Morality and law are things people worry about after they have sustainable food and shelter. Don't believe me? Go live in Syria for a few weeks and find out.Sergeant Thorne wrote:Quick question before I start back-tracking and pulling apart what you folks have done to Will's idea: Slick... what makes you so absolutely set on blaming economics for what is unavoidably a complex issue involving morality and law?
Having grown up in Chicago (did I mention I'm from Chicago?) I can tell you that economics are probably the biggest factor. It's also tied into white-flight. Industry moved from the inner city to the suburbs and those with economic mobility (mostly white) followed. Poor populations increased while jobs decreased, slowly, over time, and like quicksand those left behind found themselves stuck in decrepit buildings surrounded by empty factories and warehouses. When Spidey says declare Chicago uninhabitable that's actually not to far from how some of the neighborhoods look. Buildings really do looked bombed-out like a war happened.
It's not like the people in the city play the victim card and don't try, but there are real physical limitations: a finite number of jobs and limits to the public transportation system. At some point you are commuting three hours or more just to reach a minimum wage job, leaving no time to work a second part-time job (if you can find one) to cover the rest of your bills. We all know how the system works. Once you are rich it is easy to stay rich. Once you are poor, it's damn near impossible to get out of it. Yes, it can and does happen. But if everyone could do it then no one would be poor. There are millions of people who "take personal responsibility" and try their hardest only to find all their efforts are for naught. It is utopian to think everyone who is poor and living in violent neighborhoods is there because they didn't take responsibility for themselves. That notion is ridiculous. And people call me a delusional idealist, hahaha.
And finally, one thing to consider is this: Chicago is actually doing all the right things -- but there just needs to be more of it. There are great programs to help people. Police are on the street cleaning up. Everyone's attention is on the problem. However, again, there are limits. All cities have budgets. And it is extra hard to create better neighborhoods when the economy is bad. But keep in mind violence in Chicago is actually lower than is was in the 70's and 80's, just like the national average. Things are getting better, though slower than the rest of the country.