In the 1960s into the 1980s, New York City hit rock bottom – so far.
It was a time when leftism had ravaged the city – rent control had eliminated the supply of affordable housing, leaving block after block of vacant, burned out buildings in a city where finding an apartment was the stuff of upper-middle-class horror story.
And the crime?
It got to the point where New Yorkers were advised to carry a “decoy” wallet – with a little bit of money in it (because muggers would sometimes attack or kill people who didn’t have some money to give up. New York had well over 2,000 homicides a year – among the most dangerous cities in the country.
And here we are today: as criminals re-take the streets, the violent mentally ill are all over the subway, and our idiot elite is saying we have it coming.
Go ahead – condemn the bystanders for grabbing cameras instead of hauling off on the crazy who’s abusing the woman on the bench. We’ve seen what happens when the wrong criminal, addict of crazy gets harmed. New York has a long history of holding good guys to a level of account that no bad guy will ever see.
Giuliani cleaned all that up. It’d doubtful there are enough sane voters left in Gotham to do that again, of course.
It’s not just New York, of course. This happened in Dinkytown Minneapolis on Friday night/Saturday morning:
Another episode – same night, some of the same “people”:
One of the victims contacted CrimeWatch:
A few people asked why “bystanders” didn’t help out. It’s simple – they travel in a pack, and pick out people walking alone:
Perhaps the good guys need a lot more bystanders to flood the zone?
By the way – this was the media’s coverage:
No word if the authorities are still looking for a man with an umbrella.
I bring it up because of the parallels with the 1970s.
It was 30 years ago that New Statesman published Jeffrey Snyder’s epochal monograph, “A Nation of Cowards”, which made the case that it was time for citizens to step up and defend the order that society depends on.
It was one of several prime movers in pushing “gun culture” out of the shadows and into the mainstream, of course – but more signally, it made the case that relying on the police to protect order was not only futile, but a little craven; what makes your life invaluable, but a cop’s worth only whatever we pay them to do the job?
Once, and always, worth a read.
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