Opinion Notes On a Nonexistent Crime Wave - If American cities aren't war zones, they must be turned into war zones

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Ned Resnikoff
Aug 18, 2025

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Trump’s claim that he ordered the federal occupation of D.C. in order to “stop violent crime” is, obviously, beneath contempt. As many others have pointed out, violent crime in the District is at its lowest point in 30 years. As he did with the occupation of Los Angeles, Trump is using crime as a pretext. For the armed agents of the federal government dispatched to these cities, the real mission is to menace the regime’s real or perceived enemies. That’s why you have DEA agents milling around the National Mall.

But if crime is just a pretext, there’s a reason why this particular pretext has been so useful for Trump. A large majority of Americans consistently report that crime is on the rise, even though, as in D.C., it is near a 30-year low nationwide. The news media consistently reinforces this misperception, and has continued to do so throughout Trump’s takeover of the District: The Atlantic ran a piece about the “plague of crime” in cities like D.C., and the Washington Post published an editorial insisting “many residents still do not feel safe.” On CNN, Anderson Cooper and The New York Times’s Maggie Haberman commiserated about how “there’s a crime problem everywhere.”

In a sense, Haberman and Cooper aren’t entirely wrong; while America may be dramatically safer than it was a few decades ago, it is still more violent than its wealthy peers. But crime in the United States is not exclusively or even primarily a big city problem. When Haberman confidently asserts that “big cities have traditionally had crime problems,” she’s describing the New York City of her childhood, not the New York City of 2025.

One wonders where Haberman, Cooper, and The Atlantic’s Michael Powell got this idea that cities like New York, Los Angeles, and the District of Columbia are still facing serious urban crime waves. No doubt it has something to do with the fact that all three of them spent their formative years in large cities that genuinely were grappling with violent crime epidemics. Maybe they, like Trump, view the external world through a filter that transmutes everything into a phantasmagoric, permanent 1990s. (That would also help to explain why they seem incapable of taking the Trumpism phenomenon on its own terms, instead of treating it like another manifestation of what came to be considered “normal” politics in the late 20th century.)

But I think there’s something else going on here too. A lot of people — particularly people who live in a cloistered world of privilege — seem to be incapable of distinguishing between actual violent crime and upsetting but non-threatening signs of social disorder. A mentally distressed homeless person is usually not dangerous, but visible poverty and suffering gives a lot of people a sort of crime-y vibe.

This crime-y vibe, more than any actual crime, forms the pretext for Trump’s invasion of D.C. That’s why, shortly began the invasion began, Trump warned the city’s homeless population that they would need to “move out, IMMEDIATELY.” It’s also why, after the invasion began, the right-wing publication The Federalist ran a whole article about how three apparently drunk homeless guys were blocking the door to their offices. (The same article describes U Street as “unsavory,” which I suppose is their way of saying it has fun bars and Black people.)

To The Federalist and company, high rates of unsheltered homelessness are associated with high murder rates because they’re both manifestations of the same underlying problem of crime and disorder. In fact, no such relationship exists: while high-cost coastal states such as New York, Massachusetts, California and Oregon have the highest rates of homelessness, the states of the Deep South have significantly higher murder rates.

Plus, the timing doesn’t make sense. The urban crime wave of the 20th century started in the 1960s and crested in the early 1990s; modern street homelessness didn’t really become a widespread problem until the 1980s, and the current spike in homelessness began around the mid-2010s. If widespread violence was one of the defining features of the urban crisis, then mass homelessness is very much a post-crisis phenomenon.

This may seem counterintuitive until we remember that large-scale homelessness is caused by housing shortages. Around the turn of the century, as violent crime plunged in large American cities, they once again became highly desirable places to live. White flight slowed and then began to move in reverse; affluent, highly-educated professionals flooded into the cities that their parents had abandoned for the suburbs. In the interregnum, those cities had destroyed hundreds of thousands of homes through urban renewal, and then, through a series of aggressive rezonings, made it illegal to rebuild that housing. So the rising class of high-income urban professionals found themselves competing against incumbent residents for a smaller and inelastic pool of housing stock, with predictable results.

In terms of its underlying causes, the current homelessness crisis is very nearly the opposite of the 20th century urban crime wave. It is a product of affluence, inequality, and political sclerosis. In the late 20th century, America’s large cities struggled in large part because their major industries and tax bases were getting hollowed out; today, they are struggling because their land use regimes and planning institutions are ill-equipped to manage rapid economic growth.

