Author Topic: America's Inner City; Urban Issues  (Read 85960 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #100 on: July 30, 2019, 07:36:48 PM »
Nice find.

DougMacG

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #101 on: July 31, 2019, 10:39:22 AM »
Nice find.

Thank you, there were quite a few notable points in that, including the humor:

"It was the rhetoric, and not the comparatively modest sum involved, that made this [LBJ story] a notable episode.  Congressmen joked about LBJ’s “civil rats” bill, with a “rat corps” to be presided over by “a high commissioner of rats.”  “Mr. Speaker,” the typical speech went, “ I think the ‘rat smart thing’ for us to do is to vote down this rat bill ‘rat now.’” Florida Democrat James Haley suggested releasing “federally funded cats” in the cities instead.  The rat bill was successfully revived at the end of the year as a part of a bigger spending bill, but its ignominious treatment in mid-summer foreshadowed the growing revolt against the relentless centralization of modern liberalism."

Also the point that Trump dealt with this at his properties without a federal program is telling.

Most importantly, Trump, who has been there, has hit on rats as a more visual depiction of the worst of our inner cities than race, crime or poverty.  Rich suburbs and skyscrapers don't put up with rats or garbage piled up.  Most of the people in affluent suburbs are white but I can assure you that 'black people' and 'voters of color' don't want to live in bad areas any more than anyone else does.  They aren't there for the crime, corruption, garbage and rats.  They feel trapped and wish for things to be better.

These 'bad neighborhoods' are better symbolized by rats than race.  Rich blacks don't live there.  All of these cities are run locally by Democrats and the Left.  The cities have been run by the Left for as long as they have been bad neighborhoods.  The Left's proposal is the same everyday as it was during the "war on poverty", more of the same.  People there don't want more of the same.  They want something different, solutions to problems.  They just don't know at this point that they want is what Republicans offer, prosperity that only comes from freedom and personal responsibility.  Welfare, welfare and more welfare doesn't get you there.  Trump may be the one who breaks through all the false racism and socialist noise and ties policies to results - on both sides.
« Last Edit: July 31, 2019, 11:53:14 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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14 Baltimore neighborhoods have lower life expectancies than North Korea
« Reply #102 on: August 06, 2019, 06:15:57 AM »
14 Baltimore neighborhoods have lower life expectancies than North Korea

Washington Post April 30, 2015  (Trump's fault?)

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/04/30/baltimores-poorest-residents-die-20-years-earlier-than-its-richest/?noredirect=on

All are Democrat neighborhoods.  Democrats answer:  More of the same.  Republicans are racist for opposing the policies that cause unnecessary suffering.

DougMacG

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues, (race)
« Reply #103 on: August 19, 2019, 04:33:42 AM »
https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2019/08/15/minnesotas-5th-congressional-district-listed-as-worst-di-struct-for-black-americans-to-live/

Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District Listed As Worst District For Black Americans To Live

Reflects badly on Rep. Omar who has no clue what is wrong or how to correct it, and reflects badly on decades of non-stop Leftist governance.  This situation is worthy of discussion whenever the nation is ready to do that.

They are using misleading data IMHO but I like that they are at least trying to expose the problem.


DougMacG

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Re: Poverty was plummeting until War on Poverty 2.0
« Reply #105 on: August 21, 2019, 06:45:40 AM »

https://fee.org/articles/poverty-in-the-us-was-plummeting-until-lyndon-johnson-declared-war-on-it/?fbclid=IwAR26kjeGr9dZurZpwbbGsAkZJD_UAndrrTKpcc4EH-X6APP0SiwJXezevdk

How come this isn't more widely known?  To me it is the great denial of math and science.  The purpose of the trillions and trillions and trillions we send into the inner city is not to make them better off, it is to keep them poor and make them vote Democrat. Cynical, but what else explains it?  To the extent that black people and black families are hurt disproportionately by the flood of free money destroying families and screwing up work incentives, any knowledge of these horribly damaging effects indicates that the supporters and the policies are racist.

