Gavin Newsom fighting the right fight

Crime occurs more often in places where people live.

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Crime occurs more often in places where people live.

Yes, it does. But it is possible to compare two similar locales and determine if local policy has an impact on it. Pick large cities in Japan (where people also live) and compare them to your average US city.
 
Its one of those "the buck stops here" type things. Is urban crime the fault of the party in power? Of course not directly. But you can certainly draw some connections if the party in power has been in power for a while, and the crime continues to get worse. In a hyper partisan environment, people are more concerned with whether their "team" is responsible and then won't accept any accountability if it is. Or vice versa.

You guys (I forget who, but I think you were one) brought up Jacksonville as a crime-ridden city in Florida, and you're right to do so. The republicans have had Jax for 7 years now. Crime continues to get worse, the city is a cesspool and the downtown is disgusting. You can't walk 15 feet without being accosted. I speak from experience. The republicans own that.

But the democrats own the degradation of NYC.

The only way we get better is when we admit, honestly, what is causing the problem. What works, what doesn't. Instead of "whose team is ruining that", we should focus on "what person is making it worse, and why" and get rid of the person.

What do you expect leader to do in JAX...its not about more police..police respond to crime they dont necessarily prevent it normally.

The solution is fixing the economy of the city and addressing the poor schools and resources in the poor areas and revitalization to an extent to lift up areas. It takes money and mayors never.address these issues..they simply blame each other and focus on the crime alone.
 
What do you expect leader to do in JAX...its not about more police..police respond to crime they dont necessarily prevent it normally.

The solution is fixing the economy of the city and addressing the poor schools and resources in the poor areas and revitalization to an extent to lift up areas. It takes money and mayors never.address these issues..they simply blame each other and focus on the crime alone.

You're answering your own question.

I know the lot of you hate Rudy Giuliani, but the man sure did a great job transforming NYC after Dinkens and Koch. The man brought Disney to 42nd street, where we used to skip school to look at the druggies and peep show pervs and laugh.

Mayors have a huge impact potential if they want to. You say its not about more police, I disagree. Times Square police used to be on every street corner. Massive visible presence stops crimes. Its just that simple. If you went to jail under Giuliani for some crime, you weren't on the street 2 hours later. It had consequences.
 
You're answering your own question.

I know the lot of you hate Rudy Giuliani, but the man sure did a great job transforming NYC after Dinkens and Koch. The man brought Disney to 42nd street, where we used to skip school to look at the druggies and peep show pervs and laugh.

Mayors have a huge impact potential if they want to. You say its not about more police, I disagree. Times Square police used to be on every street corner. Massive visible presence stops crimes. Its just that simple. If you went to jail under Giuliani for some crime, you weren't on the street 2 hours later. It had consequences.

Rudy is batshit crazy..he has not been the man he was for.many years now.

Police presence only.moves crime away from a specific area. Cops in times square is great but again still does not.address crime. So just more police.isnot the answer unless you put cops.everwhere in the Bronx and Brooklyn and Queens.as well. Be it.Jax or NYC it is just not feasible to only add.cops yet leave the squalor all cities suffer from. But it takes $$$$...which cities never have.
 
So you believe that the governor of NY state has a much bigger impact on NYC crime than the mayor?

I certainly don't.

Comparisons for state by state tend to not work when you look at demographics because there are too many variables that make this difficult for simplistic comparisons. The COVID comparison comes to mind, where everyone was taking a state like Florida, which has the second highest concentration of elderly and third highest population in total, and comparing it to a state like North Carolina. Totally ridiculous.

Now, if you want to compare things like tax burden, or abortion policy, or something like that, you don't need to look closely at things like population density or age demographics.

You’re ignoring the macros. We know gun laws impact gun violence rates. Cities don’t have control over those laws. We also know that poverty and crime are connected as well.

But I’m not going to go down this road though. I’m happy to live in a low crime/low gun violence state.
 
California is the 4th largest economy in the world with one of the highest qualities of life. It’s foolish to call California third world.
California held a lot of promise and did have a golden age but it is now filled with decay, crime and abject homelessness.

Its definitely third world in the two largest cities. Many have fled to the outlying areas and those are still marginally livable.

I lived uptown in LA (1st and Hope St.) for years and its pretty dangerous to go outside at night. That is new. I used to walk my dog at night around the music center with no problems. Its on Bunker Hill and the hill itself used to be sort of a deterrent to bad guys. Not any more.
 
California held a lot of promise and did have a golden age but it is now filled with decay, crime and abject homelessness.

Its definitely third world in the two largest cities. Many have fled to the outlying areas and those are still marginally livable.

I lived uptown in LA (1st and Hope St.) for years and its pretty dangerous to go outside at night. That is new. I used to walk my dog at night around the music center with no problems. Its on Bunker Hill and the hill itself used to be sort of a deterrent to bad guys. Not any more.

I grew up in Brooklyn NY in the 1980s. A mobster was shot in a restaurant on the block I lived on. There was drugs and homelessness everywhere. The subway was disgusting and full of hustlers and crime. Graffiti was all over the place. Now it’s a million dollar neighborhood.

Cities go through cycles of investment and decay then investment. Cities are also the economic engine of America. No cities, no pretty little suburbs. Try to keep things in perspective, chicken little.
 
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