Author Topic: America's Inner City; Urban Issues  (Read 85425 times)

Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #151 on: April 17, 2021, 10:55:28 AM »
I noticed the buildings all boarded up on West Broadway in N Mpls,  nowhere near the George Floyd no-go zone, bracing for the verdict.

Nothing says fair trial like threatening to burn the city down with the wrong verdict.

Taco Bell, one of the last standing fast food places there is all boards across the front, no cars in front, and big sign that says Dining Room Open!  What could go wrong in a dining room with no windows in a war zone?

Small irony that the plywood costs more than the windows in our upside economy. 

DougMacG

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Denver, California, homeless camp in rich liberal neighborhood
« Reply #152 on: May 24, 2021, 05:53:22 AM »
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/proposed-homeless-camp-church-parking-lot-unsettles-progressive-denver-neighborhood-n1267181

Are you still liberal when they defecate on your front step?

Or do you begin to learn something about programs, personal responsibility and unintended(?) consequences?
« Last Edit: May 24, 2021, 05:58:24 AM by DougMacG »

G M

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Re: Denver, California, homeless camp in rich liberal neighborhood
« Reply #153 on: May 25, 2021, 02:21:13 PM »
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/proposed-homeless-camp-church-parking-lot-unsettles-progressive-denver-neighborhood-n1267181

Are you still liberal when they defecate on your front step?

Or do you begin to learn something about programs, personal responsibility and unintended(?) consequences?

How many of these people fled the PRK and then brought their voting habits to Colorado?


ccp

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Child hero
« Reply #155 on: June 20, 2021, 08:10:15 PM »
The shock of this video showing 2 children almost being killed was the first thing.

The second part I almost did not notice is
how brave the older child was in pulling the younger girl under her to try and shield her from the gunfire

Amazing concern for a another (sibling I am guessing ) from a small child :

https://www.yahoo.com/news/shocking-footage-shows-gunman-repeatedly-181012898.html

DougMacG

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Minneapolis
« Reply #156 on: July 11, 2021, 06:08:42 AM »
https://nypost.com/2021/07/10/how-minneapolis-residents-overturned-decision-to-defund-police/

Note:  This guy would have been considered far Left a short time ago.  But he wants police protection and less crime in his neighborhood.
« Last Edit: July 12, 2021, 05:01:42 AM by Crafty_Dog »

G M

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #157 on: July 11, 2021, 09:14:15 AM »
https://nypost.com/2021/07/10/how-minneapolis-residents-overturned-decision-to-defund-police/

Note:  This guy would have been considered far Left a short time ago.  But he wants police protection and less crime in his neighborhood.

Even if fully staffed, MPD will be hamstrung for decades. Proactive policing is dead.

DougMacG

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #158 on: August 14, 2021, 04:46:55 AM »
Received in the email, from police sources.

"safety alert this weekend for North Minneapolis and knowing that many staff and participants live North, here is some key information just received this evening:
 
Reasons for Heightened Precaution:
There is a threat of violent retaliation on W. Broadway and across the Northside. A leader of a major gang sect was murdered last Saturday at the Winner's Gas station on Lyndale and Broadway. His funeral is Saturday in East St. Paul. After the funeral there will be a horse drawn carriage procession down W. Broadway, up Penn, ending at the Crystal Cemetery on Dowling. These plans may change but at this point we need to proceed as if it will be happening.
Violence Prevention specialists have been unable to convince the gang sects to stand down.
Shortage of police to address the violence happening across the city; in the last 5 days there have been 5 people murdered 4 of them were in North Minneapolis.
Safety Protocols Planned and in Place:
The department is on high alert. More enforcement is being sought.
The Office of Violence Prevention has teams working in the community.
The City has been notifying businesses along W. Broadway to take extra precautions.
Advice on Safety Precautions:
As always but especially for this weekend and especially over North this weekend:
Be aware of your surroundings at all times.
Stay in well lit areas.
Listen to your instincts. If something seems unsafe, leave. Do not second guess yourself at this time.
Don't travel alone if at all possible.
If someone hits your vehicle from behind, DO NOT get out. Proceed to the nearest police precinct and report the accident and/or call the police. The police have described this as a carjacking trap for many unsuspecting people."