Anyone with eyes or data can see that the government has replaced the role of the father and husband.

Who in 2019, some 50 years into this failed experiment, doesn't know that our atrocious welfare system is killing the recipients?

Only the Sargent Schultz defense shields them from the racism of their policies, "I see nothing!  I know nothing!"

G M

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Re: Poverty was plummeting until War on Poverty 2.0
« Reply #106 on: August 21, 2019, 09:19:29 AM »
Government dependence isn't a bug, it's a feature.


https://fee.org/articles/poverty-in-the-us-was-plummeting-until-lyndon-johnson-declared-war-on-it/?fbclid=IwAR26kjeGr9dZurZpwbbGsAkZJD_UAndrrTKpcc4EH-X6APP0SiwJXezevdk

How come this isn't more widely known?  To me it is the great denial of math and science.  The purpose of the trillions and trillions and trillions we send into the inner city is not to make them better off, it is to keep them poor and make them vote Democrat. Cynical, but what else explains it?  To the extent that black people and black families are hurt disproportionately by the flood of free money destroying families and screwing up work incentives, any knowledge of these horribly damaging effects indicates that the supporters and the policies are racist.

Anyone with eyes or data can see that the government has replaced the role of the father and husband.

Who in 2019, some 50 years into this failed experiment, doesn't know that our atrocious welfare system is killing the recipients?

Only the Sargent Schultz defense shields them from the racism of their policies, "I see nothing!  I know nothing!"





DougMacG

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Re: Not all children killed were innocent victims
« Reply #111 on: October 21, 2019, 09:24:58 AM »
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/not-all-children-killed-by-guns-were-innocent-victims-st/article_e56212fd-6870-51c1-8f09-7cb09c776645.html?fbclid=IwAR32pF6FGjxCsnl0_mHKZ8vRmwamowcOIQ6i70rEBE6xKaZgzbBLEwWw8HQ

The reference to children includes criminals and gang members that haven't been under the influence of a parent for years, and are participants themselves in crime.

People visualize a toddler getting into Dad's gun cabinet at home when they hear statistics like this: https://qz.com/1505227/guns-kill-more-more-us-children-per-year-than-cancer/

G M

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Re: Not all children killed were innocent victims
« Reply #112 on: October 21, 2019, 09:34:34 AM »
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/not-all-children-killed-by-guns-were-innocent-victims-st/article_e56212fd-6870-51c1-8f09-7cb09c776645.html?fbclid=IwAR32pF6FGjxCsnl0_mHKZ8vRmwamowcOIQ6i70rEBE6xKaZgzbBLEwWw8HQ

The reference to children includes criminals and gang members that haven't been under the influence of a parent for years, and are participants themselves in crime.

People visualize a toddler getting into Dad's gun cabinet at home when they hear statistics like this: https://qz.com/1505227/guns-kill-more-more-us-children-per-year-than-cancer/

Yes, that's the narrative the MSM-DNC wants to push.

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: America's Inner City Cartels
« Reply #113 on: November 19, 2019, 11:38:24 AM »
America’s Inner-City Cartels
As activists smear and hinder police, will the nation surrender to the forces of lawlessness?
By Robert L. Woodson
Nov. 18, 2019 7:06 pm ET

PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES/UPPERCUT RF
Headlines were seized this month by the ambush and murder of three American women and six children by drug traffickers in Mexico. Americans were naturally shocked by the brutality of the cartels. But it would be a mistake to think it doesn’t happen here. Similarly brutal crimes frequently occur among black Americans in our own cities, generating much less coverage. There are signs that gang violence is rising—and spilling over its boundaries in a way that puts more innocent people at risk.

Street gangs and other criminal rings have even abandoned an implicit moral code that prohibits targeting “civilians”—women, children and others not directly involved in their “beefs.” In more than 40 years of working with local anticrime groups and documenting their solutions to youth violence, I have never witnessed the depravity that is occurring today on the streets of black neighborhoods around America.

