points by mrangle 10 days ago

Born and raised, and still living in an area that you likely wouldn't. You have no idea.

To be clear, not advocating for the military on the streets.

However, the people who do sympathize with that will forever increase as ineffectiveness in policing crime does.

If the military is on the streets, and there is broad support for it, then objectively speaking it's because we're at a tipping point of imbalance in policing crime.

The question then becomes, even with the military outside of their windows, would the people who start stuttering the word "fascist" in response have hindsight regret in not better enabling civilian policing to inhibit crime?

Or will they continue to deny the tipping point?

At what point is undermining of civilian police the same thing as advancing us toward military streets?

No one can have everything. If a balance isn't kept, then aberrations in norms will begin to occur. Going either way.

ryandrake 10 days ago

> If the military is on the streets, and there is broad support for it, then objectively speaking it's because we're at a tipping point of imbalance in policing crime.

Where is this "broad support" coming from? The actual people living in Washington DC, or rural outsiders who have conjured up some picture in their minds of "crime infested cities?" If you did a poll of everyone in DC, would the majority be in favor of increased policing?

It always seems like the people who are most vocal about crime in big cities are always the people who don't live in or visit those big cities.

  • mrangle 10 days ago

    I live in a high crime area of a major city.

    • nobody9999 10 days ago

      Which city? Which "high crime area?" Crime is down all across the US and way down in most major cities. Let's see some statistics, friend.

      I live in NYC[0] and I'm old. It's never been safer in the many decades I've been alive.

      And the police have little to do with that. They're just the biggest and best-armed gang.

      [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_in_New_York_City[1]

      [1] In fact, NYC saw fewer murders in 2024 than any year since 1958 -- long before my parents ever met.

      • mrangle 9 days ago

        I'm not your friend, palooka.

        You questioning my experience and where I live isn't an argument.

        In liberal circles, we "believe" people. Remember? Especially those with bad experiences.

        You questioning me just means that you can't tolerate people with differing experiences having opinions and perspectives that are counter to your own.

        What I said is factual.

        You're a sheltered person with a false entitlement to an opinion on this specific matter.

        I live in a major city between Boston and DC. I've implied enough of my experience to warrant telling you to shove your rude scare quotes up your a*.

        I've also lived in NYC. I have family that still lives in NYC. Who was just punched in the face for the second time in a couple of years, walking home at night. And that's in "safe" lower Manhattan.

        What does where you live have to do where I live?

        Just like the "person who walks with cameras", the only thing that you are communicating is that you are privileged and awful on a couple of levels. One of which is having zero perspective and real experience living in an urban area that is outside of wealthier zones and, especially in poorer cities, is only barely managed by police. Bourgeoise bubble living does not entitle you to having a policy opinion on how the poorer areas of cities should be managed, what it's like living in them let alone growing up in them, and on how they are doing on the street level. "Relativity" aside.

Arainach 10 days ago

There is no undermining, as everyone living in the cities realizes.

In Seattle I'm sick of people who think the whole city burned down in 2020 or that you can't go downtown without a homeless person stabbing you with a needle. People who don't live here and watch Fox News are afraid. People in the suburbs who never go into the city are afraid. Anyone who spends any time in the city knows otherwise. For more than a decade I've walked the streets in every neighborhood here weekly, often after dark, carrying thousands of dollars in camera gear, not bothering to hide my watch, phone, or whatever, and never been harassed.

  • dh2022 10 days ago

    Hmm, to your anecdotes I will add mine. I have been harassed in the International District at around 10:00 pm by drug dealers - was offered drugs, told them to go away so I was yelled “Get off my block”. A hobo spilled his beer on my wife while riding the bus. A female coworker was offered oral sex by a hobo and asked to take her glasses off to “see her pretty eyes”. At a bus school stop on Fairview (right next to Amazon Campus) a hobo with his pants down to his knees was exposing himself in front of some kids (their mothers were trying to make some shield around the kids)

    All of these around 2021-2022-2023. We moved out of Seattle in 2023. Maybe these snecdotes are not a big deal for you. For me they are scary.

  • mrangle 10 days ago

    >There is no undermining, as everyone living in the cities realizes.

    I remember that "Defund the Police" is the general mantra of one side of the isle.

    You aren't paying attention. I stated that I was born and raised in a (major) city, and I still live in an area that many on HN and virtually all bourgeoise urban-bubble people would not live.

    And so who are you trying to gaslight, exactly?

    I don't assert that Seattle is perfect, but Seattle is a cakewalk. One of the nicest and per-capita wealthiest cities in the country. But with a sizeable population of bored grown toddlers. A subgroup of whom are professional terrorists, while living in a priveleged city on the World scale. Spare me your faux "urbanite on a walk" homily.

