Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes that is a “particularly dangerous spot.” A lot of people who claim to be DC saavy actually have no idea that some of the most dangerous spots are located closest to upscale/gentrified areas because they have some vague notion that “Anacostia” is where the crime is.
No, it's not. How long have you lived in the District? I've lived here 17 years.
Please, by all means. Fill us in.
Anonymous wrote:
Yes that is a “particularly dangerous spot.” A lot of people who claim to be DC saavy actually have no idea that some of the most dangerous spots are located closest to upscale/gentrified areas because they have some vague notion that “Anacostia” is where the crime is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The poor boy. It's so sad. Did no one tell him this was a particularly dangerous spot? Congressional interns should get a safety briefing for DC!!! I have a 20 year old son who attends GW at Foggy Bottom. I've told him not to go to certain places in the evening, and to be careful even during the day.
Nice try, but the area he was in was not a "particularly dangerous spot," especially on a summer weeknight at 10:30 pm. There were likely many people out and about around the convention center. Agree this story is heartbreaking on so many levels. I, too, have a young son who interned on the Hill and like most of them, goes out all over the city many nights after work. Very distressing and my heart breaks for his parents. I so hope they catch and prosecute the gang who did this.
That stretch of 7th St is definitely sketchy. I used to have a friend who lived right there and walking around there at night I would always be alert.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The poor boy. It's so sad. Did no one tell him this was a particularly dangerous spot? Congressional interns should get a safety briefing for DC!!! I have a 20 year old son who attends GW at Foggy Bottom. I've told him not to go to certain places in the evening, and to be careful even during the day.
Nice try, but the area he was in was not a "particularly dangerous spot," especially on a summer weeknight at 10:30 pm. There were likely many people out and about around the convention center. Agree this story is heartbreaking on so many levels. I, too, have a young son who interned on the Hill and like most of them, goes out all over the city many nights after work. Very distressing and my heart breaks for his parents. I so hope they catch and prosecute the gang who did this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Condolences to the family for their tremendous loss. Shame on Trump. Shame on GOP. Shame on NRA.
The NRA supports gang shooting? I love this idea that criminals use legal guns. They are using ghost guns which are not registered. They are impossible to track. The NRA does nor support ghost guns. Also, the US Attorney in DC let's tons of criminals put on release who have committed crimes with guns. I was on a grand jury in DC and it was shocking how many felons are walking free in DC with a gun. They are not apprehended unless the commit another felony.
Kid's boss was endorsed by the NRA. Of course criminals aren't going to use legal guns; they have too many easier, cheaper ways to get them, because the NRA and their disciples flood the world with guns. More guns, more firepower, fewer speedbumps to getting a gun. The average legal gun owner has 4-5 individual weapons; there are whole conventions and trade shows with trucks stuffed with guns. So of course it's going to be easy for criminals to get them.
If there were simply fewer guns, fewer criminals would be able to get them. Do you hear about a lot of stolen Ferraris? No. Because there are very few Ferraris compared to Hyundais. This shouldn't be hard, if it weren't for the right-wing death cult. Guns should be rare, expensive, tracked, and have a real-world purpose. Hunting, fine. Target skill shooting, fine. Arsenal for potential gov't overthrow? Insanity. Like the gravy seals are going to go up against the US Army. Deluded. Unhinged. And totally supported by Ron Estes of Kansas.
Criminals do not get their guns through lawful channels.
Lock up felons in possession for ten years, plus the local gun possession charge, plus the other associated violations. See how fast the problem goes away.
No, they steal them. Which is easy, because there are SO DAMN MANY OF THEM. Reduce the guns, reduce the gun crime. That easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not trying to rage bait you or imply I know the reason, but poor people in rural areas just don’t commit crimes at the same rates as poor people in cities, so while DC may get worse crime , the holler probably won’tAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lived here for years and I still continue to be shocked at how ghetto DC is
Wait till trump and the republican’s BBB kicks in. Add in 10-15 million people looking for food each day will surely dive crime down. Specially in rural areas. Those meth and Fentanyl labs will just disappear!
Drugs, man. The white drugs like meth aren't pursued at nearly the rates that black crime is. Partially because it's out there in the holler, but also bc racism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The poor boy. It's so sad. Did no one tell him this was a particularly dangerous spot? Congressional interns should get a safety briefing for DC!!! I have a 20 year old son who attends GW at Foggy Bottom. I've told him not to go to certain places in the evening, and to be careful even during the day.
Nice try, but the area he was in was not a "particularly dangerous spot," especially on a summer weeknight at 10:30 pm. There were likely many people out and about around the convention center. Agree this story is heartbreaking on so many levels. I, too, have a young son who interned on the Hill and like most of them, goes out all over the city many nights after work. Very distressing and my heart breaks for his parents. I so hope they catch and prosecute the gang who did this.
Anonymous wrote:
The poor boy. It's so sad. Did no one tell him this was a particularly dangerous spot? Congressional interns should get a safety briefing for DC!!! I have a 20 year old son who attends GW at Foggy Bottom. I've told him not to go to certain places in the evening, and to be careful even during the day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not trying to rage bait you or imply I know the reason, but poor people in rural areas just don’t commit crimes at the same rates as poor people in cities, so while DC may get worse crime , the holler probably won’tAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lived here for years and I still continue to be shocked at how ghetto DC is
Wait till trump and the republican’s BBB kicks in. Add in 10-15 million people looking for food each day will surely dive crime down. Specially in rural areas. Those meth and Fentanyl labs will just disappear!
Drugs, man. The white drugs like meth aren't pursued at nearly the rates that black crime is. Partially because it's out there in the holler, but also bc racism.
Anonymous wrote:
The poor boy. It's so sad. Did no one tell him this was a particularly dangerous spot? Congressional interns should get a safety briefing for DC!!! I have a 20 year old son who attends GW at Foggy Bottom. I've told him not to go to certain places in the evening, and to be careful even during the day.
Anonymous wrote:ive been to many nation’s capitals. Dc is the least impressive one. I’ve never been to Canberra so maybe dc is a better cityAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lived here for years and I still continue to be shocked at how ghetto DC is
DC has always been a bottom-tier city. It's not really a desirable place to live except for its job market (though the hard-core defenders will always insist otherwise).
You don't have to like it personally, but I don't think there are ANY stats that put DC in a "bottom tier".
It's not in the top 25 for crime.
It's ranked high for air quality.
It's near the top of US cities for income, educational levels, museums per capita, and public transportation.
Ok, it does sit at #5 for worst traffic, and for housing cost.
So you don't like the vibes. But that's feelings, not facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So yesterday there was a mass shooting in Chicago, 18 shot, 4 killed and it wasn’t even in the national news
Yes it was. Broaden your news sources.
Local Chicago coverage is not National Media