Nationwide, the tragic number of unsolved murders was documented in a 2018 study by the Washington Post that mapped nearly 55,000 homicides in 55 cities. The study identified inner-city areas “where murder is common but arrests are rare,” dubbing these crime-plagued communities “pockets of impunity.”

Take St. Louis, where 14 children and teens were shot dead in a three-month period from May through July. By August, only one arrest had been made in any of those cases—a bleak trend police attribute to locals’ unwillingness to report suspects. Even the brother of a victim declared that “around St. Louis we don’t snitch on people. We keep it in the streets.”

In Chicago, gang members recently kidnapped and shot a 9-year-old brother of a rival in an execution-style retaliatory strike. These thugs consider the deaths of innocent toddlers and children to be collateral damage of street warfare. Victims include a 2-year-old shot to death in her mother’s arms and a 7-year-old dressed as a bumblebee shot while trick-or-treating.

Children are perpetrators as well as victims of this violence. In Minneapolis, mobs of robbers have beaten victims unconscious and kicked them in the face even while they lay helpless. According to police reports, the attackers include girls as young as 13. In Washington, about a dozen attackers, who police believe to be boys and girls ages 14 and 15, attacked two men mercilessly outside a Hilton hotel, kicking and stomping them while they were injured and on the ground. All these young perpetrators were black.

Low-income black neighborhoods throughout the U.S. are becoming more isolated and more dangerous in part because of the efforts of self-proclaimed social-justice warriors, including members of Black Lives Matter. These activists demonize law enforcement, making it harder for police to gain residents’ trust. They sometimes openly celebrate violence against police.

As hostility to law enforcement has increased, antipolice demonstrations and protests have resulted in “police nullification.” These are instances when officers stand down, opting not to enforce certain laws, to avoid accusations of racism. Their withdrawal makes dangerous neighborhoods even more vulnerable.

These attacks on law enforcement have caused a sharp drop in police recruitment. According to one survey, 62% of police departments nationally have reported decreases in recruiting in recent years. Minneapolis police reported that, in a one-year period, they were unable to respond immediately to more than 6,000 “priority one” 911 calls, which include reports of sexual assault, shootings and robberies.

Adding to this devastation, many black social critics, pundits and professors articulate a message of despair, victimhood and conflict. They tell people trapped in these inner-city killing fields that regardless of what blacks are doing to one another, it isn’t their fault. For them, blames lies only with the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow.

To avoid having to explain why these problems persist after 40 years of black political rule in many of these cities, the apologists point to their all-purpose villain: systemic and institutional racism. Police and prosecutors, they say, are merely enforcers of white-supremacist culture that pervades society. The most dangerous thing about this message is that it exempts inner-city blacks from personal responsibility and suggests they are helpless in the face of their circumstances.

The elite promoters of this blanket forgiveness don’t suffer the consequences of their advocacy because they don’t live in the ZIP Codes where rates of crime and violence are high. Most live in safe, well-to-do communities where the police are encouraged to enforce the laws, supplemented by private security.

As the social-justice warriors and race-grievance experts continue to wage war against the police, trust of law enforcement deteriorates further, and predators face no consequences. Law-abiding citizens in the afflicted communities are sometimes forced to seek protection from the people preying on them. America is on the verge of surrendering authority to the lawless forces in our inner cities. In short, we could have Mexico in America.

Mr. Woodson is president and founder of the Woodson Center.

Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Armed kids as young as 10 carjack more than a dozen people on South Side, police say

https://www.fox5ny.com/news/armed-kids-as-young-as-10-carjack-more-than-a-dozen-people-on-south-side-police-say

CHICAGO - Alyssa Blanchard was so traumatized after being carjacked at gunpoint last week outside her Calumet Heights home that she’s now scared to go outside.

Chicago police say a group of children, ages 10 to 17, carjacked Blanchard and at least 15 other people since late June — wreaking havoc on Blanchard’s generally peaceful South Side neighborhood.

Police said shots were fired by the suspects in two of the carjackings, but no one was hit.