Which brings us to the real reason why Trump is an enemy of urban America. If cities like D.C. and Los Angeles truly were crime-ridden hellholes, they would pose little threat to the MAGA movement. It is because these are prosperous and dynamic places that they must be occupied.

There’s a reason why Trump’s Department of Homeland Security is posting Thomas Kinkade paintings on X. The MAGA vision for America is fundamentally anti-urban. It is all about an idealized version of small-town America: idyllic, racially homogeneous, and organized along patriarchal lines. To the movement, this vision represents the only reasonable way to live. Anything else is unnatural and doomed to collapse into violence and chaos.

Large cities are a living rebuke to this vision. If dense, multi-ethnic, socially inclusive communities are capable of functioning reasonably well, then the whole MAGA edifice is built on a lie. Trump and his acolytes can’t tolerate the possibility that these communities are not just functional but thriving and highly desirable places to live. They have to be war zones. And if they aren’t war zones now, they need to be turned into them.

I don’t mean to downplay the slow-motion disasters now afflicting D.C., Los Angeles, and other major American cities. The homelessness crisis and the housing shortage that caused it are both humanitarian catastrophes. But the solution to these twin catastrophes is fundamentally urbanist: it necessarily involves making American cities even larger, denser, and more urban. Many state and local Democratic officials have failed to move in this direction because they share some of MAGA’s assumptions about the intrinsic superiority of suburban and exurban living.

Certain journalists at prestigious news outlets appear to also hold those assumptions. But they’re wrong, and we should say they’re wrong. The very things that Trump hates and fears about D.C. are what make it a beautiful — and beautifully American — place.

Source (Archive)
 
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I like that they need to resort to these sorts of rhetorical sleights of hand that D.C. isn't as violent as D.C. was it was when D.C. was coming down from an all-time high of 481 bodies in one year (1991). They can't say that D.C. is one of the safest cities in the nation (it isn't) or even one of the safest cities of comparable size.

What they are claiming is that 'we, according to the rules we just made up now and shall rigorously adhere to (until we make up the new rules) are doing everything right.'
Washington DC is a lot safer today then it was in the 1990s for several reasons.
Back in the 1990s outside the downtown core the city was just dangerous.
Today you can go to prince George's and the suburbs and the police do a pretty good job at cracking down on the crime.
The issue is Maryland and Baltimore just attract crime to DC because of the Marc and close proximity to DC.
Consider that DC in the 1990s you could work a decent middle class joh and find a home outside in Alexandria or Richmond for cheap.
Also Baltimore was actually cracking down on crime in the 1990s and 2000s which was pushing some of the crime back into DC.
Now Baltimore is practical turning into hell on earth outside of downtown and, the airport.
Realistically the goal for DC is to push the crime all the way to Baltimore.
 
(((Resnikoff)))
Shocker.

Please note that this guy is a shill for “California YIMBY (“Yes in My Backyard”), a nonprofit advocacy organization working to end California’s housing crisis through changes to state land use law.” He’s an advocate for building high-density, low-cost housing near city centers, a process proven throughout the west to attract criminals and boost crime rates.

He also had a bitchfit on Facebook after Trump I when he was paralyzed with fear that his plumber may have been a Trump-voting anti-Semite. Presumably this is because Resnikoff instinctively recognizes that the Democrats are the party of effete progressive masturbators and AWFLs and people who actually work for a living generally don’t care much for the plight of illegal imminent Puerto Rican transgender sex workers and such.

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He needs people to believe that there are no issues with urban crime because a huge part of his career is devoted to opening land up to (((developers))) in the name of ‘empathy and compassion for the underprivileged’, and it’s clear that such a policy drives crime.
 
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It's not necessarily "falsified" as in made up from whole cloth, it's that in larger cities, specifically liberal or progressive ran cities, there is an ongoing effort to not prosecute minor offenses and use diversion programs for first time major offenses, which, in turn, makes cops want to just not make arrests. Why the fuck would they risk their lives and livelihoods to arrest criminals when the DA is just going to let them walk or, worse, let them walk and turn around and slap trumped up charges on the cop? So arrests are down. Cops not doing shit means people stop calling in crimes, because why would I call the cops (and potentially get labeled a snitch, opening myself up for retribution) if the cops are going to either do nothing or, if they do, the perp will be back on he street the next night.

