
Letters: Any illusion that DC residents have the same rights as others has been shattered
Now, however, I live in our nation's capital and no longer have voting representation in Congress. In fact, D.C. residents could not even vote for the president until 1964.
I love D.C. and have immersed myself in making the city even better after being elected as a volunteer advisory neighborhood commissioner, representing approximately 2,000 of my neighbors to D.C.'s government. I told myself that D.C. enjoyed microlevel democracy at its best, despite the fact that laws passed by the Council of District of Columbia can be overturned at the whim of an antagonistic U.S. Congress, that serious crimes are pursued by a presidentially selected U.S. Attorney rather than by a locally elected D.C. attorney general, and that the judges who hear these cases also are presidential appointees rather than being elected with local accountability.
However, last week, any illusions of being a U.S. citizen with the same rights as others was shattered. Based on the lie that crime in D.C. represented a pressing federal emergency, despite declining by 26% this year and reaching a 30-year low, President Donald Trump considered federalizing the D.C. police and called out the National Guard (The only guard not under the jurisdiction of a local governor.)
D.C. achieved this progress in tamping down violent crime, despite having locally sourced (not federally funded) FY 25 budget funds frozen, without cause, by Congress, despite numerous judicial vacancies awaiting federal appointment, and despite curtailment of federal funding for effective violence interruption, re-entry and other crime reduction programs.
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Since I have no voting representatives in Congress, I ask those of you in other states to reach out to your representatives and ask them to support the home rule and voting rights of D.C.'s citizens. Make no mistake, the federal police state mentality that has been imposed in D.C. will not stop with D.C. Unless we push back, it will expand and squash many of the constitutionally granted rights reserved for we the people.Violent crime has dropped dramatically over the past few decades, with only brief spikes from events like the pandemic. This secular trend is welcome, but its causes remain debated. What's clear is that it has nothing to do with the increasingly cruel and chaotic immigration policies being proposed and implemented by Trump.
His campaign promised mass deportations, yet data shows that only 7% of those targeted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement have been convicted of violent crimes — and 65% have no criminal record at all. It's also well established that immigrants, especially undocumented ones, commit fewer crimes than native-born citizens.
Despite this, Trump continues to describe major cities — especially Democratic ones like Washington, D.C. — as crime-ridden hellholes only he can rescue. In reality, violent crime is falling there too, as CNN's recent fact check of his illegal takeover attempt of D.C. law enforcement confirmed. Even his own FBI director admitted the steep drop in violent crime.
We must anticipate the narrative he's building: that any drop in crime is thanks to his harsh immigration stance. He's done this before — taking credit for stock market gains that preceded his presidency. If we don't challenge the false narrative about immigrant crime now, people may believe that abusing immigrants somehow made America safer. It didn't. And it won't.As federal police agencies are in the nation's capital to repel violent crime, the subject of homelessness has come to the fore.
Not long ago, tent cities were largely associated with impoverished third-world nations and no American city would allow tents on sidewalks or parks without a permit. These new shantytowns are plagued with substance abuse, violence and prostitution. Streets have become littered with rotting garbage, human waste, discarded needles and rats, and have become breeding grounds for infectious diseases. As the most prosperous nation on earth, we have an obligation to provide shelter to anyone in need. Government agencies, nongovernmental organizations and charities should be tasked with providing inexpensive open-bay shelter to anyone in need. Anyone truly in need would be grateful for such an arrangement.
Public intoxication must be grounds for arrest. We will save lives of those whose cycle of dependency has been perpetuated in these dystopian settings. The status quo does not represent any sense of compassion and is a stain on society.It's happened, I agree with Trump. He has declared America's largest cities to be ravaged with crime. He uses a less delicate, scatologic term when describing them. People whom I tell I lived in Chicago until permanently retiring to Florida in my 80s, no longer comment about my good fortune escaping the cold weather or crooked politicians. It's now all about escaping violent crime.