“I’m scared to use my garage. I don’t feel safe in my neighborhood,” said Blanchard, an elementary school teacher at Chicago Public Schools.

What’s especially painful for Blanchard was seeing her stolen BMW used the next day to carjack a woman in the parking lot of Trinity Hospital, a few blocks from her home, she said.

“I don’t want to have to tell my kid about how some young woman was killed or shot with kids using my vehicle. It was traumatizing,” Blanchard, 44, said.

Blanchard was carjacked July 14 while returning home in the early evening. As she pulled into her alley garage on South Kingston Avenue, she noticed a vehicle and three or four children come toward her.

Two children armed with handguns pointed them to her head and ordered her out of her BMW, she said. One child looked as young as 11, she said.

“It was so instantaneous … I was just scared for my life. I thought, ‘this is it,’” she said.

They took her purse, which had about $300 inside, and jumped inside her BMW and rode off, she said.

Blanchard said the children used her BMW the next day to carjack a woman in the parking lot of Trinity Hospital. In that carjacking, a 21-year-old was seated in her Lexus when four or five teens exited a BMW, with two of them confronting her with guns, police said.

G M

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Is there some sort of pattern we can associate with crime like this? Perhaps a political party that controls these places?

Armed kids as young as 10 carjack more than a dozen people on South Side, police say

https://www.fox5ny.com/news/armed-kids-as-young-as-10-carjack-more-than-a-dozen-people-on-south-side-police-say

CHICAGO - Alyssa Blanchard was so traumatized after being carjacked at gunpoint last week outside her Calumet Heights home that she’s now scared to go outside.

Chicago police say a group of children, ages 10 to 17, carjacked Blanchard and at least 15 other people since late June — wreaking havoc on Blanchard’s generally peaceful South Side neighborhood.

Police said shots were fired by the suspects in two of the carjackings, but no one was hit.

“I’m scared to use my garage. I don’t feel safe in my neighborhood,” said Blanchard, an elementary school teacher at Chicago Public Schools.

What’s especially painful for Blanchard was seeing her stolen BMW used the next day to carjack a woman in the parking lot of Trinity Hospital, a few blocks from her home, she said.

“I don’t want to have to tell my kid about how some young woman was killed or shot with kids using my vehicle. It was traumatizing,” Blanchard, 44, said.

Blanchard was carjacked July 14 while returning home in the early evening. As she pulled into her alley garage on South Kingston Avenue, she noticed a vehicle and three or four children come toward her.

Two children armed with handguns pointed them to her head and ordered her out of her BMW, she said. One child looked as young as 11, she said.

“It was so instantaneous … I was just scared for my life. I thought, ‘this is it,’” she said.

They took her purse, which had about $300 inside, and jumped inside her BMW and rode off, she said.

Blanchard said the children used her BMW the next day to carjack a woman in the parking lot of Trinity Hospital. In that carjacking, a 21-year-old was seated in her Lexus when four or five teens exited a BMW, with two of them confronting her with guns, police said.

G M

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DeBlasio to NYFC "Drop dead"!
« Reply #124 on: August 11, 2020, 04:46:35 PM »

G M

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DougMacG

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America's Inner City; United Airlines leaving downtown Chicago
« Reply #126 on: August 13, 2020, 05:37:21 AM »
https://viewfromthewing.com/united-airlines-evacuates-operations-from-downtown-chicago-due-to-riots/

Very sad to see the downward spiral of these Dem run cities.  When you can't solve your problems, the good people tend to leave and the bad take over.

G M

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Hide the decline
« Reply #127 on: August 13, 2020, 01:01:34 PM »

G M

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Minnetroit
« Reply #128 on: August 14, 2020, 03:01:28 PM »


DougMacG

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Re: Minnetroit
« Reply #130 on: August 16, 2020, 10:22:22 AM »
http://ace.mu.nu/archives/389632.php

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4HZahNuBOY

Driving up the price of housing with over regulation and over taxation doesn't hurt the existing suppliers as much as they might think.  It hurts the consumer, the renters, the working poor, the future buyers.  What would hurt suppliers most would be free market competition running wild, driving prices down. 

