Anonymous wrote:How do we turn it around. Is it just more police, more arrests, more prosecutions? I'm on board for all of those, by they way. If someone says "violence interruptors" to me, I'll scream.
But I'd love to know in a practical sense how we address this. It's not acceptable. I get there are multiple factors playing into this (homelessness, mental health issues, and substance abuse are all major ones from where I sit). What specifically did DC do last time to make it so much better? What do other cities do?
To me the biggest issues seems to be the apathy of people in positions of power about the problems we face. People have been excusing the violence for years now and arguing it's "not that bad" or that virtually any enforcement mechanism is racist. Well, we somehow managed to reduce violence by a lot in the last two decades, so what did it? And what changed? And how do we get back on track? If we've done it before, we can do it again.
Anonymous wrote:How do we turn it around. Is it just more police, more arrests, more prosecutions? I'm on board for all of those, by they way. If someone says "violence interruptors" to me, I'll scream.
But I'd love to know in a practical sense how we address this. It's not acceptable. I get there are multiple factors playing into this (homelessness, mental health issues, and substance abuse are all major ones from where I sit). What specifically did DC do last time to make it so much better? What do other cities do?
To me the biggest issues seems to be the apathy of people in positions of power about the problems we face. People have been excusing the violence for years now and arguing it's "not that bad" or that virtually any enforcement mechanism is racist. Well, we somehow managed to reduce violence by a lot in the last two decades, so what did it? And what changed? And how do we get back on track? If we've done it before, we can do it again.
Anonymous wrote:How do we turn it around. Is it just more police, more arrests, more prosecutions? I'm on board for all of those, by they way. If someone says "violence interruptors" to me, I'll scream.
But I'd love to know in a practical sense how we address this. It's not acceptable. I get there are multiple factors playing into this (homelessness, mental health issues, and substance abuse are all major ones from where I sit). What specifically did DC do last time to make it so much better? What do other cities do?
To me the biggest issues seems to be the apathy of people in positions of power about the problems we face. People have been excusing the violence for years now and arguing it's "not that bad" or that virtually any enforcement mechanism is racist. Well, we somehow managed to reduce violence by a lot in the last two decades, so what did it? And what changed? And how do we get back on track? If we've done it before, we can do it again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you all go to some sort of night school to learn to speech in such dramatics?
wading through blood on the evening commute
Attempted murder with more than 30 shots fired at 6PM on a commuter route is nbd to you. Got it.
One thing to note for the OP: the “it was worse in the 90s” crew got mocked and bullied into giving up that lie.
Again, you seem to really excel in exaggeration and distortion. Nobody said that and you are a moron for not being able to talk without using such extremes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you all go to some sort of night school to learn to speech in such dramatics?
wading through blood on the evening commute
Attempted murder with more than 30 shots fired at 6PM on a commuter route is nbd to you. Got it.
One thing to note for the OP: the “it was worse in the 90s” crew got mocked and bullied into giving up that lie.
Anonymous wrote:Do you all go to some sort of night school to learn to speech in such dramatics?
wading through blood on the evening commute
Anonymous wrote:How do we turn it around. Is it just more police, more arrests, more prosecutions? I'm on board for all of those, by they way. If someone says "violence interruptors" to me, I'll scream.
But I'd love to know in a practical sense how we address this. It's not acceptable. I get there are multiple factors playing into this (homelessness, mental health issues, and substance abuse are all major ones from where I sit). What specifically did DC do last time to make it so much better? What do other cities do?
To me the biggest issues seems to be the apathy of people in positions of power about the problems we face. People have been excusing the violence for years now and arguing it's "not that bad" or that virtually any enforcement mechanism is racist. Well, we somehow managed to reduce violence by a lot in the last two decades, so what did it? And what changed? And how do we get back on track? If we've done it before, we can do it again.
Anonymous wrote:How do we turn it around. Is it just more police, more arrests, more prosecutions? I'm on board for all of those, by they way. If someone says "violence interruptors" to me, I'll scream.
But I'd love to know in a practical sense how we address this. It's not acceptable. I get there are multiple factors playing into this (homelessness, mental health issues, and substance abuse are all major ones from where I sit). What specifically did DC do last time to make it so much better? What do other cities do?
To me the biggest issues seems to be the apathy of people in positions of power about the problems we face. People have been excusing the violence for years now and arguing it's "not that bad" or that virtually any enforcement mechanism is racist. Well, we somehow managed to reduce violence by a lot in the last two decades, so what did it? And what changed? And how do we get back on track? If we've done it before, we can do it again.
