Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bricking people
Sadly, some seriously nihilistic teens are indeed doing this to prevent gentrification. It is terrible that they have so much public sympathy rather than 1) their victims and 2) us parents trying very hard to stay in the middle class and hoping to see some return on our modest home investments in this city, or at least not see the neighborhoods we invested in become crapholes.
Oh come on. This isn't about "preventing gentrification." And even if it were, it all the more increases the calls for more policing and efforts to push them out.
On the contrary, it is about gentrification in every way. The teens who brick are 1) claiming "their" space and 2) expressing the "rage" being stoked by extremely irresponsible people who feed them inflammatory lines about how gentrifiers are invading "their" turf. Braining white people with bricks is literally their reaction to gentrification, and too many adults who should know better tell them they're justified if they want to kill or permanently disable their neighbors.
I don't know that they're thinking far enough ahead to realize there could eventually be backlash. They're mostly thinking nothing will happen to them even if they get caught.
Why is this not prosecuted as a hate crime?
It is barely prosecuted at all. That's our problem here in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bricking people
Sadly, some seriously nihilistic teens are indeed doing this to prevent gentrification. It is terrible that they have so much public sympathy rather than 1) their victims and 2) us parents trying very hard to stay in the middle class and hoping to see some return on our modest home investments in this city, or at least not see the neighborhoods we invested in become crapholes.
Oh come on. This isn't about "preventing gentrification." And even if it were, it all the more increases the calls for more policing and efforts to push them out.
On the contrary, it is about gentrification in every way. The teens who brick are 1) claiming "their" space and 2) expressing the "rage" being stoked by extremely irresponsible people who feed them inflammatory lines about how gentrifiers are invading "their" turf. Braining white people with bricks is literally their reaction to gentrification, and too many adults who should know better tell them they're justified if they want to kill or permanently disable their neighbors.
I don't know that they're thinking far enough ahead to realize there could eventually be backlash. They're mostly thinking nothing will happen to them even if they get caught.
Why is this not prosecuted as a hate crime?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bricking people
Sadly, some seriously nihilistic teens are indeed doing this to prevent gentrification. It is terrible that they have so much public sympathy rather than 1) their victims and 2) us parents trying very hard to stay in the middle class and hoping to see some return on our modest home investments in this city, or at least not see the neighborhoods we invested in become crapholes.
Oh come on. This isn't about "preventing gentrification." And even if it were, it all the more increases the calls for more policing and efforts to push them out.
On the contrary, it is about gentrification in every way. The teens who brick are 1) claiming "their" space and 2) expressing the "rage" being stoked by extremely irresponsible people who feed them inflammatory lines about how gentrifiers are invading "their" turf. Braining white people with bricks is literally their reaction to gentrification, and too many adults who should know better tell them they're justified if they want to kill or permanently disable their neighbors.
I don't know that they're thinking far enough ahead to realize there could eventually be backlash. They're mostly thinking nothing will happen to them even if they get caught.
Why is this not prosecuted as a hate crime?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bricking people
Sadly, some seriously nihilistic teens are indeed doing this to prevent gentrification. It is terrible that they have so much public sympathy rather than 1) their victims and 2) us parents trying very hard to stay in the middle class and hoping to see some return on our modest home investments in this city, or at least not see the neighborhoods we invested in become crapholes.
Oh come on. This isn't about "preventing gentrification." And even if it were, it all the more increases the calls for more policing and efforts to push them out.
On the contrary, it is about gentrification in every way. The teens who brick are 1) claiming "their" space and 2) expressing the "rage" being stoked by extremely irresponsible people who feed them inflammatory lines about how gentrifiers are invading "their" turf. Braining white people with bricks is literally their reaction to gentrification, and too many adults who should know better tell them they're justified if they want to kill or permanently disable their neighbors.
I don't know that they're thinking far enough ahead to realize there could eventually be backlash. They're mostly thinking nothing will happen to them even if they get caught.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bricking people
Sadly, some seriously nihilistic teens are indeed doing this to prevent gentrification. It is terrible that they have so much public sympathy rather than 1) their victims and 2) us parents trying very hard to stay in the middle class and hoping to see some return on our modest home investments in this city, or at least not see the neighborhoods we invested in become crapholes.
Oh come on. This isn't about "preventing gentrification." And even if it were, it all the more increases the calls for more policing and efforts to push them out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bricking people
Sadly, some seriously nihilistic teens are indeed doing this to prevent gentrification. It is terrible that they have so much public sympathy rather than 1) their victims and 2) us parents trying very hard to stay in the middle class and hoping to see some return on our modest home investments in this city, or at least not see the neighborhoods we invested in become crapholes.
Anonymous wrote:Bricking people
Anonymous wrote:Bricking people
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would someone protest gentrification? You think certain neighborhoods should be racially exclusive?
Gentrification causes people to lack homes.
Not working causes people to lack homes. Bartenders can live in gentrified neighborhoods, so stop whining and get a job.
Yeah right, just working any job will allow someone to get approved for a $1400/month apt
Then get a second or third job or whatever it takes and also develop some skills so that people will pay you enough to make it. Whatever it takes.
That’s great that you feel that way, but a lot of people can’t/won’t/don’t do that, so unless you want a bunch of unhoused people on the sidewalks of your neighborhood, I hope you support a public option for housing (just like there is a public option for k-12 schools) and shelters + rehabs in your neighborhood.
People make terrible decisions. Having babies they can’t afford with men who are broke is the biggest mistake. No one is entitled to live in DC or any expensive area. Move to a cheaper place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would someone protest gentrification? You think certain neighborhoods should be racially exclusive?
Gentrification causes people to lack homes.
Not working causes people to lack homes. Bartenders can live in gentrified neighborhoods, so stop whining and get a job.
Yeah right, just working any job will allow someone to get approved for a $1400/month apt
Then get a second or third job or whatever it takes and also develop some skills so that people will pay you enough to make it. Whatever it takes.
That’s great that you feel that way, but a lot of people can’t/won’t/don’t do that, so unless you want a bunch of unhoused people on the sidewalks of your neighborhood, I hope you support a public option for housing (just like there is a public option for k-12 schools) and shelters + rehabs in your neighborhood.
People make terrible decisions. Having babies they can’t afford with men who are broke is the biggest mistake. No one is entitled to live in DC or any expensive area. Move to a cheaper place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would someone protest gentrification? You think certain neighborhoods should be racially exclusive?
Gentrification causes people to lack homes.
Not working causes people to lack homes. Bartenders can live in gentrified neighborhoods, so stop whining and get a job.
Yeah right, just working any job will allow someone to get approved for a $1400/month apt
Then get a second or third job or whatever it takes and also develop some skills so that people will pay you enough to make it. Whatever it takes.
That’s great that you feel that way, but a lot of people can’t/won’t/don’t do that, so unless you want a bunch of unhoused people on the sidewalks of your neighborhood, I hope you support a public option for housing (just like there is a public option for k-12 schools) and shelters + rehabs in your neighborhood.