Those Damn Guns Again II - Chicago

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
The history of gun control in the United States has been one of discrimination, oppression, and arbitrary enforcement.

Now, I don't think that anyone would argue that whites didn't want guns in the hands of those they oppresed, including Black people. But, does not the article YOU posted go further than discrimination against Blacks ???

What the author actually said, was:


The history of gun control in America possesses an ugly component: discrimination and oppression of blacks, other racial and ethnic minorities, immigrants, and other "unwanted elements," including union organizers and agrarian reformers.

* * *​

Another old American prejudice supported such gun control efforts, then as it does now: the idea that poor people, and especially the black poor, are not to be trusted with firearms. Even now, in many jurisdictions in which police departments have wide discretion in issuing firearm permits, the effect is that permits are rarely issued to poor or minority citizens

* * *​

American gun control laws have been enacted to disarm and facilitate repressive actions against union organizers, [Page 69] workers, the foreign-born and racial minorities.

* * *​

Lets see now: ethnic minorities, immigrants, and other "unwanted elements," including union organizers and agrarian reformers . . . poor people . . . the foreign-born . . ."

Damn near ALL sound like whites to me ???




 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Now, I don't think that anyone would argue that whites didn't want guns in the hands of those they oppresed, including Black people. But, does not the article YOU posted go further than discrimination against Blacks ???

What the author actually said, was:

The history of gun control in America possesses an ugly component: discrimination and oppression of blacks, other racial and ethnic minorities, immigrants, and other "unwanted elements," including union organizers and agrarian reformers.

* * *​

Another old American prejudice supported such gun control efforts, then as it does now: the idea that poor people, and especially the black poor, are not to be trusted with firearms. Even now, in many jurisdictions in which police departments have wide discretion in issuing firearm permits, the effect is that permits are rarely issued to poor or minority citizens

* * *​

American gun control laws have been enacted to disarm and facilitate repressive actions against union organizers, [Page 69] workers, the foreign-born and racial minorities.

* * *​
Lets see now: ethnic minorities, immigrants, and other "unwanted elements," including union organizers and agrarian reformers . . . poor people . . . the foreign-born . . ."

Damn near ALL sound like whites to me ???

This topic should have have been continued here:

Sorry, Gun Nuts: Hitler Actually Relaxed Most Gun Laws:
 

Upgrade Dave

Rising Star
Registered
You're wasting your time debating with people who are emotionally connected to the left.

As opposed to your own emotional connection to the Right wing, even at your own personal detriment?

Lamarr has yet to show how any of this connects to the current debate.
When he does, this will be interesting again.
 

Lamarr

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Registered
This is certainly not to excuse the policies of the Chicago Housing Authority Police Department or the Chicago Police Department itself. But you're arguing that the crime sweeps by the Housing Authorith Police was a racist plot by whites against blacks ???


Of course, it was a plot by whites! Excuse my anger, (it's not directed at you) but How else could the CHAPD (the 'house' negroes) obtain funding to carry out their nefarious policies?
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Of course, it was a plot by whites! Excuse my anger, (it's not directed at you) but How else could the CHAPD (the 'house' negroes) obtain funding to carry out their nefarious policies?

:hmm: . . . is that you best impression of Cruise ?!?!?


:lol:
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Of course, it was a plot by whites! Excuse my anger, (it's not directed at you) but How else could the CHAPD (the 'house' negroes) obtain funding to carry out their nefarious policies?


BTW, an argument could be made that Blacks who join with the NRA alleging reasonable gun control is racist are just "House Negroes" complicit in the deaths of black men, women and children, all across America.

 

Greed

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First lady Michelle Obama to visit Harper High

Be aware - Each link connects to a web page with embedded audio that may or may not autoplay.

Harper High School, Part One
FEB 15, 2013
We spent five months at Harper High School in Chicago, where last year alone 29 current and recent students were shot. 29. We went to get a sense of what it means to live in the midst of all this gun violence, how teens and adults navigate a world of funerals and Homecoming dances.

PROLOGUE
At the first day assembly, the freshman seem confused and nervous while the seniors are boisterous and confident. It's exactly the kind of first day stuff you'd expect at any school. Until Harper Principal Leonetta Sanders calls for a moment of silence to honor the students Harper has lost in the last year. Then Harper doesn't seem so ordinary. In the clean and orderly halls of Harper, we meet the staff as they shepherd the students through new schedules and rules while they also try to reassure parents about the frightening rise in shootings in the neighborhood. (7 minutes)

ACT ONE - Rules to Live By.
So many of the shootings in the Englewood neighborhood of Chicago, the neighborhood where Harper High sits, are characterized as "gang-related." Often, the implication is that gang-related means there is a reason to the shooting — huge, established gangs shooting it out over drug territory. Gang-related often implies you must've deserved it, a certain level of 'what goes around comes around.' Reporter Linda Lutton talks to dozens of Harper students who say adults don't understand that that's not the way it works. Gangs don't operate the way they used to. (13 minutes)

ACT TWO - A Tiny Office on the Second Floor.
Reporter Alex Kotlowitz spends time in the social work office, where the effects of gun violence are most often apparent. Early on in the year, social worker Crystal Smith spends time with a junior named Devonte, talking him through his grief and guilt after Devonte accidentally shot and killed his 14 year old brother last year. Crystal also meets with Devonte's mother, who has some understandably confused feelings towards Devonte. (16 minutes)

ACT THREE - Game Day.
By early October, it's been pretty quiet at Harper, as far as gun violence goes. But on the day before the homecoming game, during a pep rally, a senior named Damoni who is both on the football team and nominated for Homecoming King, gets word that a good friend of his, James, has been shot. James is also a former Harper student with many ties to the school. Reporter Ben Calhoun follows Principal Sanders and the rest of the Harper staff as they jump into action and try to ward off more violence, keep the students safe and grapple with whether they need to cancel the Harper High School Homecoming. (18 minutes)​

Be aware - Each link connects to a web page with embedded audio that may or may not autoplay.

Harper High School, Part Two
FEB 22, 2013
We pick up where we left off last week in our second hour from Harper High School in Chicago. We find out if a shooting in the neighborhood will derail the school's Homecoming game and dance. We hear the origin story of one of Harper's gangs. And we ask a group of teenagers: where do you get your guns?