G M

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Re: Minnetroit
« Reply #131 on: August 18, 2020, 10:35:03 AM »
https://legalinsurrection.com/2020/08/black-lives-matter-protesters-harass-neighbors-of-minneapolis-police-union-chief/

http://ace.mu.nu/archives/389632.php

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4HZahNuBOY

Driving up the price of housing with over regulation and over taxation doesn't hurt the existing suppliers as much as they might think.  It hurts the consumer, the renters, the working poor, the future buyers.  What would hurt suppliers most would be free market competition running wild, driving prices down.

DougMacG

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Re: Minnetroit
« Reply #132 on: August 18, 2020, 03:13:38 PM »
quote author=G M
https://legalinsurrection.com/2020/08/black-lives-matter-protesters-harass-neighbors-of-minneapolis-police-union-chief/

Next we see how well this polls statewide, nationwide.  Soccer moms, is THIS your party?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=2&v=iJO1AnGPmP4&feature=emb_logo

Once or twice before, Democrats have overplayed their hand.

G M

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Re: Minnetroit
« Reply #133 on: August 18, 2020, 04:42:57 PM »
quote author=G M
https://legalinsurrection.com/2020/08/black-lives-matter-protesters-harass-neighbors-of-minneapolis-police-union-chief/

Next we see how well this polls statewide, nationwide.  Soccer moms, is THIS your party?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=2&v=iJO1AnGPmP4&feature=emb_logo

Once or twice before, Democrats have overplayed their hand.

They are getting ready to do it like they did in 1861.


G M

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No worries, just 250,000 people or so
« Reply #134 on: August 18, 2020, 04:46:18 PM »

DougMacG

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DougMacG

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #136 on: August 19, 2020, 07:50:41 AM »
In Chicago 2,500 people have been shot, a rise of 44 per cent on last year. In Philadelphia the tally is 1,203, a rise of 36 per cent. More than a thousand people have been shot in New York city, a rise of 84 per cent, with murders up 29 per cent. In Kansas City, murders are up by 38 per cent.
        - Times of London today

“You guys won”: Seattle Police Officer Quits Because of BLM Protests
Those were the words that came from a Seattle police officer to a BLM protester, saying he was resigning from the department.
https://welovetrump.com/2020/08/17/you-guys-won-seattle-police-officer-quits-because-of-blm-protests/?utm_source=newsletter_vm&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=vm

(I thought the numbers were outrageous BEFORE the increases.)
« Last Edit: August 19, 2020, 08:17:00 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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Minneapolis and policing
« Reply #137 on: September 18, 2020, 06:57:20 AM »
"WHO wants no law enforcement?  WHO??!! "

Watch 7 minutes. Video at the link. Save yourself a trip into the city to see what people here think.

Video with the Principal of Mpls North High School, the Polars, describing the problem with passion - and predicting the video will be taken down for saying too much.

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2020/09/from-a-minneapolis-principal-a-cry-from-the-heart.php

Does anyone detect a shift in political views taking place?  These are so called liberal policies in a so called liberal city she talking about. Complete failure.

When the big get out the vote push comes through, what are they going to vote for?  More of the same? For how long?

Incidentally, the kids shot that they are honoring, one killed, were campaign workers for the Black conservative Republican endorsed opponent of Rep. Ilhan Omar.

What they now call nationwide, the Minneapolis Effect, where violent crime srges when law enforcement retreats, she describes first hand.
« Last Edit: September 18, 2020, 07:01:07 AM by Crafty_Dog »


DougMacG

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #139 on: January 03, 2021, 06:45:31 AM »
Chicago ends 2020 with 769 homicides as gun violence surges

https://apnews.com/article/homicide-chicago-violence-coronavirus-pandemic-gun-violence-be4b972267e31358dd165925d5a33cce

Roughly the same carnage to US troops in Iraq in the worst years of war, except that war had an end to it.

ccp

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #140 on: January 03, 2021, 08:24:06 AM »
and that is just in ONE city

overall  in the entire US last yr police shootings :

https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/police-shootings-database/

now which stat will get onto the DNCNN and MSDNC?