   - How am I supposed to run my business?

ccp

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Terror warning in Minnesota
« Reply #159 on: August 15, 2021, 08:46:08 AM »
Doug,

That is truly unbelievable and disgusting
We can't even count on our government to protect us and our property
And they won't even let us protect our own person and property

yet all we here from the lying media and FBI and DC people is the biggest threat are the proud boys who have NOT been terrorizing anyone

What you posted above is like a civil defense warning of an impending terror attack.


DougMacG

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North Minneapolis
« Reply #160 on: August 15, 2021, 12:26:19 PM »
Danger advisory noted, instead of working on housing for the poor in North Minneapolis this gorgeous summer weekend I'm playing tennis at the nicest country clubs and boating on Lake Minnetonka.  Screw them. 

Strange thing is I'm leaving City of Minneapolis housing business because the regulatory burden is far worse than the crime.  Drug lords and their pawns fight each other with a few stray bullets.  That's nothing like feeling the government is out to get you - and finding out it's not paranoia.
« Last Edit: August 16, 2021, 02:09:19 PM by Crafty_Dog »

ccp

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LAPD massive infiltration of gangs
« Reply #161 on: September 14, 2021, 07:51:02 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #162 on: September 22, 2021, 01:57:42 AM »
OPINION  UPWARD MOBILITY
The Destructive Legacy of the Great Society
Government subsidies for antisocial behavior stalled decades worth of black progress.

By Jason L. Riley
Sept. 21, 2021 6:31 pm ET


The Democrats’ $3.5 trillion proposal to expand the U.S. safety net is being described as a make-or-break moment for the Biden presidency. Regarding electoral politics in the short term, that may well be true. But some of us are more concerned about what it could mean for the country beyond the next election or two.


Liberals view a larger welfare state as an unalloyed good, but what’s the track record? Entitlement programs were dramatically expanded in the 1960s in the service of a war on poverty, yet poverty fell at a slower rate after the Great Society initiatives were implemented, and overall dependency on the government for food, shelter and other basic necessities increased. According to Howard Husock, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and author of a coming book on housing policy, “The Poor Side of Town: And Why We Need It,” the median time a family spends in New York City public housing today is 19 years. And 10% of public housing residents in the city have been there for more than 40 years. Housing intended to help families through a rough patch has become a multigenerational trap for some.

Democrats are now aiming to create new entitlements and expand the existing ones, not only for the poor but also for the professional class. Workers making $200,000 a year would be eligible for a new national paid family and medical leave program. Earlier this year the American Rescue Plan Act expanded the child tax credit for households earning as much as $150,000. Liberals pitch these social programs in the name of helping underprivileged minority groups and reducing inequality, but the lesson of the 1960s is that government relief can put in place incentives that have the opposite effect.

Between 1940 and 1960 the percentage of black families living in poverty declined by 40 points as blacks increased their years of education and migrated from poorer rural areas to more prosperous urban environs in the South and North. No welfare program has ever come close to replicating that rate of black advancement, which predates affirmative action programs that often receive credit for creating the black middle class. Moreover, what we experienced in the wake of the Great Society interventions was slower progress or outright retrogression. Black labor-force participation rates fell, black unemployment rates rose, and the black nuclear family disintegrated. In 1960 fewer than 25% of black children were being raised by a single mother; within four decades, it was more than half.


Antisocial behavior is closely associated with family breakdown, so it’s no surprise that more fatherless homes led to higher violent crime rates. The criminologist Barry Latzer has noted that black male homicide rates had been falling in the 1940s (by 18%) and in the 1950s (by 22%), yet this trend would reverse itself beginning in the late 1960s and continue to worsen for nearly three decades. The political left likes to cite the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow. But what about the legacy of the massive welfare-state interventions in the 1960s?


“The greatest twenty-five years of black progress after Emancipation itself came between the early postwar period and around 1973,” writes labor economist Richard Vedder in the current issue of the Independent Review. “The real median income of the black population more than doubled between 1948 and 1973, increasing an astonishing 3 percent per year. If average instead of medians are used to calculate real income, the increase was even larger.”