PROLOGUE
Principal Leonetta Sanders is worried that in the wake of a recent shooting, some of her students at Harper might be in danger of retaliatory violence. The threat is so real, she's considering canceling the school's Homecoming football game and dance. The possibility of canceling is heartbreaking to her, though, as all she wants is to give her students one normal high school dance. On Homecoming day, she gathers her staff to announce that there has been word of more shooting in the neighborhood. (5 minutes)

ACT ONE - The Eyewitness.
Most murders in Chicago happen in public places — parks, alleyways, cars. Scores of Harper students will tell you they've actually seen someone shot. Reporter Alex Kotlowitz talks with a junior named Thomas, who has seen more than his fair share. Thomas meets with his social worker, Anita Stewart, and tries to explain what it feels like to hold all of these images — and feelings — inside of him. He worries he can't hold on to them much longer. (10 minutes)

ACT TWO - Your Name Written On Me.
Reporter Ben Calhoun tells the story of Terrance Green, a 16-year-old who was killed three years ago but is still an iconic presence at Harper. Ben asks Terrance's dad and his best friend: Why did this one kid's death lead to slickly produced songs, tribute videos, a gang in his name, assault rifles on the street and an entire remapping of the violence in the area around Harper High School? (15 minutes)

ACT THREE - Get Your Gun.
Chicago has strict gun laws but, obviously, teenagers are somehow getting their hands on guns. Lots of guns. We've all heard about straw purchasers and gun shows but 15-year-olds aren't spending hundreds of dollars to buy guns, or exploiting gun show loopholes. Reporter Linda Lutton gathers together a group of Harper boys and asks them: where do you get your guns? They tell her not only where they get them, but where they keep them, too. (6 minutes)

ACT FOUR - Devonte, Part Two.
In the first hour of our Harper High School shows, Alex Kotlowitz talked to a junior named Devonte who a year earlier had accidentally shot and killed his 14-year-old brother. Devonte was forming a strong relationship with Crystal Smith, one of the social workers, and beginning to come to terms with both his grief and guilt. Alex checks back in with Devonte and finds out that his life has taken some troubling turns. (8 minutes)

ACT FIVE - Reverse Turnaround Backflip.
Late in the semester, Principal Sanders takes a look at her budget. It doesn't look good. She talks with Ben Calhoun about what is going to change — and who won't be at Harper — next year. (7 minutes)

ACT SIX - We Are Harper High School.
Harper High School isn't alone. (3 minutes)​
First lady Michelle Obama to visit Harper High
By Katherine Skiba
Tribune reporter
6:16 p.m. CDT, April 9, 2013

First lady Michelle Obama, visiting Chicago on Wednesday for a discussion with Mayor Rahm Emanuel and civic leaders on ways to combat youth violence, will make a stop afterward at Harper High School, where students and alumni have been hit hard by gun violence.

Twenty-nine current or former Harper students have been shot in the last year, eight of them fatally, her office said. The school is in the West Englewood neighborhood.

At the school she will meet with a small group of students and counselors “to hear firsthand about their experiences,” her office said. The visit is not open to the public.

The lunch with Emanuel and others is at the Hilton Chicago Hotel.

Her visit comes just as Congress is poised to take up gun-control measures.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...arper-high-20130409,0,7773930.story?track=rss
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: First lady Michelle Obama to visit Harper High




<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/LORVfnFtcH0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>


 

Greed

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Teen Found Shot Half-Mile From Obama Home

Teen Found Shot Half-Mile From Obama Home
April 23, 2013 6:28 AM

CHICAGO (CBS) — A 15-year-old boy was found shot to death in the Grand Boulevard neighborhood Monday night — less than four blocks the home of President Barack Obama.

Cornelius German was found lying in the backyard of a home in the 700 block of east 50th Place with a gunshot wound in his back about 9:40 p.m., authorities said.

German, of the 1000 block of East Hyde Park Boulevard, was pronounced dead at the scene at shortly after his body was discovered, authorities said.

Police said German was affiliated with a gang.

No one was in custody early Tuesday.

The Obamas’ home, in 5000 block of South Greenwood Avenue, in the Kenwood neighborhood is little under a half-mile from where German’s body was found.

German’s home address is just two blocks west of the Obama residence.

http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2013/04/23/teen-found-shot-half-mile-from-obama-home/
 

Greed

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Bishop Moves In Home To Face Down Gangs May 15, 2013 5:03 PM

Bishop Moves In Home To Face Down Gangs
May 15, 2013 5:03 PM

CHICAGO (CBS) — One month ago today, change came to one block in one of Chicago’s toughest neighborhoods.

It had been terrorized by a gang until the block got some new neighbors.

On this warm Wednesday morning, Bishop James Dukes visited with a neighbor and described what life is like no on 68th Place, just west of Damen in West Englewood.

“People are back on the porch,” Dukes said. “We’re cleaning up the block. We got people watering the grass.”

It has been a month since gang members forced the Robinson family out of their house. Mr. Robinson was severely beaten.

It happened, the family said because they would not allow the gang to sell drugs along the side of the house.

Bishop Dukes and other ministers moved in staying in the Robinson house, night after night.

All to send a message to the gang.

Dukes said the gangs have not given him any trouble. If fact, he found the opposite with some of them

“Most of them come wanting help,” Dukes said. “They don’t operate in the capacity that they used to.”

Joe Evans, who lives down the block, said before the ministers arrived gunfire made watching TV in the living room dangerous.

“You get on the floor,” Evans said. “Then go and sit down and do whatever you were doing.”

It is relatively peaceful now on this block, but there are ominous comparisons. Dukes worries about what will happen when he leaves.

“People are worried,” Dukes said. “If we leave, it’s almost like Afghanistan or Iraq. If we leave, will the surge come back?”

Bishop Dukes concedes because he and his fellow ministers are there now police are keeping a close eye on the block. He hopes churches and community organizations adopt other blocks in Englewood.

http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2013/05/15/bishop-moves-in-home-to-face-down-gangs/
 

Greed

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Registered
Chicago Killings Cost $2.5 Billion as Murders Top N.Y.’s

http://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/2012-chicago-murders/explore-data?neighborhood=South+Shore
http://go.bloomberg.com/multimedia/measuring-the-cost-of-gun-violence/

Chicago Killings Cost $2.5 Billion as Murders Top N.Y.’s
By Tim Jones & John McCormick
May 22, 2013 7:00 PM CT

When Gregory Glinsey was fatally shot while buying ice for his mother’s 80th birthday party, the emotional toll on his family was incalculable. The immediate price to the public was $800 for his autopsy.

His slaying and 505 others in Chicago last year scarred it with a rising homicide rate as most cities saw declines. Another 2,000 non-fatal shootings in Chicago added costs measured in shuttered businesses, lost wages, disability checks and depopulation. In Glinsey’s case, the price of his random killing mounted before his mother knew her 54-year-old son wouldn’t return from a convenience store in the South Shore neighborhood.