DougMacG

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America's Inner City; Urban Issues, Can Minneapolis recover, Hinderaker
« Reply #141 on: February 04, 2021, 09:25:38 AM »
One of the world's greatest cities - down the tubes.  Once again, the continuing threat is from the enemy within.  We know how to build a great city, a great civilization, and we do the opposite.

https://spectator.org/minneapolis-riots-covid-american-spectator-print-magazine/

Can Minneapolis Make a Comeback?
A reminder for those who forget about the riots that ruined an American city.
by JOHN HINDERAKER
January 8, 2021

For five days and nights following the death of George Floyd on May 25, the city of Minneapolis was the scene of riots, arson, and looting. A two-mile stretch of Lake Street, located twenty blocks south of downtown, was almost completely burned. Local politicians’ reactions to the riots were sympathetic: officials expressed solidarity with the rioters’ concerns, the Minneapolis Police Department’s Third Precinct station house was abandoned to the rioters, and force adequate to end the violence, in the form of the National Guard, was not used for several days.

Minneapolis’s City Council responded to the Floyd riots by vowing to defund the city’s police department. Lacking legal authority to do that, the Council passed a measure that would put defunding the department on the ballot at this year’s election, an initiative that the city’s Charter Commission mercifully tabled. Nevertheless, retirements and disability claims have significantly reduced the police department’s manpower. A group of Minneapolis residents, mostly black, have sued the city, alleging that the number of police officers has fallen below the legally required minimum.

In the three months after the riots, there were forty homicides in Minneapolis, an increase of 150 percent over the average of the previous five years. Violent crime of all types spiked, and gunfire was reported at dozens of locations around the city.

Then, on August 26, rioters attacked the Nicollet Mall, the heart of downtown Minneapolis. The Target store on the ground floor of Target Corporation’s headquarters was sacked. Arsonists burned a popular bar. Looters smashed the windows of department stores and walked out with armloads of merchandise. Law enforcement was more or less absent. Since then, an uneasy peace has settled over the city, while crime continues at elevated levels.

Liberal neighborhood groups in the city initially pledged not to call the police in response to crime, sharing the view of the president of Minneapolis’s City Council that calling 911 “comes from a place of privilege.” But reality eventually intruded, and the Council summoned the city’s Chief of Police, demanding to know what he was doing about rising crime. Most recently, the city is contemplating bringing in officers from the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office and the Metro Transit Police to supplement the city’s depleted police force.

Today, Lake Street remains a burned-out ruin. It will take around $500 million to rebuild the destroyed blocks, and there is no apparent source for that kind of money. Downtown Minneapolis is a ghost town where the homeless outnumber businesspeople and shoppers. Crime isn’t the only reason, of course — many businesses had already begun working remotely before the May riots. But COVID doesn’t explain the boarded-up storefronts along Nicollet Mall or the reluctance that many feel to set foot in the city.

Polling by the Center of the American Experiment in September found that the riots and the crime that followed have made a deep impression not only on residents of Minneapolis, but across the state of Minnesota. For the first time in such surveys, the state’s residents identify “personal safety” as their number one concern. Of those who listed safety as their top concern, 54 percent said they have little or no confidence in current state and local officials. And 72 percent of non-Minneapolis residents said that if the city’s police department were defunded, they would be less likely to enter the city to eat dinner or attend sports events and concerts.

Minneapolis’s future is very much in doubt. Over the years, the city’s reputation as a desirable place to live, based on low crime, a progressive business environment, and a culture friendly to families, has helped to make up for what many see as a less-than-optimal climate, featuring long, cold, snowy winters. But that positive image has been badly damaged by the riots that were televised into homes across the country, and reputations once lost are hard to recover.

