Mrwiregrass
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The crime bill partially explains what we see today. When you create something that disenfranchises people, ruin their ability to support themselves and their families, it has a lasting impact generationally. And communities are still reaping what that bill did.Yet folks mad at the crime bill........... Move to these neighborhoods and enroll your kids in the neighborhood school. Only then will I listen to you
That was before my era but the stories I read and hear are still way worse than what goes on todayThe crime bill partially explains what we see today. When you create something that disenfranchises people, ruin their ability to support themselves and their families, it has a lasting impact generationally. And communities are still reaping what that bill did.
Yet folks mad at the crime bill........... Move to these neighborhoods and enroll your kids in the neighborhood school. Only then will I listen to you
I wish I could recall the thread that was started when the pandemic first hit, and people were saying that there was going to be a baby boom nine months later. And I told yall, not necessarily, because this could lead to a lot of divorces. Now, all these killings, I did not anticipate.Homicides are up in most cities. Many seem to be domestic in nature. A lot of family violence. Lockdown is causing people to interact who normally would not be at home. This has led to an drastic increase in violence. Spousal domestic abuse has also increased in the last six months...
The crime bill partially explains what we see today. When you create something that disenfranchises people, ruin their ability to support themselves and their families, it has a lasting impact generationally. And communities are still reaping what that bill did.
That is a lie.The crime bill partially explains what we see today. When you create something that disenfranchises people, ruin their ability to support themselves and their families, it has a lasting impact generationally. And communities are still reaping what that bill did.
This did not start in 1994. In all seriousness it's a lack of Jesus, but I know not everyone wants to hear that so I'll come at it from this perspective. Our community schools have been given less to work with for 100 years. You provide the people a subpar education, limit their ability to compete and make an honest living for themselves and their family, they are going to do what they have to do. Much of the crime we see in our community involves the drug trade, which is dangerous and violent by nature. Young people have learned that tomorrow is not promised and so they live for today, because today is all they've got. They have lost hope and a boy w/o hope is dangerous and desperate. Combine that with their youth (men's brains don't reach maturity until mid-20s) that makes them impulsive and unable to fully process the consequences of their actions. welcome to 2020, or 1994. It's true now and it was true then.The crime bill partially explains what we see today. When you create something that disenfranchises people, ruin their ability to support themselves and their families, it has a lasting impact generationally. And communities are still reaping what that bill did.
Seems to me people who lack Jesus ain't black people.This did not start in 1994. In all seriousness it's a lack of Jesus, but I know not everyone wants to hear that so I'll come at it from this perspective. Our community schools have been given less to work with for 100 years. You provide the people a subpar education, limit their ability to compete and make an honest living for themselves and their family, they are going to do what they have to do. Much of the crime we see in our community involves the drug trade, which is dangerous and violent by nature. Young people have learned that tomorrow is not promised and so they live for today, because today is all they've got. They have lost hope and a boy w/o hope is dangerous and desperate. Combine that with their youth (men's brains don't reach maturity until mid-20s) that makes them impulsive and unable to fully process the consequences of their actions. welcome to 2020, or 1994. It's true now and it was true then.
there is not a demographic of people you can identify that don't need Jesus. those in our community that commit crime, the police that abuse their authority & make themselves useless to the community, the remainder of the CJS that doesn't treat the problem but seeks simply to punish, schools that don't provide an education that will prepare young people to meet their opportunities. churches that pass judgement but don't pass mercy down mercy and meet the needs of the communities they serve.Seems to me people who lack Jesus ain't black people.
It also started with Reverse migration. And started happening to a bunch of cities, Jackson, Little Rock, Mobile Birmingham, even little old Meridian Mississippi. Ask me what I mean, if you don't know.This did not start in 1994. In all seriousness it's a lack of Jesus, but I know not everyone wants to hear that so I'll come at it from this perspective. Our community schools have been given less to work with for 100 years. You provide the people a subpar education, limit their ability to compete and make an honest living for themselves and their family, they are going to do what they have to do. Much of the crime we see in our community involves the drug trade, which is dangerous and violent by nature. Young people have learned that tomorrow is not promised and so they live for today, because today is all they've got. They have lost hope and a boy w/o hope is dangerous and desperate. Combine that with their youth (men's brains don't reach maturity until mid-20s) that makes them impulsive and unable to fully process the consequences of their actions. welcome to 2020, or 1994. It's true now and it was true then.
It also started with Reverse migration. And started happening to a bunch of cities, Jackson, Little Rock, Mobile Birmingham, even little old Meridian Mississippi. Ask me what I mean, if you don't know.