Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I thought it was all the guns coming in from evil Virginia that drive DC's rampant crime and murder. Now you're telling me it's a man who stands on the 1400 block of Fairmont? But how can I keep my hate Virginia narrative alive in light of this info
There’s plenty of reasons to hate va, including unnecessary and obnoxious comments like this one. Wonder where this man gets his guns from? Most likely va
I’d be mad too. VA residents can own firearms and behave, you can’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I thought it was all the guns coming in from evil Virginia that drive DC's rampant crime and murder. Now you're telling me it's a man who stands on the 1400 block of Fairmont? But how can I keep my hate Virginia narrative alive in light of this info
There’s plenty of reasons to hate va, including unnecessary and obnoxious comments like this one. Wonder where this man gets his guns from? Most likely va
Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned that the crime and poverty are only going to get worse. I think we're caught at the start of a vicious cycle in which more and more people leave DC permanently and fewer and fewer people move into DC because of post-pandemic work patterns, a desire for more space, and/or concerns about rising crime. The city's tax base gradually erodes and the poverty/crime only continues to get worse.
Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned that the crime and poverty are only going to get worse. I think we're caught at the start of a vicious cycle in which more and more people leave DC permanently and fewer and fewer people move into DC because of post-pandemic work patterns, a desire for more space, and/or concerns about rising crime. The city's tax base gradually erodes and the poverty/crime only continues to get worse.
This was called the 1980s. DC has BTDT. Culminating in city mismanagement so profound that Congress placed the city under oversight of a control board.
Anonymous wrote:Yet they keep voting Democrat. Go figure![/quote
Do Republicans even run candidates for councilmembers or do they not even bother because they know that their "ideas" are dead on arrival?
I'm concerned that the crime and poverty are only going to get worse. I think we're caught at the start of a vicious cycle in which more and more people leave DC permanently and fewer and fewer people move into DC because of post-pandemic work patterns, a desire for more space, and/or concerns about rising crime. The city's tax base gradually erodes and the poverty/crime only continues to get worse.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in CH when the the DCUSA site was a needle-strewn vacant lot, the Tivoli was still boarded up and every shopkeeper on 14th Street worked behind an inch-think wall of plexiglass.
I felt much safer then than I do in CH now. This is what happens when you build luxury condos and million-dollar renovated rowhouses right next to entrenched poverty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shutting down the drug market would be a first step, and that is the job of police and prosecutors. No amount of community engagement will work without getting rid of the bad element.
The community does not want police and prosecutors going after drug dealers.
OP here. Yes, I've heard this from some neighbors. They don't believe it would result in a better life for most of the families impacted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shutting down the drug market would be a first step, and that is the job of police and prosecutors. No amount of community engagement will work without getting rid of the bad element.
The community does not want police and prosecutors going after drug dealers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shutting down the drug market would be a first step, and that is the job of police and prosecutors. No amount of community engagement will work without getting rid of the bad element.
The community does not want police and prosecutors going after drug dealers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shutting down the drug market would be a first step, and that is the job of police and prosecutors. No amount of community engagement will work without getting rid of the bad element.
The community does not want police and prosecutors going after drug dealers.