More than three dozen police swarmed the scene of the Feb. 19, 2012, shooting, which also killed a 19-year-old and injured five other teenagers. After $1,000 ambulance rides to hospitals for each survivor, the combined trauma-care bill would, on average, top $250,000. Gunfire outside Budget Food & Liquors cost its owner a tenant and $1,000 in monthly rent: A tax preparer next door bolted after a bullet from another shooting ripped past a secretary’s head.

“Violence hurts the economy, and sooner or later it permeates everything,” said Teyonda Wertz, head of South Shore’s chamber of commerce. “Unless we change our crime situation, it’ll kill us.”

All told, shootings cost Chicago $2.5 billion a year, or about $2,500 per household, according to Jens Ludwig, director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab. Many of those costs are intangibles, Ludwig said, like keeping people from going outside or letting their children walk to school. Reducing even a fraction of the carnage, though, would free up more money than the city expects to save each year from the closing of 49 elementary schools approved yesterday by the school board.

Chicago Bleeding

Nationwide, the crime lab estimates, gun violence costs $100 billion, roughly the salaries of 2 million police officers.

Chicago, the third-largest U.S. city, last year recorded a homicide rate more than three times New York City’s and double that of Los Angeles. It also had about 900 more non-fatal shootings than New York despite having a third as many residents. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg is co-founder of Bloomberg LP, parent company of Bloomberg News.

In a nation beset by handgun deaths and injuries, Chicago is a big city that bleeds more than almost any other.

The bloodshed last year prompted Mayor Rahm Emanuel, a Democrat who is President Barack Obama’s former chief of staff, to reverse a money-saving decision that let police ranks drop to the lowest in at least five years.

Burning Overtime

Citywide through May 12, homicides were down 39 percent and shootings 28 percent. To help accomplish that, though, the police in just three months burned through almost two-thirds of the entire year’s overtime-pay budget, which the department said is $38 million.

“It’s a shell game,” said Pat Camden, a spokesman for Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police. “We are shifting things back and forth trying to appease the aldermen and the public.”

In South Shore, the price of such violence can be gauged in its grim decline, from a vibrant redoubt among neighborhoods that have long been synonymous with urban mayhem to one on the verge of joining their ranks.

The community of 50,000 people on the south side of the city of 2.7 million is the childhood home of first lady Michelle Obama, who grew up on the second floor of a bungalow on Euclid Avenue. There she befriended the children of the city’s black elite, including civil rights leader Jesse Jackson Sr. It’s where software pioneer Larry Ellison, co-founder and chief executive of Oracle Corp. (ORCL), was raised and where health-care consultant Dr. Eric Whitaker, one of the Obamas’ closest friends, lives.

Population Drain

The neighborhood is racially homogenous, 95 percent black after most white residents fled integration decades ago. Yet South Shore is economically divided, with homes selling for anywhere from $10,000 to more than $1 million.

Amid the violence, it’s losing its human and commercial lifeblood. While Chicago’s population fell 6.9 percent from 2000 to 2010, the neighborhood’s sank 19.2 percent, according to the city and Census Bureau.

The number of businesses dropped by a third from 2005 through 2012 in the postal zone that covers the neighborhood, according to Chicago licensing data compiled by Bloomberg. During that period, the citywide total grew by 1.3 percent. The merchants who remain find it tougher to compete.

‘Real Costs’

“In higher-crime neighborhoods it’s more costly to run a business, both in terms of attracting customers and workers,” said Robert Greenbaum, a professor at Ohio State University who has studied the subject. The loss of nighttime business hours robs the U.S. gross national product of as much as $7.4 billion a year, according to research by Ludwig and Philip Cook, authors of “Gun Violence: The Real Costs.”

Some studies suggest it contributes directly to people leaving cities. University of Chicago economist Steven Levitt, co-author of the book “Freakonomics,” found that each homicide leads to the departure of 70 people.

South Shore is providing ample motivation to flee. Last year, 19 homicides occurred within its three square miles. Residents dubbed one particularly violent stretch Terror Town, where Glinsey was hit in the chest after a burst of gunfire from a car that pulled in front of the convenience store. The 19-year-old who was killed was shot in the back while running inside.

On April 30, hours before police officials announced another drop in homicides, the temperature hit 86 degrees Fahrenheit (30 Celsius) for the first time in almost eight months. South Shore erupted: Three people were shot and one killed in six hours.

Society’s Tab

“There is no safe time of day to go out anymore,” said Arthur Lyles, an assistant pastor of Christ Bible Church of Chicago, which sits in the middle of Terror Town. Lyles has a grandson and nephew wounded by gunfire. “You can be shot at 10 in the morning, 1 in the afternoon or 9 at night.''

The tab for taxpayers and society starts running as soon as a bullet strikes someone, from detectives on the street and trauma surgeons at the city’s public hospital to months of rehab for victims and years of court proceedings for the accused.

The first to arrive at the Budget Food & Liquors crime scene that February evening was the “paper car,” police slang for the unit charged with completing a preliminary report.

Detectives and evidence technicians soon converged on the corner of 79th Street and Essex Avenue. Lower-priority calls were pushed aside. Suspicion of gang involvement brought more, including patrolmen to discourage retaliation. With Glinsey dead on the sidewalk, a homicide team consisting of a sergeant and a handful of investigators were dispatched, said Joseph Salemme, commander of detectives for the South Side.

Body Bags

The initial response cost as much as $6,000 in salary alone for the roughly five hours that officers spent gathering evidence and interviewing witnesses.

Then there were the incidentals: The medical examiner’s office paid $4.58 for the body bag, including the plastic sheets and tape used to seal Glinsey’s remains for the trip to the morgue.

No one’s been charged in the slaying of the unemployed former steelworker who lived with his mother. If suspects are arrested, police must charge or release them within 48 hours, so officers often put in night and weekend duty to meet the deadline.

“Every murder incurs overtime,” Salemme said, with extreme cases consuming 1,000 to 1,500 hours of “premium pay.”

It can take years to develop tips from reluctant witnesses, and that doesn’t come cheap -- detective pay ranges from $63,642 to $96,444.

Fewer Police

Buffeted by the worst recession since the Great Depression, the city has tried to make its force leaner. Emanuel’s predecessor, Mayor Richard M. Daley, started the trend in 2008 by not filling vacant police positions.

Emanuel continued the reductions after taking office in May 2011. Last year’s homicide spike came after the number of rank-and-file officers dropped to 12,236 in 2011 from 13,749 in 2006, according to pension-fund records.

There weren’t enough cadets to replace those retiring, and Emanuel in October pushed for hiring more than 450 cops as part of his $8.3 billion spending plan for 2013. Last week, the police academy graduated 105, its largest class since 2005.

“I’ve been saying for two years we have the number of officers we need,” Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said in a statement. “Today Chicago has more officers per capita than any of the five major police departments in the country.”