    The nine months of rioting in 2020 were nine months of partisan terrorism purposefully leading exactly up to an election. Funny that, in the context of those so concerned with democracy.

    We were terrorized, absolutely. It caused me to think twice about voting at all, out of fear. During one weekend in which police were hamstrung by the mayor in favor of rioters, we had two large bombs go off in my neighborhood. While the power happened to be off for 72 hours. Have you ever felt the deep vibration from a close domestic terrorist bomb in the dark? Twice? How about during election season?

    Would you like to go into my personal experiences with urban crime? How many gun barrels have you stared down? How many times have you been punched in public by a stranger, while just standing there? How many times did that lead to a full blown street fight, out of self-defense? How many times have you been robbed on the sidewalk? How many friends of yours have been targeted and murdered on the sidewalk? How about while in grade school? Yes, I'm Caucasian. I'm overeducated, including graduating on a full-ride from a school that existed a long time before the United States did. That makes no difference.

    You deserve a string of derogatory names, but decorum prevents.

    • Arainach 10 days ago

      >I remember that "Defund the Police" is the general mantra of one side of the isle.

      And I remember that that was about focusing police on policing and spending more on having specialists provide social support and the kind of things that prevent crime, which cops aren't trained to do or any good at.

      • mrangle 10 days ago

        [flagged]

        • saulpw 10 days ago

          Not OP, but yes, "defund" meaning to reverse the excessive budgetary increases of the past 5-10 years, which increased militarization of police, alongside increasing qualified immunity precedent. Some people took "Defund The Police" to mean "No Police" (there will always be extremists, sincere or planted), and it turned out to be a terrible slogan for this reason. There's a healthy middle ground in which the police force is reduced to a reasonable level, and other services are funded, so the police with their guns and military training aren't the first responders when e.g. someone is suicidal or spraypainting graffiti.

          And even if the suicidal person is holding a knife, or it's my house being spraypainted, I don't want the person shot!

          • mrangle 9 days ago

            Ok, so still undermining. Got it.

            Irrelevant babble aside that was already read and refuted with wikipedia information.

    • LeafItAlone 10 days ago

      >The nine months of rioting in 2020 were nine months of partisan terrorism purposefully leading exactly up to an election. Funny that, in the context of those so concerned with democracy. >We were terrorized, absolutely. It caused me to think twice about voting at all, out of fear. During one weekend in which police were hamstrung by the mayor in favor of rioters, we had two large bombs go off in my neighborhood. While the power happened to be off for 72 hours. Have you ever felt the deep vibration from a close domestic terrorist bomb in the dark? Twice? How about during election season?

      The only city in the USA that fits that seems to be Oakland.

      And this seems to be the incident: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_boogaloo_murders

      Would you like to read that carefully?

      • michtzik 10 days ago

        I did some minimal searching for Seattle and explosions in 2020 and I found plenty of sources reporting on different supposed explosions, at different times and places (within Seattle). Seems perfectly plausible to me.

        https://mynorthwest.com/local/peaceful-protests-planned-in-s...

        https://projects.seattletimes.com/2020/local/protest-timelin...

        https://spdblotter.seattle.gov/2020/09/24/police-arrest-13-d... https://spdblotter.seattle.gov/2020/07/26/officer-injuries-p...

        https://www.thestranger.com/slog/2020/07/28/44178586/so-what...

        • LeafItAlone 7 days ago

          None of those sources detail anything that I would describe as “two large bombs”. And I can’t find a 72 hour power outage in Seattle in 2020.

          Can you help me out?

          mrangle also later said [0] they live “in a major city between Boston and DC”. So they aren’t describing Seattle. (Or actually any city in the US based on what they have shared so far)

          [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44888781

      • mrangle 9 days ago

        I'm observing how this is breaking down into questioning where I live (in another post), or whether what I say happened actually happened.

        Should I not believe that people's post's here defending cities are from legitimate experience (at least as stated, in their bubbles)?

        What happened to the "believe" people ethic?

        I don't live in Oakland. What do you want me to read carefully, super-sleuth? To what purpose? In spite of your masterful rhetorical question, you're wrong about the event in question and location.

        Consider that a lot of the country was terrorized in a manner that you and much of the nation is blind to. These are people who will be forming opinions and voting for a long time to come.

        Given that the Press's obvious mandate was to whitewash the violence so that it continued.

        You can't be good with nine months of nationwide riots and then ever think that you understand the impact or can get a handle on everything that occurred via zero-start google searches.

        • LeafItAlone 7 days ago

          Those other commenters are talking about named cities which the rest of us are able to verify what they say based on simple internet searches.

          You are describing an unnamed war-torn hellscape that matches no city in America. It’s like something out of a fictional writing class.

          Which of those two types of comments are something you would believe?