The city’s economic situation is troubling, as well. In recent decades, the Twin Cities metropolitan area, of which Minneapolis is the business hub, has experienced below-average economic growth. The area persistently loses middle- and upper-income residents to other states, while attracting low-income residents. Rioting, looting, and arson — and, perhaps worse, a perceived inept response to those crimes by city and state officials — can only accelerate that demographic trend.

A more immediate concern for the city might be a drop in convention business. Once the COVID situation improves enough to resume meeting in person, it is hard to imagine event planners around the country choosing Minneapolis for their annual meetings or sporting events. According to Meet Minneapolis, conventions and sporting events such as the Super Bowl attracted 34.5 million visitors in 2019, supporting 37,091 jobs and adding $8 million to the city’s tax coffers. The city also relies on hospitality taxes to pay the debt on major infrastructure projects such as Target Center and the Minneapolis Convention Center. Massive drops in revenue from these sources will start a domino effect on city resources that won’t get better until the city’s reputation improves enough to attract future events.

Many wonder when, if ever, downtown Minneapolis will be restored to its former vitality. Office buildings now stand empty, and local businesses seem to have little interest in bringing their employees back to the city. Target Corporation has announced that it will not bring employees back to its corporate headquarters until June 2021 at the earliest. Piper Sandler, a major investment bank, is publicly reported to be mulling a move out of the city. Some smaller companies have already announced that they are leaving the city for suburban or other locations, and a recent survey by the Downtown Council identified forty-five businesses that are either no longer considering moving to downtown Minneapolis or are looking to leave.

There may be worse yet to come. Leasing companies reportedly are predicting that as current leases expire, or termination clauses can be invoked, there will be a massive exodus from Minneapolis office buildings.

Throughout its history, Minneapolis benefited from business leaders who were actively engaged in civic life and who played the leading role in driving economic development. But times have changed. The current generation of business leaders are, for the most part, not natives, and are not disposed to get involved in public affairs in any way that could be deemed controversial. Thus, the city’s business community has been virtually silent in the face of a crisis that has both public safety and economic dimensions.

Will Minneapolis recover? Not under its current leadership. The city’s experience over the last six months demonstrates the inadequacy of feel-good liberalism to deal with serious issues of violent crime and economic stagnation. Unless Minneapolis’s residents are willing to vote for a different sort of leadership in next year’s city elections, little is likely to change.


DougMacG

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Minneapolis' largest employer Target Corp closing downtown headquarters
« Reply #143 on: March 14, 2021, 09:20:52 PM »
Minneapolis' largest employer Target Corp closing downtown headquarters.

https://noqreport.com/2021/03/14/target-announces-its-abandoning-its-minneapolis-headquarters-heres-why-its-no-surprise/

Next will go the naming of NBA arena Target Center and Minnesota Twins home stadium Target Field?

G M

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Re: Minneapolis' largest employer Target Corp closing downtown headquarters
« Reply #144 on: March 14, 2021, 11:53:35 PM »
Minneapolis' largest employer Target Corp closing downtown headquarters.

https://noqreport.com/2021/03/14/target-announces-its-abandoning-its-minneapolis-headquarters-heres-why-its-no-surprise/

Next will go the naming of NBA arena Target Center and Minnesota Twins home stadium Target Field?

Is Minnetroit or Minnadishu better for rebranding the city?

DougMacG

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Re: Minneapolis' largest employer Target Corp closing downtown headquarters
« Reply #145 on: March 15, 2021, 06:59:38 AM »
Minneapolis' largest employer Target Corp closing downtown headquarters.

https://noqreport.com/2021/03/14/target-announces-its-abandoning-its-minneapolis-headquarters-heres-why-its-no-surprise/

Next will go the naming of NBA arena Target Center and Minnesota Twins home stadium Target Field?

Is Minnetroit or Minnadishu better for rebranding the city?

Who will maintain the vacant skyscrapers?