He attributed this year’s gains to giving district commanders more authority and accountability as well as “a return to community policing, a comprehensive gang violence reduction initiative, a more holistic approach to narcotics enforcement.”

Public Disapproval

The reduction in violence so far this year hasn’t yet registered with the public. A Chicago Tribune/WGN-TV poll taken April 30 to May 6 showed the proportion of city voters who disapprove of Emanuel’s handling of crime had risen to 47 percent, up from 34 percent a year earlier.

On top of the cost of policing comes the cost of care. The teenagers injured alongside Glinsey were taken to three private South Side hospitals. The workhorse for treating the city’s gunshot victims, though, is Cook County hospital, the hulking public facility on the West Side that inspired the TV series “ER.”

Trauma Bills

On a recent Saturday night, five of eight occupied intensive-care beds in the unit had shooting victims. One man had 10 bullet holes, including one through his jaw that would require a feeding tube for at least six weeks and nursing-home care. Another had a spinal-cord wound that would leave him a quadriplegic and a “significant burden on the taxpayer,” said Dr. Andrew Dennis, 43, a trauma surgeon.

This wasn’t an extraordinary night. Last year, the hospital treated 846 shooting victims at a total cost of about $44 million, with trauma care averaging $52,000 per case, according to the county. Seventy percent of the victims treated at what’s formally called John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital have no insurance, so their bills are part of the annual $500 million taxpayer tab for the county health system.

During the heat of the summer, Dennis said, he’s seen as many as 20 gunshot victims in one 24-hour shift. Several times a month, he’ll see repeat customers. Often, doctors leave the bullets inside because taking them out surgically is more risky.

“Most people who leave, leave with their bullets in them forever,” said Dennis, who exhibits a police officer’s toughness. In fact, he’s a medical director for the Cook County Sheriff’s office and carries a gun when not at the hospital.

Brain Damage

For the 98 percent of gunshot victims who depart alive, their next stop is often the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago.

Gunshot wounds represent about one in 20 of the institute’s patients, said Dr. Elliot Roth, its medical director. More of its gunshot victims have multiple wounds than those from a decade ago, the result of increasing use of semi-automatic weapons. That can mean exponentially greater neurological damage that is more expensive to treat, Roth said.

Care can cost $100,000 or more -- covered by taxpayers if the patient is indigent -- with the average about $35,000 and inpatient stays lasting about six weeks. Once a victim goes home, making it wheelchair accessible often costs tens of thousands of dollars.

As victims recover, the cost of prosecuting attackers mounts. Police earn overtime for court appearances outside normal shifts, much of it wasted because it’s not uncommon for murder trials to be delayed as many as 20 times. Six to eight officers and detectives may testify.

Squandered Hopes

Other costs are less tangible: lost wages and squandered hopes.

Kelley Boyd, who has lived in South Shore for the past decade, became a harbinger for the neighborhood when he was shot at age 16 while walking down a street several miles away. Costs associated with his wounds have been accumulating for two decades.

He spends days in a wheelchair in his three-room apartment, watching TV and collecting his $700 monthly disability check and $100 in food stamps.

He points with an index finger to a spot left of his nose where a bullet entered, leaving him partially paralyzed on his right side. He struggles for vocal clarity, occasionally snapping the fingers of his left hand in search of words.

Lost Wages

As a teenager, Boyd planned to become an accountant. That’s roughly $600,000 in lost wages for South Shore, assuming a starting salary for a tax preparer of about $40,000.

“I’m not through,” he says, showing a flash of anger. “I’m too smart to be doing this. It’s not what I want for myself.”

Beyond Boyd’s broken venetian blinds, hundreds of people were attacked on South Shore’s streets in recent years. The 420 shootings in 2011 and 2012 in the police district that includes most of the neighborhood represented a two-year increase of 20 percent, four times as large as the city as a whole, police data show. So far this year, shootings in the district are down 55 percent from the same period in 2012 and 15 percent from 2011.

The socioeconomic opposite of Terror Town, where Glinsey was killed, is a 12-block section of South Shore called Jackson Park Highlands. It’s distinctive for its architecture, affluence and isolation.

Dead Bodies

The Highlands’ well-educated professionals represent a vital component of the neighborhood’s future that the violence threatens to drive away.

“If you’re making $100,000 or $200,000, you’re not going to want to continue to step over bodies,” said Henry English, president and chief executive officer of the Black United Fund of Illinois, a South Shore-based community development group, who has seen gunshot victims lying dead outside his office and on his block at home.

The commercial heart of the neighborhood sits less than three blocks from the Highlands home of James Norris, yet he said he feels he has to “be on guard” when he’s on 71st Street. “I would usually prefer to avoid the area,” he said.

Violence has prompted the South Shore chamber of commerce to discourage businesses from staying open at night and to seek fines -- and even shutter -- stores that tolerate loitering. Merchants struggle with people selling individual cigarettes called “loosies” and illegal drugs.

Fleeing Violence

Two months after Glinsey was fatally shot outside Budget Food & Liquors, the tax preparer next door fled. The Jackson Hewitt branch moved eight blocks north to 71st Street, near a shopping center anchored by franchise drug, electronics, grocery and sandwich outlets.

That wasn’t far enough. On the evening of April 30, three men were shot near the stores. The next morning, a 27-year-old man was killed about three blocks away.

Wertz, the executive director of the South Shore Chamber Inc., has a different challenge than her peers in most suburbs or more stable city neighborhoods.

The South Shore commercial strips she touts are defined mostly by beauty salons, wig shops, liquor stores, check cashing operations and tax preparation outlets. Wertz’s wish list: auto parts, shoes, a pancake house, a Marshalls and a T.J. Maxx.

Crime Consultant

Wertz, whose organization employs its own crime consultant, is pushing the city to open a police substation on 71st Street, a year and a half after Emanuel closed three district stations to help plug a $636 million deficit left by Daley.

“We need to get rid of the impression that there’s always going to be a gun fight,” Wertz said.
Death, it turns out, is death on business.

Sandy Neal, a fashion designer, would like to open a vintage clothing store in his native South Shore.
“I don’t see a lot of foot traffic,” said Neal, 48. “You don’t see people going out to stroll and stop to have coffee.”

Or get supplies for their mother’s birthday party. More than a year after her son’s killing, Bertha Glinsey can’t quite fathom just how far her neighborhood has fallen.

“To think that you could go to the store and not come back alive,” she said, grimacing as she sat at her dining room table. “You can’t do what normal people do.”