As for the "cooking the book" comment, I think that guy was just bullshitting. That's not really how crime statistics work. Charges are logged in the FBI crime database independently, not under the header charge. For instance, if someone is charged with jaywalking across the street to shoot a rival gang banger, the FBI database logs it as one count of jaywalking and one count of murder, not something like jaywalking with a murder modifier.
Acccccccccskhually he was not bullshitting. He retired before the NIBRS was implemented. SRS(replaced by NIBRS in 2021) used to allow only the most serious classifications to be submitted. Now supposedly they take everything but smashing an X on that as well.

Here is what they are doing now apparently:
 
because double think and hypocrisy are built features of the progressive mindset
Most of the people I know whom could be called something like "americanized libs/progs" are intentionally ignorant to what's going on and want to stay that way, so they now dismiss any proof of things they don't like with "That could be AI, though". This never applies in reverse, of course.

It's the most perfect delusion, because it's the kind where literally no proof will ever work because in their minds nothing is provable if they don't wanna hear it.
 
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Reminder Trump defender the police and there are less police on the streets RIGHT NOW because of him
Fell for it again!
 
A lot of people — particularly people who live in a cloistered world of privilege
Hmm, I wonder who that could be
seem to be incapable of distinguishing between actual violent crime and upsetting but non-threatening signs of social disorder.
"Non threatening signs of social disorder" is an oxymoron.
A mentally distressed homeless person is usually not dangerous, but visible poverty and suffering gives a lot of people a sort of crime-y vibe.

This crime-y vibe, more than any actual crime, forms the pretext for Trump’s invasion of D.C.
This is embarassing.
They have to be war zones. And if they aren’t war zones now, they need to be turned into them.
They already were war zones.
 
Also Baltimore was actually cracking down on crime in the 1990s and 2000s which was pushing some of the crime back into DC.
Now Baltimore is practical turning into hell on earth outside of downtown and, the airport.
I wouldn't say that. There's some pretty crime heavy parts of the city, but they're more in the northwest and the northeast, sorta.

Considering the liveable parts of the city, places like Hampden, Mount Vernon, Fed Hill, Canton, etc, I'd be a little more comfortable in those than downtown. Like downtown is probably fine during the day because the office buildings have security in the area, but you probably shouldn't walk around downtown at night. Whereas the residential neighborhoods I mentioned are reasonably safe at night.

We had a bit of a crime spike in the past few years because of the shitty juvenile crime bill (all the gangsters need to do is have a 13 year old pull the trigger). It was immediately unpopular, mostly with Republicans and city blacks and got amended this past session. The Baltimore state's attorney is a solid guy too. I don't trust state judges though.

And amazingly, this year our retarded Dem governor ate his words and fired woke moron Vincent Shiraldi. Vince, if you're not aware, was the guy at the DC youth justice department who held a party at his house for some of the inmates leading to some of them escaping.
 
Imagine complaining about criminals and other ills being solved. How does one defend high crime with a straight face?
It's more they solved the issue of high crime statistics by not recording it where they are in charge. To them no crime exists if they government doesn't know about it. Trump, love him or hate him, will point something out and almost immediately talking heads will feign ignorance. The coyote one is the most damning. The homeless and crime epidemic is not just ignored, they'll get pissy if you hurt one of their anti-social retards. It's why Daniel Penny was going to be made into an example.
 
(((Resnikoff)))
Shocker.

Please note that this guy is a shill for “California YIMBY (“Yes in My Backyard”), a nonprofit advocacy organization working to end California’s housing crisis through changes to state land use law.” He’s an advocate for building high-density, low-cost housing near city centers, a process proven throughout the west to attract criminals and boost crime rates.

He also had a bitchfit on Facebook after Trump I when he was paralyzed with fear that his plumber may have been a Trump-voting anti-Semite. Presumably this is because Resnikoff instinctively recognizes that the Democrats are the party of effete progressive masturbators and AWFLs and people who actually work for a living generally don’t care much for the plight of illegal imminent Puerto Rican transgender sex workers and such.

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He needs people to believe that there are no issues with urban crime because a huge part of his career is devoted to opening land up to (((developers))) in the name of ‘empathy and compassion for the underprivileged’, and it’s clear that such a policy drives crime.
When you look at the guy who wrote this it makes me believe phrenology may be legit.
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>I'm still a straight, white guy who can phenotypically pass as a gentile.
>I'm still a straight, white guy who can phenotypically pass as a gentile.
>straight
>can phenotypically pass as a gentile
 
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