Another recent analysis of black upward mobility in the 20th century, by Harvard political scientist Robert Putnam and co-author Shaylyn Romney Garrett, reached a similar conclusion. “Overall, African American incomes rose relative to white incomes for the first two-thirds of the century,” they write, and “most scholars agree that income levels by race converged at the greatest rate between 1940 and 1970.”

The welfare state is often discussed in relation to its effect on racial and ethnic minorities, yet crime, single parenting and drug abuse also increased among poor whites in the aftermath of the Great Society. When the government indulges and subsidizes counterproductive behavior, we tend to get more of it. Aside from how all this indiscriminate government benevolence has affected individuals, there’s also the matter of its long-term effect on America’s standard of living. By undermining the development of human capital and allowing—even encouraging—larger and larger swaths of the less-productive population to live off their more-productive brethren, we risk exacerbating income inequality and nurturing class resentments.

Hard-left ideologues who want to turn the U.S. into Western Europe, and politicians eager to hand out goodies in exchange for votes, don’t much care about these trade-offs. But they’re relevant for anyone who wants to understand the relationship between social progress and government “help.”


DougMacG

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Re: Where are the unarmed social workers we were promised?
« Reply #164 on: November 09, 2021, 12:49:24 PM »

https://alphanews.org/78-instances-of-fully-automatic-gunfire-in-minneapolis-so-far-this-year/

Passing the 1986 law did not make the criminals disarm?  Weird.  Maybe pass another law - or hire law enforcement.

The social workers I know don't even carry a hand gun.  Hard to stop a determined shooter with words alone.  "C'mon man!"

4000 per year shot in Chicago, the closest major Dem-run city:  https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/2020/12/1/21755116/chicago-police-department-crime-statistics-shooting-murder-homicide-gun-violence-november-2020

Crafty_Dog

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Homeless in Oakland, CA
« Reply #165 on: November 21, 2021, 12:19:35 PM »
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRWmKh13b50

Haven't watched the whole thing yet.

DougMacG

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Re: Homeless in Oakland, CA
« Reply #166 on: November 24, 2021, 08:58:18 AM »
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRWmKh13b50

Haven't watched the whole thing yet.

Wow.  Every time government policies, State of California in particular, drive up the cost of housing, they drive more people out of it.  And then on the other side of it, if you make 'homeless' camps safer and nicer, more will come.

I like the interviews with real people who experience and witness the problem, but their ideas on the larger economic picture are not always the best.

The theme is that someone else should pay for their housing.  The main answer, it seems to me, is that we should stop blocking safe, healthy, reasonably priced housing from being available.

One thing you notice is how resourceful people can be, but you can't escape rats and disease in a garbage and sewage dump.

A basic truth from the first interview, "who wants to hire someone doesn't bathe everyday?"  And then the cycle is self perpetuating.  No job, no housing, no good mailing address, can't sleep regular hours or bathe, and pretty soon no good job or housing is possible.

I met a man as a scrapper who I now hire for odd jobs and has become a friend.  I was amazed at how hard he would work to gather metal for cash with no wage, including the removal of giant furnaces from basements that no one else could get out.  I helped him recently with a ride to get a tire fixed to get his truck off the freeway, drove him to and from the tire shop.  I didn't mention to him but his smell was overwhelming.  The man seems to me one turn away from breaking out of the cycle.  A clean set of clothes and a one minute shower everyday would do wonders.  Easy for me to say.  Sleeping in your truck in Minnesota winter is not safe and not comfortable any time of year but the survival instinct in most is alive and strong.  His truck needs gas and needs tires and repairs; without it he has no income.  I tell him there are programs but he says he has been through all that, whatever that means. 

The lady in the interview said she gets $1000/month SSI (disability).  Very common in the homeless and inner city communities.  A thousand is a lot of money with no rent, taxes and utilities, but not with the cost of living, especially where they are.  Even so, it has to mailed somewhere, cashed, and then what, you carry that cash?  Hide it?  Some have subsistence money management skills and some I'm sure do not.