Just down Saginaw Street from the two-story brick home where she and her husband reared seven children, a welcome sign still boasts: “A Great Place to Raise a Family.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...cago-shows-gun-toll-for-city-that-bleeds.html
 

Greed

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Career criminal charged in Jonylah Watkins slaying


Chicago baby, shot 5 times
with father during a diaper change, dies




ht_jonylah_watkins_dm_130312_wg.jpg




In Chicago, certain names have become synonymous with a specific type of tragedy for girls, which can be recalled with bleak and brief synopsis:

Now there is another name to add.

Six-month-old Jonylah Watkins died at a hospital Tuesday morning after being shot while getting her diaper changed by her father, who was shot too.​

She is survived by her 20-year old mother -- who had once been shot in the leg while eight months' pregnant -- and her father, Jonathan Watkins, 29, who remained in the hospital in serious condition, officials said.

"This is another tragedy, because no child, and certainly not an infant, should be the victim of gang violence," Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy said at a televised news conference. "Which, by the way, at this point, although there's a lot of angles that we're pursuing, there are very strong gang overtones to this particular event."

Police said Watkins had parked his van on the street to change his daughter's diaper when the gunman approached from behind and fired several shots into the van. The shooter then ran through an empty lot and into a blue minivan, speeding away.

"Based on the ballistics and the position of the father and the baby in the car, he was shooting at the father," McCarthy said.

He added, "Right now, we don't have one real good witness at this point."

The death comes a day after McCarthy started a push for a "broken windows" law-enforcement strategy in Chicago that would punish more small crimes in the hope that the effort will prevent bigger crimes -- the idea being that allowing just one broken window will lead to many more broken windows.

According to the latest available mortality data kept by the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, 20,033 women and girls were killed in gun homicides between 2000 and 2010, with gun homicides against women at its lowest rate in 2010.

Black women and girls were 3-1/2 times more likely to have been killed in a shooting than white females, according to the data, with their deaths most likely coming in their 20s.
SOURCE: L.A. TIMES
Career criminal charged in Jonylah Watkins slaying
By Adam Sege, Carlos Sadovi and Dawn Rhodes
Tribune reporters
4:18 p.m. CDT, May 27, 2013

First-degree murder charges have been lodged against a 33-year-old Chatham neighborhood man in the fatal shooting of 6-month-old Jonylah Watkins in March, according to officials.

Koman Willis of the 7800 block of South St. Lawrence Avenue was charged with killing the girl and was also charged with aggravated battery with a firearm for shooting the girl's father on March 11, according to Sally Daly, a spokeswoman for Cook County State's Atty. Anita Alvarez.

According to court records, Willis has been arrested 46 times going back to 1996.

He has prior convictions for aggravated assault of a police officer from a 2002 incident in which he was sentenced to three years in the Illinois Department of Corrections, a 2007 conviction for drugs for which he was sentenced to one year in prison, and a conviction for a 2005 drug charge for which he received a year in prison. He also was convicted on a 1998 weapons charge for which he received probation, according to court records.

Police had been holding Willis at Area Central police headquarters, sources said.

At a press conference, police superintendent Garry F. McCarthy formally announced the charges and said the charges marked a milestone for the investigators.

"Mr. Willis has been a suspect for a very long time," McCarthy said. "The question was whether or not we could show it in a court of law."

McCarthy said that Willis allegedly shot Jonathan Watkins "in retaliation for a stolen video game system," but would not say why Willis suspected Watkins for the burglary. Watkins is not expected to be charged for any such burglary, McCarthy said.

He also said that Willis turned himself in on Saturday, accompanied by an attorney, but did not give police a statement.

"He knew we were out looking for him," McCarthy said.

Rev. Corey Brooks, who has frequently spoken on behalf of Jonylah's family, said that her parents spent today, Memorial Day, at their daughter's grave site.

"They are very grateful and thankful," Brooks said. "Hopefully they'll be able to put this part behind them and go forward."

Watkins and her father were shot the afternoon of March 11 as they sat in a minivan parked in the South Side's Woodlawn neighborhood, according to police.

Jonylah was rushed to Comer Children's Hospital after the shooting, which happened shortly before 1 p.m. near the intersection of East 65th Street and South Maryland Avenue. She died the following day.

Her 29-year-old father, who was shot multiple times and treated at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, survived. Police believe he was the shooter's intended target.

Like Hadiya Pendleton, a 15-year-old high school student killed less than two months earlier, Jonylah made national headlines as yet another young victim of gun violence in Chicago.

More than than 500 people were killed in the city last year, the vast majority by gunfire. It was the first time Chicago passed that number since 2008.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...ns-person-of-interest-20130526,0,752926.story
 

Greed

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Chicago prepares for new concealed carry gun law

Chicago prepares for new concealed carry gun law
By DON BABWIN | Associated Press
2 hrs 7 mins ago

CHICAGO (AP) — This city, where violent street gangs shoot it out dozens of times a week despite some of the nation's toughest restrictions on guns, now faces a new challenge: Well-meaning citizens with the legal right to hit the streets with loaded firearms, whenever they want.

As Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn mulls whether to sign off on eliminating the country's last concealed carry ban, the question in Chicago is whether it will matter in the crime-weary city. Will a place that long had some of the nation's tightest restrictions on handguns be more at risk? Or will it be safer with a law that can only add to the number of guns already on the street?

Neighborhood leaders, anti-crime activists and police officials worry about additional mayhem in Chicago. But other residents, including some who live in Chicago's more violent areas, believe more guns will allow them to defend themselves better.

"We just had a weekend where something like 48 people were shot, seven died," said Otis McDonald, 79, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit that ended with the U.S. Supreme Court tossing out Chicago's strict gun ban three years ago. "Now law abiding citizens like myself ... can carry them when they want to and not carry them when they don't want to, and the people out there who will do us harm won't know when we got them and when we don't."

At City Hall, where Chicago's anti-gun campaign has centered for years, the reaction to concealed carry legislation has been relatively quiet. The reasons seem to boil down to this: The city can do little about stopping the law because a federal appeals court ordered Illinois to end its public possession ban by this summer.

"We would prefer to have the (gun) bans we've always enacted... (but) it's the best we could do based upon the mandate we have," said Alderman Patrick O'Connor.

The bill sitting on Quinn's desk is a hard-fought compromise between conservative downstate lawmakers who opposed most gun restrictions and anti-gun lawmakers from Chicago and other urban areas. The legislation requires state police to issue a concealed-carry permit to any gun owner with a state-issued Firearm Owners Identification card, and who passes a background check, pays a $150 fee and undergoes 16 hours of training.

It's not as stringent as concealed carry laws in California, New York and a handful of others states, which give law enforcement authorities more power to deny permits. But it's more restrictive than earlier proposals by gun rights advocates, including one that would have superseded all local gun restrictions. For example, it won't wipe out Chicago and Cook County's ban on assault weapons.

