Posted on 10/05/2007 5:19:04 AM PDT by William Tell 2
This explains Eagles fans.
And please don’t mention crime statistics per race here either - nobody wants to know.
Pennsylvania is a shall issue state. If she doesn’t already have one, she ought to get a carry permit and start packing.
I guess they realized that if there was guns and drugs outside the city too, why weren't we shooting the towns up like the Wild West?
This article puts the blame where it belongs and that is too uncomfortable for them to admit. Better to find an outside scapegoat.
I lived in SE PA for 29 years and still own property in Valley Forge.
That area is - as far as I’m concerned - a cesspool.
I was visting a student there and watched a charming citizen take a dump on the sidewalk in broad daylight.
In 29 years, I always hated to go to philly.
They used to have good cheese steaks once, before they discovered cheese whiz.
Are you sure? I tried to get one once, and the process was pretty exclusive to LE officers.
If you read my novel “ A Sense of Duty” ( available at Barnesandnoble.com and Amazon.com), you will see that I address - in a fictitious way - many of the problems that hamper law enforcement in Philadelphia.
Although fiction, the scenes are derived from my experiences as a police officer in Philadelphia.
So, while I hope it is entertaining, I also hope to enlighten people about police work in Philly ( and elsewhere). Bestselling author WEB Griffin - who wrote a series of novels set in Philadelphia and about the Philly PD - said “A Sense of Duty” provides an insight about law enforcement.
I think if you read it, you would have a better understanding of the criminal justice system in Philadelphia and why the politicians who blame guns for the carnage are just engaging in political theater.
(Thanks for permitting me to plug my novel.)
If guns made people murderous pyschopaths, then my area of Wisconsin would be leading the nation in murders. There's tons of guns in Wisconsin. Not including Milwaukee or Madison. The crime rate here is as low as you'll find in many countries where guns are strictly controlled. It's the person that does the crime, not the gun.
It's not the guns who are out of control, it's the politicians and their enablers. What you point out so well is in large measure the result of the scourge of Liberal corruption and the utter failure of their policies which have allowed - nay, encouraged - once great cities to turn into cesspools. These politicians deserve to be put in jail along with the (other) criminals.
Sure, we'll always have street criminals. But when it's the inept, corrupt, coiffured criminal class running a city, the city doesn't stand a chance - no matter how many silly gun laws craven politicians get passed.
It's the moral rot from top to bottom causing the problem - not the "excess" of forged iron and brass.
>the scenes are derived from my experiences as a police officer in Philadelphia.
What part of Philly?
Believe it or not my former wife was from Philly, and not the Greater Northeast, either.
2nd and Allegany. - Of course, that was back in the old Frank Rizzo days.
- I’ll be sure to get your book at B&N. :)
How far off Penn campus is she living? Or was she in some other neighborhood when she saw this? When I was a grad student there in the 80’s that sort of stuff happened fairly close to campus, but after one of my successors as a math grad student was murdered about a block from my first apartment (at 40th and Pine) a decade after I finished my Ph.D., Penn redeveloped a huge swath of West Philly, and extended the reach of their own police (real police, guns and all, not like the rent-a-cops we have out here at midwestern cow colleges) into I think a 15 block arear around campus.
When I was back on sabbatical, I had the impression that the Penn neigborhood was now pretty safe. Maybe your daughter would do well to stay near Penn and only venture out into Center City and the South Street area by day. (The suburbs are fine, too: there was a movement in the 80’s for Penn grad students to live in the suburbs and commute by train. I lived in Paoli my last two years, and my best friend lived in Berwyn.)
"The Philadelphia Bulletin calls A 'Sense Of Duty' : A Double Shot Of Testosterone Michael P. Tremoglie's "does for big city police training what Stanley Kubrick's Vietnam classic, "Full Metal Jacket" did for U. S. Marine boot camp. ..Tremoglie's attention to detail and understanding of the psychological hazards circling around his characters draws its readers into a world fraught with pending disaster, mixed with the joy of accomplishment, and then hit with the harsh reality of the eventualities its inhabitants tried so hard to avoid. "A Sense Of Duty" deals with clashes. Clashes between cultures, social status, ideologies, political parties, races, sexes, along with hopes and dreams. --The Philadelphia Bulletin "
I was in Wisconsin this past August. Stayed in Milwaukee stopped in Madison and Windsor.
Beautiful state. First time I was there. Reminded me a little of Pennsylvania - including the German food.
Thanks for the kind words. I do hope you buy the book.
You are absolutely correct. The politicians are out of control. They are stuck in gear using failed social policy of a by-gone era.
Ironically, it is the “progressives” who are really not progressive.
Here, btw, is a relevant excerpt from my novel:
***
I always figured that a white liberal was more dangerous to
blacks than the Ku Klux Klan,Mike said.
Really? Beverly asked, skeptically.
Liberals dont like imprisonment and capital punishment. This causes more crime. So, who are the people that bear the brunt of the consequences of that policy? Blacks do! Thats why homicide is the leading cause of death among young black males.
Beverly was incredulous, You think that capital punishment
would stop that?
Sure. Execution definitely limits the chances of someone
repeating a crime does it not? The recidivism rate is very low for someone who was executed.
***
Mike is Mike Carr the protagonist of the novel. Beverly is Beverly Clark a civil rights attorney - who just happens to be very beautiful and very rich.
I won’t tell you how they meet or the relationship between them. You’ll have to buy the book :)
I was from South Philly, 8th and Oregon, which is where the novel is set. As a cop I was assigned to the 12th District in Southwest Philly ( I lived around 68th and Dorel when I was a boy.)
I hope you do buy the book. B&N is cheaper than Amazon.com. B&N’s website says they are out of stock right now. Let me know if they tell you you cannot buy it. I will need to fix that.
Thanks again.
Thank you very much for posting that. I am grateful.
I highly recommend the novel.
Just an excuse to grab guns from the law-abiding citizens and deliberately leave them in the hands of the criminals.
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