The person making the video said his experience in San Francisco was much different.  That will be interesting.
« Last Edit: November 24, 2021, 09:07:52 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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NY, NY, the Rotten Apple
« Reply #167 on: December 21, 2021, 09:27:00 PM »



DougMacG

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Tony Dungy; former U of Minn QB speaks to fatherless issues
« Reply #170 on: April 14, 2022, 03:31:34 AM »
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2022/04/unapologetic_tony_dungy_smokes_out_obamas_betrayal_of_black_america.html

Tony Dungy, the first black coach ever to win a Super Bowl, might have escaped notice this week had he merely supported Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s “Responsible Fatherhood Initiative.” His real sin was to explain why.
...
When Dungy asked what accounted for the young men’s incarceration, Brown told him, “It’s not socioeconomic. It’s not racial. It’s not education. It’s none of that. Ninety-five percent of these boys did not grow up with their dad.”
-----
https://floridapolitics.com/archives/516646-joe-henderson-tony-dungys-critics-are-way-way-off-base/
« Last Edit: April 14, 2022, 10:19:23 AM by DougMacG »


DougMacG

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« Last Edit: June 23, 2022, 10:31:37 AM by DougMacG »

ccp

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #173 on: June 23, 2022, 04:12:39 PM »
Doug posted :

https://nypost.com/2022/06/22/how-liberal-policies-have-killed-black-communities-clarence-thomas/

Justice Thomas :

"And yet the people who pushed it never say, “Oh, we made a mistake."

agreed NEVER !
just  pushing more of their same dogma even more forcefully
 down our throats

with more alinsky tactics





ccp

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Re: America's Inner City; Urban Issues
« Reply #175 on: July 11, 2022, 09:13:39 AM »
video of small child cursing at and hitting police officers.....

gee, I wonder why some minorities do well in America and others don't

and , it ain't white supremacy.

 :wink:

the cyclic stupidity never ceases to astonish


DougMacG

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G M

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Crafty_Dog

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G M

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Re: Urban doom feedback loop
« Reply #180 on: June 26, 2023, 02:42:28 PM »
The article fails to point out how the vibrants in those cities have made them no go zones. A small oversight!

I had not thought of this:


https://www.zerohedge.com/political/urban-doom-loop-hits-midwest?utm_source=&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=1601


Crafty_Dog

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Chicago
« Reply #182 on: November 05, 2023, 05:40:32 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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Riley: Fatherlessness causes Crime
« Reply #183 on: December 13, 2023, 05:02:37 AM »
The Biggest Root Cause of Crime Is Fatherlessness
Children are likelier to finish high school and stay out of trouble if they’re brought up by two parents.
Jason L. Riley
By
Jason L. Riley
Follow
Dec. 12, 2023 6:30 pm ET



A decade ago, New York City launched a campaign to combat teen pregnancy. It featured ads on buses and subway cars that read: “If you finish high school, get a job, and get married before having children, you have a 98% chance of not being in poverty.”

That advice, more popularly known as the “success sequence,” is often credited to research done by Brookings Institution scholars Isabel Sawhill and Ron Haskins, though others have made similar observations. In his recent book, “Agency,” Ian Rowe of the American Enterprise Institute writes that the message “has attracted many admirers because of the simplicity of the three steps that young people, even if born into disadvantaged circumstances or raised by a young single parent, can themselves control and take in their lives.”

The effort nevertheless faced significant backlash from detractors who accused then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg of stigmatizing teen pregnancy and pushing a “moralistic, conservative agenda to revitalize marriage,” Mr. Rowe writes. Mr. Bloomberg’s successor, Bill de Blasio, ultimately abandoned the effort. Public moralizing has since fallen further out of favor and been replaced by a kind of self-congratulatory nonjudgmentalism. In today’s New York, you’re likely to see ads for free syringes and directions to “safe” injections sites for junkies, even as drug overdoses have reached record levels.

We could use more of that moralizing from public officials, whether the issue is solo parenting, substance abuse or crime. The success sequence works to keep people not only off the dole but also out of trouble with the law. High-school graduates and children raised by both parents are much less likely to end up in jail. “Virtually every major social pathology,” political scientist Stephen Baskerville writes, “has been linked to fatherless children: violent crime, drug and alcohol abuse, truancy, unwed pregnancy, suicide, and psychological disorders—all correlating more strongly with fatherlessness than with any other single factor, surpassing even race and poverty.”