G M

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Re: Minneapolis' largest employer Target Corp closing downtown headquarters
« Reply #146 on: March 15, 2021, 12:13:01 PM »
Minneapolis' largest employer Target Corp closing downtown headquarters.

https://noqreport.com/2021/03/14/target-announces-its-abandoning-its-minneapolis-headquarters-heres-why-its-no-surprise/

Next will go the naming of NBA arena Target Center and Minnesota Twins home stadium Target Field?

Is Minnetroit or Minnadishu better for rebranding the city?

Who will maintain the vacant skyscrapers?

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=detroit+building+collapse&ia=web

DougMacG

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #147 on: April 12, 2021, 12:38:20 PM »
"The National Guard was deployed in Minneapolis as hundreds of people looted and rioted into the early hours Monday after a black man was shot dead while trying to flee arrest"  - NY Post

   - Um, the shooting in Brooklyn Center MN was not in Minneapolis.

"Black man fatally shot; protests, looting ensues"   - Mpls StarTribune headline
https://www.startribune.com/brooklyn-center-police-fatally-shoot-man-20-inflaming-tensions-during-the-derek-chauvin-trial/600044821/
   - Since when do we identify race First in a crime headline.  Does does the headline read, 'black man victim', in nearly every murder in Chicago?

"our state mourns another life of a Black man taken by law enforcement," MN Dem Gov Walz said
   - Is he black first, man second and human not mentioned?  Why is this all about race?

The provocative word there is "another".  I am not aware of "another" situation where a (female, don't know the race yet) officer thought she was shooting her taser and discharged her firearm.  This is not "another", like one in a long string.  This is something new.

Last time Duante fled police, police did not shoot him.  He was black then too.  No headline.  No riot.  No pattern established.  Who protests suspects resisting and fleeing?

Could we just say, another resisting, fleeing suspect shot (accidentally) by Police?  Or just tell the truth in journalism or as Governor writing the first day on social media: 'We don't know what happened yet or why.'

But someone (everyone) is trying to stir the race pot.

Riot video at link.
https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/tyler-o-neil/2021/04/12/rioters-and-looters-ravage-city-near-minneapolis-after-duante-wright-shooting-n1439164
This is the suburbs, people. 
Was this criminal group expecting a problem today.  How did they organize?  Where did they come from?
« Last Edit: April 12, 2021, 01:10:21 PM by DougMacG »

ccp

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #148 on: April 12, 2021, 03:25:28 PM »
".Last time Duante fled police, police did not shoot him"

I would love to see a Black Democrat come out in public

and say

"you know what "

"maybe our youth should stop resisting arrest"

"maybe they should cooperate with the police"

"the vast majority of these things would cease to occur"

How bout it Brock?

Instead big business and big DNC power playing going on - we all know

Leave out Ben Crump and the rest of lawyers

just pay the family the 30 million and get it over with

we can't bring the kid back

but maybe instead of quick to blame all the police - "we need to do better"

what about the other half of the equation doing better?




DougMacG

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #149 on: April 12, 2021, 05:07:48 PM »
"maybe [people] should stop resisting arrest"

Amen.


This isn't funny anymore.  They canceled my USTA match tonight because of curfew - nowhere near the sites of the problems, that they created and they won't solve.  Cannot travel on public street after 7pm in 3 counties.  Emergency alerts to all cell phones.  One of those counties, Hennepin, has an economy larger than 8 states.  Hennepin County without counting Minneapolis is bigger than 5 states.  They shut it all down. Our lives and activities and free choices are NON ESSENTIAL.  It's Martial Law.

Canceled showings on a house for sale.  Can't go out and defend my property - that they won't defend.  People can't go out and help someone in need.  No communication on the rules.  No notice to prepare for it.  No guidelines for exceptions.  It's eery quiet, like after 9/11.

Don't break the rules.  No idea what the penalties are.  There will be lots of law enforcement out - and the reason given for the shutdown is that aw enforcement has been out shooting people haphazardly.  So stay in.
« Last Edit: April 12, 2021, 05:40:05 PM by DougMacG »