Back in the 1960s, when I was a member of the National Guard in Illinois and later Washington, D.C., my units were activated after neighborhoods erupted in violence. I believed the new normal would be civil unrest and my unit and others would be routinely activated. Eventually things calmed down and to my knowledge the National Guard has largely been domestically used during weather events such as hurricanes and floods.
Although large-scale riots are now a rarity, warm weather and those enjoying the beaches, parks and festivities of summer and just the warmer weather are at risk of well-armed criminals robbing businesses and assaulting those out for a nice evening.
Inclement winter months tamp down and inhibit much local violence.
I see nothing wrong and everything good about National Guard units being deployed to areas where citizens and visitors desire but fear to be.
Saturating unsafe areas with cruisers and vans containing members of the National Guard and deploying unarmed members with radio devices to stroll through popular well visited areas is likely a good deterrent against violence. That's why police vehicles and officers patrol.
Very little creates more comfort for citizens and discomfort for criminals than the threat of lawbreakers getting caught.I would prefer that the Chicago Tribune Editorial Board not presume to tell me what God does and does not do. The editorial of August 12, 'God does not gerrymander' was offensive. That the board does not gerrymander is fine with me. But to take issue with the Rev. Michael Pfleger and the congregation of St. Sabina, a man and a people who have put their lives on the line time and time again to defend democracy as it exists in their neighborhood and their beliefs, is beyond arrogance.
'Politics is about power.' So, it would appear, are newspaper editors. Just because you can, doesn't mean you should.
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After years of untrustworthy numbers that made the idea of official Greek data a global punchline, his efforts were downright startling. What followed were years of legal fights, and he was prosecuted for allegedly inflating the country's deficit figures. Even the EU itself condemned Greece for the false data. The fakery made the effects of the global financial crisis of 2008 and 2009 significantly worse in Greece. Lenders, skittish of what Greece's actual public finances might be, shied away, demanding increasingly higher rates to hold Greek bonds. Austerity measures demanded by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to bail out Greece angered everyday citizens. Pictures of Greeks rioting in the streets, burning cars and expressing their rage, underscored the dangers. In Argentina, accusations of untrustworthy inflation and economic growth data have dogged Latin America's third-largest economy for decades, scaring off investors despite a wealth of natural resources. Then-President Nestor Kirchner demoted the person in charge of preparing inflation data because she (correctly) reported surging prices in 2007. Everyone from ordinary citizens to global investors treated official inflation data as suspect for years after. That contributed to the country's credit ratings staying in junk territory for years – one of the factors investors typically cite to charge a country more to loan it money. (In Argentina's case, previous sovereign defaults were also a major factor. The unreliable inflation data, after all, did not happen in a vacuum.) That matters to ordinary people because short- and long-term debt, whether from a federal government down to tiny cities and towns, can help fund everything from new schools to roads to essential services. When lenders turn off the money spigot – or charge dearly for access – that means regular people ultimately pay the price. 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A preliminary annual revision in August 2024, for example, showed the US economy had added 818,000 fewer jobs over the past year than previously reported. Those kinds of large revisions might suggest deeper issues, like how the BLS gets their data and constructs their economic models, said Kathryn Rooney Vera, the chief market strategist and chief economist at financial services company StoneX. 'Several economists and research teams I personally engage with have flagged these as structural issues with the data long before Trump's involvement or the firing of the BLS chief,' Rooney Vera told CNN. And Shapiro noted another wrinkle: budget cuts. Already the BLS has said it will cut back on collecting some data because it has fewer people. That, in turn, means it can take longer to get to final numbers for data releases. In the case of the jobs report, big companies usually respond with information first. Smaller companies tend to trail. 'And so you get a lot of responses that come in after the date when the initial estimate is put out,' he said, leading to revisions. Still, the US has other sources of data, both public and private, to round out a fuller picture of the economy. Shapiro pointed to the Census Bureau and the Bureau of Economic Analysis. 'These institutions are made up virtually 100% by statisticians and economists,' Shapiro said. 'They're utterly nonpolitical in their jobs.'