America’s crime debate tends to focus on so-called root causes, such as joblessness. But it’s worth remembering that the sharpest increase in violent crime began in the 1960s, a decade that saw low unemployment, strong economic growth and a doubling of black household incomes. As notable, labor-force participation rates of young black men fell during the 1980s and ’90s, one of the longest periods of sustained economic growth in U.S. history.

A new academic paper from the Institute for Family Studies doesn’t deny that economic conditions play a role in criminal behavior. And co-authors Rafael Mangual, Brad Wilcox, Joseph Price and Seth Cannon write that “changes in law-enforcement and the prosecution of criminals have also had a hand in the recent uptick in violent crime in American cities.” The paper’s main argument, however, is that family instability may be the biggest factor of all and that it’s not receiving the attention it deserves.

“Cities are safer when two-parent families are dominant and more crime-ridden when family instability is common,” the authors write. Nationwide, the total crime rate is about 48% higher in cities “that have above the median share of single-parent families, compared to cities that have fewer single-parent families.” Even when controlling for variables such as race, income and educational attainment, “the association between family structure and total crime rates, as well as violent crime rates, in cities across the United States remains statistically significant.”

Having a father around, the authors note, is about more than an additional paycheck. Fathers teach their sons responsibility, self-control, how to carry themselves, how to treat women. They tend to be more effective disciplinarians, and their involvement in childrearing is linked to positive outcomes in the academic development of their children, “especially in mathematics and verbal skills.” That finding “has been established for both sons and daughters but, unsurprisingly, it is especially pronounced among boys. The presence of married fathers is also protective against school suspensions and expulsions, as well as the risk of dropping out of high school.”

Between 1960 and 2019, the percentage of babies in the U.S. born to unwed mothers grew from 5% to almost 50%. “Shifts from the late-1960s to the 1990s away from stable families have left some cities, and especially some neighborhoods, vulnerable to higher rates of crime, especially violent crime,” the study concludes. “We need to realign material and cultural incentives in our cities to favor marriage and stable families, not undercut them.”

We all know single mothers—some of us even may be related to them—who heroically beat these odds and raised children that have gone on to lead productive lives. The public-policy goal should be to reduce the number of people who will have to face those odds. And that means calling out behavior that is objectively harmful to people and society in general.

Crafty_Dog

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Peter Navarro: American Cities dying in a woke world
« Reply #184 on: December 27, 2023, 03:43:29 AM »
America’s cities are dying in a ‘woke’ world

The once great Chicago, San Francisco and Washington

By Peter Navarro

If the wages of sin are death, surely the wages of “woke” must be the death of America’s cities.

Take Chicago. It has the best architecture, those beloved and once again hapless Cubbies, a truly Magnificent Mile on the shore of Lake Michigan, deep-dish pizza, Harold’s fried chicken, and a wonderland of a Navy pier.

Yet to enjoy any of these Windy City treats is to risk a carjacking and the crossfire of warring gangs. Chicago is the carjacking capital of America, and its most ganginfested city.

Chicago’s “sanctuary city” status has left it at a tipping point into chaos because of the open-border policies of President Biden. Fully one-third of Chicago’s projected $538 million budget deficit for 2024 flows from its flood of illegal aliens.

Meanwhile, over 10,000 migrants are scattered across the city in temporary shelters or, get this, housed in Chicago police stations. These poorly educated illegal aliens are crowding out Black and brown Chicagoans at the lower end of the labor market, driving down wages and sparking angry confrontations.

Then there is the roller coaster, trolley car ride of a city where excrement literally does roll downhill: San Francisco. In this moral desert of Rep. Nancy Pelosi and Gov. Gavin Newsom, homelessness, public defecation and drug addiction are now Frisco’s finest art.

The “woke” failure I have witnessed up close and personal is my once beloved Washington. I went to Bethesda Chevy Chase High School across the D.C. line in Maryland. I spent countless days honing my basketball skills — and learning all I’ve ever needed to know about race relations — on the predominantly Black D.C. playgrounds. The nights I spent with my girlfriend at the Howard Theater rocking to Motown are among my life’s fondest memories.

Today, however, D.C. is dead to me. I am a Florida resident and return to the D.C. swamp only occasionally to deal with my legal issues.

