Post by Deleted on Feb 5, 2017 3:30:35 GMT
Trump is obsessed with Chicago bloodshed. Good start.
Violence in Chicago remains stubbornly high. The city recorded about the same number of homicides and shootings in January as the year-earlier period, according to statistics released Feb. 1 by the city's police department. (Feb. 1, 2017)
President Donald Trump says he wants an end to rampant gun violence in Chicago. He's talked about our city several times in his first two weeks in the White House. So far he's offered no remedies. On Jan. 24 he tweeted: "I will send in the Feds!" That's not a policy prescription. It's a movie cliche, no better than, "Get me Batman!"
Yet we welcome Trump's obsession with Chicago's enduring tragedy of murder and mayhem. In fact, we challenge him to talk and think more about the crisis. Because the bully pulpit of the presidency is no small thing. Maybe Trump is just popping off, but the more he threatens to act, the more heat he puts on Chicago's leaders to do the hard work of healing broken neighborhoods. By the same token, the more involved he gets, the more he must accept a share of the responsibility for solutions or risk looking like a do-nothing.
On Wednesday at a White House event for Black History Month, Trump heard from a concerned Ohio minister who wants to arrange a gang summit in Chicago. The minister's idea, while well-meaning, holds little promise because the city's gang structure is atomized. There appear to be no leaders empowered to negotiate a truce.
But Trump's response to the Rev. Darrell Scott contained seeds of a valuable promise: "If they're not going to solve the problem … we're going to solve the problem for them because we're going to have to do something about Chicago," the president said. "Because what's happening in Chicago should not be happening in this country."
Much, much more here
Violence in Chicago remains stubbornly high. The city recorded about the same number of homicides and shootings in January as the year-earlier period, according to statistics released Feb. 1 by the city's police department. (Feb. 1, 2017)
President Donald Trump says he wants an end to rampant gun violence in Chicago. He's talked about our city several times in his first two weeks in the White House. So far he's offered no remedies. On Jan. 24 he tweeted: "I will send in the Feds!" That's not a policy prescription. It's a movie cliche, no better than, "Get me Batman!"
Yet we welcome Trump's obsession with Chicago's enduring tragedy of murder and mayhem. In fact, we challenge him to talk and think more about the crisis. Because the bully pulpit of the presidency is no small thing. Maybe Trump is just popping off, but the more he threatens to act, the more heat he puts on Chicago's leaders to do the hard work of healing broken neighborhoods. By the same token, the more involved he gets, the more he must accept a share of the responsibility for solutions or risk looking like a do-nothing.
On Wednesday at a White House event for Black History Month, Trump heard from a concerned Ohio minister who wants to arrange a gang summit in Chicago. The minister's idea, while well-meaning, holds little promise because the city's gang structure is atomized. There appear to be no leaders empowered to negotiate a truce.
But Trump's response to the Rev. Darrell Scott contained seeds of a valuable promise: "If they're not going to solve the problem … we're going to solve the problem for them because we're going to have to do something about Chicago," the president said. "Because what's happening in Chicago should not be happening in this country."
Much, much more here