Most significantly for gun control advocates, the legislation does prohibit guns in places like schools, buses, trains, bars and government buildings.

"If you think about all the prohibited places there are ... I don't think you will see an overwhelming number of people actually (carrying weapons) because it becomes such a headache," said state Sen. Kwame Raoul, a Chicago lawmaker and lead negotiator on the bill who represents President Barack Obama's former state senate district.

But other city officials aren't so assured. Superintendent Garry McCarthy calls a requirement that people go through only 16 hours of training before they are issued a concealed carry permit "woefully inadequate" because about the only thing people can learn in that time is how to "point and fire a weapon" and not when they can legally do so.

"Our officers receive six months of training in the police academy and then three months on the streets and at the end of the day we make mistakes frequently," he said.

Another concern by Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart is the provision in the bill that calls for law enforcement and prosecutors to object to a governor-appointed panel if they suspect applicants are dangerous. In Cook County, where there are 358,000 registered gun owners, Dart said he's worried gang members and others who shouldn't have guns will slip through the cracks and be granted permits.

Quinn, a Chicago Democrat, has been quiet on his intentions with the legislation, his office saying he's "reviewing the bill carefully." But what he decides may be moot, given that the Legislature passed it by wide enough margins to override any veto.

Once the law is in place, Dart said he expects a flood of applications for permits, something that happened in November 2011 in Wisconsin, where within hours of becoming the 49th state to have a concealed carry law, tens of thousands of people downloaded applications. By the end of 2012, the state had issued nearly 110,000 permits.

During 2012, the first full year the law was in effect, Milwaukee's total for homicides and rapes remained virtually the same as the year before. As for robbery, the kind of crime that concealed carry supporters say would be reduced if more regular citizens had weapons, Milwaukee saw a 17.2 percent drop between 2011 and 2012. But police say so far this year the number of robberies has climbed by 19 percent.

Whether the law will have similar effects in Chicago is a matter of contention. Rev. Michael Pfleger, a Catholic priest and activist on the city's South Side, doesn't believe criminals will hesitate out of some concern their victims might be armed.
"You are going to see a lot more gun fights and you are going to see people using guns as their first line of defense when they are confronted. To think guns are suddenly going to be the answer to violence in the city or the state, it's absurd," Pfleger said.

But Richard Pearson, Illinois State Rifle Association executive director, predicts Chicago's crime rate will fall. He argues that both sides in the gun debate will be watching closely what transpires.

"What goes on in Chicago is a very big deal because of their history of resisting firearm use," Pearson said.

http://news.yahoo.com/chicago-prepares-concealed-carry-gun-law-193704212.html
 

QueEx

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8 shot in single West Side attack
67 shot over long Chicago weekend





July 7, 2013 - 7:51 a.m., CDT


Eight people were shot -- one fatally -- in a drive-by shooting in which two men fired on a group of people at a home in the Lawndale neighborhood Saturday evening, authorities said.

At least one of the shooters used a rifle and casings were recovered at the scene, police said.

At least 67 people have been shot across the city since Wednesday afternoon [through Sunday morning] this long holiday weekend, 11 fatally.

Chicago Tribune


 

Greed

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Yea, it was fifty shot two or three weeks ago on just a regular weekend.

Every where you go in the black parts of town, there are multiple groups of boys doing nothing but hanging out on the corner while the local McDonald's is 90% female employees.
 

thoughtone

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Yea, it was fifty shot two or three weeks ago on just a regular weekend.

Every where you go in the black parts of town, there are multiple groups of boys doing nothing but hanging out on the corner while the local McDonald's is 90% female employees.


I don't know where you live, but around here the the cashiers tend to be female, but the cooks and managers tend to be male.

Not to defend the fools that are hanging out and cause mayhem, but maybe fast food would rather hire females because it's currently an employers market and females tend to come cheaper than males.
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
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The Free Market at work.

source: Raw Story

Insurers dropping Kansas schools over concealed-carry law for teachers


At least three insurance companies have refused to renew their coverage policies for Kansas schools in the wake of a new law allowing teachers to carry firearms on campus, The Des Moines Register reported on Sunday.

“We’ve been writing school business for almost 40 years,” EMC Insurance Companies vice president for business development Mick Lovell told the Register. “One of the underwriting guidelines we follow for schools is that any on-site armed security should be provided by uniformed, qualified law enforcement officers. Our guidelines have not recently changed.”

Lovell’s company provided insurance to almost 90 percent of the state’s school districts before pulling its coverage. Two other companies, Continental Western Group and Wright Specialty Insurance, followed suit. The new law, which allows teachers and other personnel to carry concealed arms inside school buildings, took effect on July 1, and is similar to measures in South Dakota and Tennessee passed as a response to the December 2012 school shooting attack in Newtown, Connecticut.

State Sen. Forrest Knox (R), who advocated for the law, told the Register that only 300 of 3,000 counties and municipalities in Kansas had filed exemption requests with Attorney General Derek Schmidt (R), and that a brokerage group, identified by another state official as the Insurance Management Association, had agreed to provide insurance for Independence Community College, Labette Community College and Neosho County Community College, three schools in his district.

“I’m not an insurance expert, but it’s hard for me to believe that if schools and other public buildings allow law-abiding citizens to carry that that increases risk,” Knox told the Register. “It’s news to me.”

The New York Times reported that school district administrators in Oregon are balking after the state School Boards Association, which manages liability coverage for the vast majority of school districts there, instituted an additional premium worth $2,500 for every faculty member who has a firearm on campus.

“Pretty much every last bit of our money is budgeted,” Jackson County official Scott Whitman told the Times. “To me, that could be quite an impediment to putting this forward.”

The Times also reported that a plan to deputize teachers in Noble County, Indiana, which would have granted them permission to carry firearms, never came to fruition after an insurance company refused to provide coverage for schools taking part.
 

Greed

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I don't know where you live, but around here the the cashiers tend to be female, but the cooks and managers tend to be male.
I live in Chi-Town, Illa Noise. Home of the 50% school dropout rate for black males and the 50% unemployment rate for black males.

Not to defend the fools that are hanging out and cause mayhem, but maybe fast food would rather hire females because it's currently an employers market and females tend to come cheaper than males.
I'll readily defend them because its not their fault that people like you and the rest of this board want to make it illegal for them to work. If you want to tell someone, who has nothing, that work isn't worth having if its under the Illinois minimum wage of $8.25, then prepare for some people to a) not work and b) find illegal ways to make money.

And for the record, the ones hanging out aren't necessarily the ones causing mayhem, but they definitely will attract mayhem more than others.
 

thoughtone

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I live in Chi-Town, Illa Noise. Home of the 50% school dropout rate for black males and the 50% unemployment rate for black males.