To refresh, U.S. v. Navarro is a landmark case destined for the Supreme Court. In contradiction to the Justice Department’s own more than 50-year policy, I am the first White House adviser ever to be charged with standing up to Congress in defense of executive privilege and the constitutional separation of powers. But the specter of a possible two-year prison term — I’m to be sentenced on Jan. 25 — is not what has soured me so thoroughly on D.C.

What has soured me is Washington’s descent into “woke” hell. It began shortly after the Wuhan virus pandemic started in early 2020. Mayor Muriel Bowser would lock down the city longer than almost any other in America — and then double down with a mandatory vaccination policy.

This one-two punch rapidly accelerated the hollowing out of Washington’s business districts and commercial real estate already reeling from a pandemic spurring suburban flight and a remote worker explosion. Channeling her inner Angela Davis, Ms. Bowser then threatened desperate commercial real estate landlords with building takeovers.

Ms. Bowser likewise followed the lead of other “woke” cities — Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Seattle, et al. — in slashing millions from D.C.’s police budget while seeking to turn police departments into social worker centers. The result has been an exponential increase in the crime rate — surprise, surprise.

Washington’s Metro rail system has also suffered dramatically from declining ridership as people have fled the city and remote workers no longer need to ride tin cans to work. Yet Ms. Bowser has made it all so much worse by refusing to meaningfully crack down on the numerous scofflaws who regularly ride the Metro rails free of charge.

These scofflaws not only deprive the system of needed revenue, but they also often terrorize paying customers. The last time I was on the Metro, I almost got caught in a gunfight crossfire — just saying.

A clueless Ms. Bowser — please look in the mirror, Muriel — is now up in arms over the recent announcement by Ted Leonsis, the owner of the Washington Capitals hockey team and Washington Wizards and Mystics basketball teams. His Monumental Sports & Entertainment conglomerate plans to move out of the downtown Capital One Arena to a state-of-the-art arena in Alexandria, Virginia.

And who can blame Mr. Leonsis: What once was a vibrant, family-friendly environment around the Cap One center has, under Ms. Bowser’s “woke” leadership, descended into a cavalcade of pimps, hookers, dope dealers, beggars, betting parlors, pickpockets, grifters, and violent homeless schizoids. While the police force now shows up in greater numbers, it is willing to show any of that force, much less make any arrests, because of the “woke” dictates from on high.

Here’s the unintended comic coda: Shortly after the Capital One Arena closing announcement, the Metro announced another type of closure. This was the temporary closing of the Gallery Place Metro stop, the critical Red Line stop that brings people in from the Greater Washington area to Capital One Arena. If Mr. Leonsis and company needed another excuse to beat feet, this ill-timed closure surely provides that.

As the Terminator might say: “Hasta la vista, baby.” Not just to Washington as we once knew it, but to every “woke” city in America.

Peter Navarro served in the Trump White House as manufacturing czar and chief China strategist. This column originally appeared at https://peternavarro. substack.com

Crafty_Dog

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Woodson
« Reply #185 on: December 30, 2023, 06:55:59 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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PP: SCOTUS: No right to homelessness
« Reply #186 on: June 28, 2024, 09:44:47 AM »


SCOTUS says there is no right to homelessness: In a 6-3 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that an Oregon city's law banning people without a permanent residence from sleeping outside in public places does not violate the Eighth Amendment, which forbids "cruel and unusual" punishments. Writing for the majority, Justice Neil Gorsuch noted, "Homelessness is complex. Its causes are many. So may be the public policy responses required to address it." He added, "At bottom, the question this case presents is whether the Eighth Amendment grants federal judges primary responsibility for assessing those causes and devising those responses. It does not." Justice Sonia Sotomayor argued in her dissent that the city's rule punished homeless people for being homeless and, in so doing, claimed that it was an affront to "the humanity and dignity of homeless people and our constitutional principles." Regarding the minority opinion, Mark Hemingway rightly observed, "To be clear, all three liberal justices want your city or town to be filled with homeless encampments and strip the local government of the ability to do something about it. That's insane, and this should be hung around the necks of Dems running for office."

