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Sad, but true....
toad67
Member Posts: 13,009 ✭✭✭✭
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Who would have thought, austin20.
Ken, not much different, to some extent, than CA.
Or Portland, OR. I read this last weekend that Multnomah County, where Potland is located, is down $1,000,000,000 in taxes due to people escaping. One billion dollars... Can you imagine?
To paraphrase PP&M: "When will we ever learn?".
all cities are facing a huge drug and homeless problem that just keep snowballing.
what helps ? lets give out more free housing and food stamps free drugs and shelter and of course a free area to use the drugs in and dont forget no punishment as no city will step up and can afford to lock them up or tie up the courts with all the so called "petty" crimes
only going to get worse and were paying for it and supporting millions with out tax dollars around the world
the old movies like Soylent green or the purge series of movies seem like good ideas any more
More proof that Democrats can do more damage than an atomic bomb.
Sort of reminds me of Frank Regans "Broken Windows Policy"...........sadly.🤔
There were a million more people in Detroit in 1945. Todays population 630,000. Those buildings are no longer needed.
Yes Steve, I can imagine. The big liberal cities are just like dominoes, eventually the game will be over, and they will all fall.
Anthony, Maybe we should start a go fund me for Detroit. 😕
Just hope they don't drag us all down with them!! The federal vote buyers will continue to bail them out to the bitter end.
I had to look it up 🤨
What is Broken Windows Policing?
The broken windows model of policing was first described in 1982 in a seminal article by Wilson and Kelling. Briefly, the model focuses on the importance of disorder (e.g., broken windows) in generating and sustaining more serious crime. Disorder is not directly linked to serious crime; instead, disorder leads to increased fear and withdrawal from residents, which then allows more serious crime to move in because of decreased levels of informal social control.
The police can play a key role in disrupting this process. If they focus in on disorder and less serious crime in neighborhoods that have not yet been overtaken by serious crime, they can help reduce fear and resident withdrawal. Promoting higher levels of informal social control will help residents themselves take control of their neighborhood and prevent serious crime from infiltrating