked outrage in Winnipeg: a Dollarama shoplifting incident that ended in shocking violence, a criminal charge against a security guard, and a city once again forced to confront its growing crime crisis. The discussion began with the disturbing video that has now circulated widely, showing a suspected shoplifter being violently subdued by a security guard. Koop drew a hard line, arguing that while shoplifting is not a victimless crime and must be taken seriously, what was seen on the video went far beyond detention and crossed into brutality. He said Canadians should not be forced to accept either rampant theft or excessive violence as normal parts of daily life. Pinsky pushed back, cautioning that the full context remains unknown and that a short clip cannot tell the entire story. He noted that downtown businesses have been repeatedly hit by theft, disorder and intimidation, leaving store owners, staff and security guards on edge. He argued the deeper issue is not just one confrontation, but a broader breakdown of public safety that governments have failed to address. Klein took the conversation to the bigger picture, arguing that the most alarming part of the story is that stores now need security guards just to operate, and even those guards are effectively powerless until something explodes. He said politicians keep making announcements about safety while residents and business owners see the opposite on the ground: rising theft, rising disorder and fewer consequences for repeat offenders. The panel agreed that the roots of the problem go far beyond one Dollarama incident. They pointed to weak bail policies, repeat offenders cycling through the system, under-resourced policing and a refusal by governments to confront organized crime and drug trafficking with real force. Klein argued that too many leaders are afraid to say the obvious — crime is crime — and that excuses such as “survival crime” only deepen division rather than solve the problem. Yet the conversation also turned to a deeper moral challenge: homelessness, addiction and untreated mental illness. Pinsky and Koop both argued that governments should stop tolerating people living in misery on streets, in parks and under bridges, and start treating that reality as a public failure. Klein agreed, calling housing, treatment and intervention not an expense, but an investment in Canada’s future. The result was one of the show’s bluntest discussions yet: crime must be stopped, but so must the social collapse feeding it.