Crafty_Dog

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SCOTUS: Grant City
« Reply #187 on: June 29, 2024, 07:42:37 AM »
Gavin Newsom No Longer Has an Excuse for Tent Cities
In City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, the Supreme Court reverses a Ninth Circuit decision that barred laws against public camping.
By Stephen Eide
June 28, 2024 5:23 pm ET

As tent cities filled with homeless people proliferated in West Coast communities in recent years, elected Democrats dealt with the problem by passing the buck. California Gov. Gavin Newsom argued that his hands—and those of other state and local officials—were tied by a Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that prohibitions on homeless encampments amounted to “cruel and unusual punishment.” In City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, the Supreme Court has taken that excuse away.

In 2018, the judges of the Ninth Circuit essentially OK’d the idea of pitching a tent on a sidewalk or in a park. The ordinances at issue in that case levied fines for public camping. Repeated noncompliance could lead to being banned from local parks and jailed for short periods. The ordinances applied, Justice Neil Gorsuch made clear in his Grants Pass majority opinion, with equal force to homeless people, backpackers and student protesters. They wouldn’t strike most Americans as cruel.

In generations past, courts invoked the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment as indicating the framers’ commitment to what Chief Justice Earl Warren described in 1958 as “the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.” It’s therefore rich that the same constitutional provision has been used to force communities to accommodate street homelessness and related harms such as retail theft, sidewalks strewn with human waste, sexual violence and overdose deaths.

Martin v. Boise, the 2018 Ninth Circuit ruling, had three practical and immediate consequences. First, it ushered in an almost 40% increase in street homelessness throughout the nine states under the Ninth Circuit’s jurisdiction. Second, it precipitated a collapse in demand for beds in local homeless shelters. Finally, it gave Democratic politicians like Mr. Newsom an easy way to satisfy progressive demands for lax law enforcement.

After years of struggle, U.S. cities in the 1990s managed to reduce crime and make their downtowns livable again. This was achieved by a relentless focus on public order. Encampment culture in recent years has offset most of those gains. While officially in agreement that encampments are bad, the Ninth Circuit contended that laws penalizing homelessness lead to more homelessness. People who are camping on the streets live precariously. For some, the Ninth Circuit declared, even the modest penalties under review in Grants Pass could make the difference between sleeping rough and upward mobility.

The Ninth Circuit ruled that if a city provided “practically available” shelter for its homeless, it could enforce its ordinances against camping. But how much spending is enough? Is a shelter program truly “available” if it disallows pets and partners? Do beds in church shelter programs count toward measures of availability? Oversight of such details has now been stripped from judges, who never should have had it in the first place.

Most Americans have at one time or another looked at what’s going on in San Francisco and wondered why homelessness is so much worse there than in their own hometowns. The reason is simple. Your hometown has reasonable rules governing the use of public places, which it enforces. Homeless advocates have inadvertently proved this point by issuing reports, which Justice Gorsuch cites, that encampment restrictions are far from “unusual.” They are standard practice in municipal law.

Justice Gorsuch was impressed by the “exceptionally large number of cities and States” that filed briefs demanding relief from the Ninth Circuit’s overbearing jurisprudence. He also emphasized that his ruling left cities free not to pass antiencampment ordinances if they don’t want to.

By shifting more power from federal courts to state and local politicians, Grants Pass is a win for democracy and federalism. It’s also a win for judicial pragmatism, a value celebrated in a recent book by former Justice Stephen Breyer. Justice Breyer’s argument took aim at the originalist-oriented conservative bloc. In Grants Pass, all six conservative justices signed on to the majority opinion. No justice from the liberal bloc saw anything amiss in the Ninth Circuit’s grant of a constitutional right to vagrancy.

The high court’s ruling in Grants Pass will restore a measure of normality to a policy area overridden by cruelty and dysfunction. The homelessness crisis has contributed to plummeting levels of trust in government. In Western states, public surveys often cite homelessness as the No. 1 issue of community concern. It will be up to voters to keep the pressure on state and local officials, and success is by no means assured. But Grants Pass is a sound first step.

Mr. Eide is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and the author of “Homelessness in America.”



Crafty_Dog

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« Reply #189 on: October 24, 2024, 08:02:45 AM »
Warning:  Seriously incorrect!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDZHzP-kvsY