Yeah, Silver Spring is a pretty big area. There are a lot of neighborhoods doing very well with rising property values. Downtown Silver Spring has made a large chunk unreachable for me. The purple line will contribute to that. Sure there is poverty. In an area this large that is a given. But it sure doesn't characterize the community, and it's sure not taking over. |
You can't have it both ways. You can't say the SS defenders are protesting too much because they are arguing with you on a thread where you are spending time and energy arguing the opposite. You need to examine why you are wasting so much time pulling made up stats out of your ass so people will come on and contradict you. There are a lot of educated, affluent people in the DCC choosing to raise families here. You coming on DCUM and bashing it isn't going to stop it. Deal with it. |
The proximity to DC and the jobs IN DC (Discovery Communications, NOAA, FDA) plus access to major transportation hubs means property values will only continue to increase. |
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OMG. Just read this new article on Post Website:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/people-here-live-in-fear-ms-13-menaces-a-community-seven-miles-from-the-white-house/2017/12/20/6cebf318-d956-11e7-b859-fb0995360725_story.html?hpid=hp_rhp-top-table-main_ms13control-940am%3Ahomepage%2Fstory&utm_term=.a3621e9eb460 somehow I dont think the gangs care too much about county lines. This is a regional problem affecting schools and something needs to be done |
| Teacher here and I’m leaving MCPS over this issue. They need to get it under control. |
Well don't move to N VA: http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/690338.page |
I wish we could have a nuanced discussion about all of this, because I think there is a lot of consensus among regular folks. The people hurt worst by gang violence are law abiding citizens, as detailed in that article. But aggressive immigration enforcement makes those folks very very reluctant to engage with police. So they suffer in silence, and the gangs grow. That is a strong argument in favor of MCPD policies around not checking the immigration status of victims, which puts them afoul of federal policy. At the same time, I'm always alarmed to find out how many of the criminals are known to ICE and are on some sort of vaguely supervised release despite ICE knowing they are undocumented. I don't understand the process by which someone is known to be undocumented and known to be a gang member but is not in custody. I want to understand this, but discussion descend into accusations of "sanctuary state!" so quickly that no one actually understands what sanctuary means, or how it is or is not obstructing the ability to get at real criminals. |
The people hurt worst seem to be undocumented immigrants, in part because they don't come to police due to their status. |
| ^^law-abiding undocumented immigrants, to be clear. But I thought the article emphasized that MS-13 is very specific in who they target, i.e., undocumented children. |
I'm the PP and I wasn't including the original immigration violation in my definition of "law abiding." I meant undocumented and otherwise law-abiding residents. That's the paradox, right? You need undocumented and otherwise law-abiding residents to feel comfortable calling the police. You can't have that if they fear immigration enforcement as victims of crimes. So that argues for the current MCPD approach of not enforcing immigration violations if someone comes into contact with the criminal justice system as a victim. HOWEVER, I'm flummoxed by how often it seems that known criminals are out on ICE bond. It seems like the whole system is broken. Known criminals are loose while law-abiding residents are being rounded up and deported. |
You had used the word citizens in the post, hence my reply--because you're right, that is the paradox: the people targeted by MS-13 are afraid to come to law enforcement for fear of being deported. I'm glad MCPS has their current policy. Keeping known criminals out on ICE bond does seem problematic, though. Maybe it's a part of a larger strategy to bring down large numbers of people, and they need cooperation? That seems incredibly risky, though. |
Yeah, I should have been more precise. I said "citizen" because it is a professional quirk but I should have put more thought into what I was writing. Yes, generally lawful RESIDENTS need to feel safe involving law enforcement. So, basically, I think everyone is doing the wrong thing here. The current administration is criminalizing folks whose only crime is the initial immigration violation and therefore creating an environment in which victims can't cooperate and the criminals run amok. Meanwhile, the Democrats seem to be closing their eyes to the actual problems created by allowing 20K unaccompanied minors whose only family is the gang to flood the country. So...now what? Everyone has the wrong answers, because it isn't deporting law-abiding residents and it isn't pretending there is no problem. |
| Yes this is terrifying. Reading stuff like this makes you think yes we need to deport them all and shut the borders. These gang members are in our schools! MD, DC, and VA! Law enforcement can only do so much. This lady is brave now but her son was brave always. He paid the price. For what? I fear something will happen to her and let’s face it it’s going to take a village to speak up and that is not going to happen. The system is broken and this is how Support for deportation and tougher immigration enforcement gains momentum. It’s a giant festering wound.... |
| Sherwood, Damascus, Clarksburg, Magruder, and Quince Orchard don't have gangs. All upcounty. Sherwood the best, then QO, then Damasus, then clarksburg, then Magruder. |
Olney is not the upcounty. Also, I wonder how you know that there are no gangs in these schools. |