I'll readily defend them because its not their fault that people like you and the rest of this board want to make it illegal for them to work. If you want to tell someone, who has nothing, that work isn't worth having if its under the Illinois minimum wage of $8.25, then prepare for some people to a) not work and b) find illegal ways to make money.

And for the record, the ones hanging out aren't necessarily the ones causing mayhem, but they definitely will attract mayhem more than others.


..that people like you and the rest of this board want to make it illegal for them to work.

:lol:

But it is legal for the tax payer to subsidize Walmart to pay them $7.25 or in your world, less which means they qualify for food stamps, instead of Walmart just paying them more so we don't have to subsidize Walmart and the low wage worker...

Get it!
 

Greed

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:lol:

But it is legal for the tax payer to subsidize Walmart to pay them $7.25 or in your world, less which means they qualify for food stamps, instead of Walmart just paying them more so we don't have to subsidize Walmart and the low wage worker...

Get it!
And your plan for the people that don't work and black youth unemployment?
 

Greed

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The issue became prominent with trickle down/supply side economics.
Still waiting on your solution.

I said get rid of the minimum wage so people can work for whatever pay they agree to work for, independent of your approval. You view that as a human travesty.

What's the answer?
 

Greed

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How gun law works: Likely 2014 before permits issued

How gun law works: Likely 2014 before permits issued
Concealed carry permits likely won't be issued until next year
By David Heinzmann, Monique Garcia and Jeremy Gorner, Chicago Tribune reporters
7:11 a.m. CDT, July 10, 2013

Illinois lawmakers overrode Gov. Pat Quinn's veto of concealed carry legislation on Tuesday, but it will likely be 2014 before any firearm owners are permitted to pack handguns in public.

The last state to adopt a concealed carry law, Illinois now has to set about building a bureaucracy to process applications — which could number in the hundreds of thousands in the first year — screening out people with prohibitive criminal records or conditions of mental illness that police believe could make them dangerous if armed.

While gun owners may have questions about how soon they'll be able to carry guns in public, other state residents may also have questions about where they can expect to find people armed with deadly weapons. And where guns will still be banned.

Schools, parks, government facilities, buses and commuter trains, bars or restaurants where more than half the business is alcohol sales, and several other public places will continue to be banned areas, according to the law. But at many privately owned places, such as grocery stores and shopping malls, the decision will be up to business operators and property owners.

Passage of the law Tuesday started the clock ticking on answering a number of tricky questions about how it will be administered.

For instance, the legislation defined "concealed" as a carrying a firearm in a manner that is "concealed or mostly concealed from public view." What exactly "mostly" means remains unclear to some in law enforcement, state police spokeswoman Monique Bond said.

The definition was one of the issues that Quinn wanted to clarify in his revisions to the legislation, which lawmakers rejected. But both sides on the gun debate agreed lawmakers may need to tweak the law with amendments even as authorities are working on rolling out the regulations.

Illinois State Police officials have 180 days — roughly six months — to create an application process. Once they begin accepting applications, Bond said it will take them about 90 days to process and screen the first round of applications and begin issuing permits. Until then, the ban on concealed carry will remain officially in effect.

But how that will play out across the state could vary, say some backers of the law.

Rep. Brandon Phelps, a Democrat from downstate Harrisburg who sponsored the bill, said some residents are already carrying guns in public in counties where they believe they won't be prosecuted for doing so as long as they have a valid firearm owners identification, or FOID, card.

"I had phone calls already saying, 'Guess what? I'm carrying,' " Phelps said Tuesday after the legislature voted. "I said, 'Well, that's illegal.' ... But they're doing it."

Based on the flow of FOID card applications, state police officials anticipate that as many as 300,000 state residents will apply for permits in the first year, Bond said. To handle the requests state police will create a new Concealed Carry Unit that will cost about $25million to launch and operate, she said. If the state's projected numbers hold up, 300,000 applications would create about $45 million in revenue from the $150 permit fee.

The laundry list of tasks for the state police and the governor's office include creating the application system, identifying and authorizing firearms trainers and firing ranges to carry out 16-hour training courses mandated by the law, and probably modifying the Law Enforcement Agencies Data Systems computer database to accommodate the background checks, Bond said.

The governor also will have to appoint a seven-member Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board to handle objections to permits lodged by law enforcement and mental health officials. The law requires the board to be made up of mostly people with experience as federal law enforcement or court officers.

State police will have to run background checks, including fingerprint searches, on all applicants, Bond said. One of the most complicated tasks will be searching for evidence of mental illness, she said. County and state mental health agencies, as well as courts, will report mental health issues to the state, she said.

Under the new law, police and prosecutors can object to a permit on several grounds if they believe a person is a danger to themselves or others. In addition to mental health issues, objections can be filed if a person has been arrested five or more times in the previous seven years, or three or more times on gang-related charges.

Applicants can be rejected for two or more convictions related to driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs or if they underwent residential or court-ordered treatment for substance abuse in the last five years.

Reaction from law enforcement has been mixed.

Several Chicago police officers who work in high-crime neighborhoods said they support the law, in part because law-abiding citizens who live in dangerous neighborhoods may have a better chance to defend themselves. The officers, who spoke on the condition that they not be identified, agreed that there would be a learning curve for police officers encountering people permitted to be armed.

"I think it'll be a little bit of a rough start in the beginning," said one officer who works in a South Side district. "I'm happy for the average citizen who is not up to no good."

That attitude is not in step with the Chicago Police Department's top brass. Superintendent Garry McCarthy and Mayor Rahm Emanuel have opposed concealed carry, saying that more people carrying guns is the last thing that's needed in Chicago, home to some of the most violent neighborhoods in the country.

"The answer to guns is not more guns," McCarthy said when asked about the law at an unrelated news conference Monday. "We're going to have tragedies. ... It needs to be controlled in a reasonable fashion. And I don't see that that's happening right now.

Training, both to shoot a gun accurately and to do so in a life-and-death situation, is a concern shared by McCarthy and other law enforcement experts as they evaluate the new law. A former federal agent who spent many years as a firearms trainer said the willingness and ability to use deadly force should be a daunting and serious consideration for people planning to apply for a permit.

When a person feels threatened, using a gun becomes more difficult than firing at targets at a gun range, said the former agent, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"When your heart rate goes up in a stressful situation, your fine motor skills deteriorate. You get tunnel vision," he said. "The added stress of not knowing whether you have the skills to fire a well-placed shot — to eliminate that, you need to practice."

Federal agents shoot anywhere from hundreds to more than a thousand rounds of ammunition a year to maintain their shooting skills.

Although they trained for years with firearms and had been in numerous dangerous situations on the street, the former agent said he and his colleagues had a joke to sum up their attitudes about guns: "Best way to survive a gunfight is don't be there when the gunfight happens."