          >Consider that a lot of the country was terrorized in a manner that you and much of the nation is blind to. These are people who will be forming opinions and voting for a long time to come.

          We are _trying_ to consider them. But we are unable to make the leap from reality to the fantasy world you’ve been describing, so it’s really hard.

          >Given that the Press's obvious mandate was to whitewash the violence so that it continued.

          I guess it is a pretty good thing we live in a modern world with an internet that lets anybody that wants to share actual evidence. Unfortunately it also allows people to post they made up accounts they use in a conservative fireside story telling event, but those are identifiable by including outlandish details that would be easily verifiable, but also refusing to provide evidence, like names of cities.

    • nobody9999 10 days ago

      >Would you like to go into my personal experiences with urban crime? How many gun barrels have you stared down?

      More than one.

      >How many times have you been punched in public by a stranger, while just standing there?

      More than once.

      >How many times have you been robbed on the sidewalk?

      Once, as a child because I wasn't paying attention. As a teen? Several attempts on the subway, on the street and other places. As an adult? On the Brooklyn Bridge.

      So. Where exactly did all this stuff happen to you, eh? I call bullshit on your "horror stories."

      • mrangle 9 days ago

        It doesn't matter whether or not you believe me. You believing me doesn't even begin to calculate into a single thought that I have.

        Besides that, not believing someone is not an argument. On these issues, it means that you lack realistic perspective and have nothing to say.

        Aside from what it makes you to discount someone's very real trauma, as your only patter.

        • beedeebeedee 9 days ago

          I've been beaten, pistol-whipped by a group and had to go to the hospital, had a kid try to knock me out from behind (remember the knock out craze fifteen years ago?), seen people beaten and shot, and had the cops draw their guns on me and threaten to blow my head off on more than one occasion in New Haven (and if you're curious, I'm not a criminal, but was just an adventurous kid who tried to defy the segregation in the city).

          As someone like you who has also been the victim of violent crime, I definitely do not want the military patroling any city. I hate violent crime, but that is not the way to solve it, period. It takes community policing and the slow process of raising people out of poverty, desperation and hopelessness, by undoing the damage that has been done to them through decades of economic oppression.

      • nec4b 10 days ago

        Your city doesn't sound very safe as you claim in another comment.

        • nobody9999 10 days ago

          >Your city doesn't sound very safe as you claim in another comment.

          All that stuff was 30-50 years ago. As I mentioned (and linked[0] to statistics), I'm old and things have changed a lot.

          [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44879420

          Edit: Actually it was 35-50 years ago, but who's counting?

          • nec4b 10 days ago

            Actually you have not mentioned it was 35-50 years ago. But thank you clearing it up.

        • nobody9999 10 days ago

          >Inflation was high and people had to convert their salaries into German marks the same day they got pay checks, otherwise the money was worthless the next day. Basic goods were unattainable. People had to smuggle coffee, bananas and jeans across the border. Of course if you were a part of the red nobility, your life was easier as you got access to special stores and got to enjoy the fruits of the labor of your fellow equals.

          And things are, right now, exactly as you described in this comment[0], right?

          [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44850663

          • nec4b 10 days ago

            No need to be snark. Unlike your comment, where you iterated what happened to you without any time specifics, my comment was for a specific time period as evident from the discussion.

            • nobody9999 10 days ago

              Did you?

              There was nothing clearly stating any dates or years.

              Just like you did, I assumed what you said all happened in the past three weeks.

              Especially since I said[0]:

              "Once, as a child because I wasn't paying attention. As a teen? Several attempts on the subway, on the street and other places. As an adult? On the Brooklyn Bridge."

              Because we grow up fast here in NYC. A month ago I was a child. Now I'm pushing 60. All in the past three weeks!

              [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44879506

              • nec4b 10 days ago

                >> Did you? Literally the first line was starting with ">> Yugoslav communism...".

                #Especially since I said[0]:

                #"Once, as a child because I wasn't paying attention. As a teen? Several #attempts on the subway, on the street and other places. As an adult? On the #Brooklyn Bridge."

                That was for the robbery and before that you said:

                #>Would you like to go into my personal experiences with urban crime? How many #gun barrels have you stared down?

                #More than one.

                #>How many times have you been punched in public by a stranger, while just #standing there?

                #More than once.

                Nothing specific there. Why are you so antagonizing about it and trying to straw man something with my comment that doesn't exist? I only told you how I read (I'm probably not the only one) your comment and pointed out some context was missing and when you explained it, I accepted it.

    • ThrowMeAway1618 9 days ago

      >Would you like to go into my personal experiences with urban crime?

      Not really. Maybe you just have really punchable face? Given the diarrhea you're spewing, those traits combined would probably make most people want to beat the crap out of you.

      Which would explain quite a bit. Hey. Let's be careful out there![0]

      [0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJDQewSMB-E