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...ats-next-0709-2-20130710,0,4059241,full.story
 

Greed

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You mean whatever the employer says "they" will work for.
Once again, the poor are not society's mentally handicapped children.

What is it about people choosing to work for the job they find satisfactory equals, in your mind, employer dictatorships? An employer can't order anyone to work for a certain wage.

You and everyone else are the dictators of poor people. You have no place to tell them what job is worth having.

You need to understand the difference between economic power and political power. Employers are not the government and they don't exercise power in the same way.

What do you find dangerous about the idea of poor people building their own economic base as they see fit independent of government handouts?

Your way has prevailed for 60 years and it doesn't work. When are you going to admit that limiting poor people's economic freedom doesn't leave them economically better off?

Come up with something different.
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Once again, the poor are not society's mentally handicapped children.

What is it about people choosing to work for the job they find satisfactory equals, in your mind, employer dictatorships? An employer can't order anyone to work for a certain wage.

You and everyone else are the dictators of poor people. You have no place to tell them what job is worth having.

You need to understand the difference between economic power and political power. Employers are not the government and they don't exercise power in the same way.

What do you find dangerous about the idea of poor people building their own economic base as they see fit independent of government handouts?

Your way has prevailed for 60 years and it doesn't work. When are you going to admit that limiting poor people's economic freedom doesn't leave them economically better off?

Come up with something different.

1044770_10151532190446275_1333900917_n.jpg
 

Greed

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Registered
It is a choice. A choice liberals are making for poor people independent of what poor people think.

Still waiting for a solution thoughtone.

I say the problem of gun violence can be solve by providing people with jobs foremost. You think the problem is not enough poor people vote Democrat.

I say the problem of gun violence can be solve by providing people with jobs foremost. Others think the problem is too many gun readily available.

I say the problem of gun violence can be solve by providing people with jobs foremost. Others think the problem is people should make a stronger committment to self-education.

The problem is my option isn't an option at all. People are not allowed to work below minimum wage at all.

Stop hindering people with your horrible and restrictive policies thoughtone. That is, unless you have another option for people.
 

Greed

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Re: In a Soaring Homicide Rate, a Divide in Chicago

In a Soaring Homicide Rate, a Divide in Chicago
By MONICA DAVEY
Published: January 2, 2013

Like other cities, Chicago has long been a segregated place, richer and whiter on the North Side, and the city’s troubling increase in killings has accentuated a longstanding divide.

Along the streets downtown and in neighborhoods on the North Side not far from Lake Michigan, some residents acknowledged that they had heard about a rise in the city’s homicide rate, but said it had not affected their own sense of safety. “This area is a bit of a Garden of Eden,” said Gwen Sylvain, as she walked dogs along a residential street not far from the Loop.

Others said they rarely had reason to go to the Chicago’s South or West Sides, only a few miles away, and some longtime residents said they had never once ventured to such neighborhoods.
Wrongly accused
You wouldn't know it, but Chicago isn't even close to the most dangerous city in America
July 26, 2013|Eric Zorn | Change of Subject

Greetings from Chicago, the "murder capital of America," a toddlin' town that's "gaining a national reputation for violence," the site of a "mini-Holocaust" on the streets due to our "epidemic of gun violence," all in the recent words of TV talking heads.

Chicago has become the go-to reference for anyone looking to evoke the everyday horrors of the streets in contrast to such high-profile but unusual incidents as the shooting death of Trayvon Martin in suburban Orlando, Fla., last year.

"Since Trayvon Martin was killed, 500 people have been killed in Chicago alone," said talk-show host Larry Elder during a guest appearance on CNN on Tuesday evening. The previous night on the same network, in a video montage related to the umpty-whillionth panel discussion prompted by Zimmerman's acquittal, an unidentified woman said, "Nobody's talking about what happened in Chicago last week; 62 people were killed."

Nobody was talking about it because it didn't happen. No one on the show bothered to correct the assertion — the actual number of murders in Chicago in that week was 10, police said — probably because it felt so right.

Chicago had the most murders of any city in America last year, 506, and was the site in late January of a heartbreaking killing that made international news — when Hadiya Pendleton, 15, a King College Prep honor student, was mistakenly gunned down in an attempted gang hit just days after she'd returned from performing in Washington, D.C., at presidential inaugural festivities.

But even with its 17 percent spike in murders in 2012, Chicago was far from the deadliest city in America. The murder rate here — 18.5 per 100,000 residents, according to preliminary FBI data — was 21st in the nation, better than in Atlanta, Philadelphia, Baltimore, St. Louis, New Orleans and Detroit, to name a few.

Chicago also wasn't even close to the most dangerous city in America last year, ranking 43rd in overall per capita violent crime in preliminary data.

Further, we're not experiencing an "epidemic" of murder, per the talking heads. Nor is the city's homicide rate "spiral(ing) out of control," as a guest essayist on these pages put it Wednesday.

In the first six months of 2013, Chicago police reported 184 murders, 26 percent fewer than last year in that time frame and the lowest raw number since 1965.

Comparing this year with last year (through July 14), Chicago police officials are reporting a 5 percent decrease in criminal sexual assaults, a 9 percent drop in felony thefts, a 10 percent decline in robberies, a 16 percent decrease in aggravated batteries, an 18 percent drop in car thefts and a 21 percent decline in burglaries. Shootings are down 24 percent. Overall, these crimes have fallen 23 percent since the same period in 2011.

Note that such snapshots in time can be misleading. "Last year was clearly an aberration" for homicides, said Loyola University criminologist Arthur Lurigio. "We're back to roughly 2011 levels, and violent crime is going down all over the country if you look at long-term trend lines. There's nothing to be alarmed about here."

Yet of course there is something to be alarmed about here. Perhaps not statistically — annual homicides in Chicago have dropped dramatically since the mid-1990s — or comparatively. But 184 murders (188 if you count four slayings on state-controlled expressways) is still a lot; a lot of shattered families and broken dreams.

We could do better. New York, with three times Chicago's population, saw just 155 homicides in the first six months of 2013.

We should do better. "The numbers are encouraging, but let's not imply that things are hunky-dory," said Roseanna Ander, executive director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab. "Chicago is unfairly put under the klieg lights, in part because the president is from here and we have such a high-profile mayor. But we can still feel a sense of urgency without overreacting. There are definitely neighborhoods where it doesn't feel like we've made any progress."

So, yes, sorry to ruin your handy allusion, pundits. Crime is down in Chicago. But, as Ander said, "it's still nowhere near the level it ought to be for a civil society."

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/...0130726_1_toddlin-town-chicago-arthur-lurigio
 
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