Thursday, June 10, 2010

Blood, bread and order.

Blood, bread and order.

No sleep tonight. It's in the air, again. At 9, just at the start of
the Celtic game, two .40 caliber guns engaged in a running battle
along the Gaza strip, aka Howard ave, Bainbridge n Chauncey. A massive
police presence followed. Then at 1:15 am, a .9mm rang out. Same
location.
In the hood, we're as close to the general breakdown of order as a
community can get (without curfew).
That got me thinking, what would the general breakdown of order look
like in the hood? Remember, David Paterson is entertaining the total
shutdown of state government, a scenario he said would lead to chaos.
Major investors are voicing their fears, openly talking on cnbc about
investing in guns, barbed wire and land.
In civilized orders, after the breakdown of the state, civil society
should be the next line of defense against anarchy. The houses of
worship, qualified citizens from all disciplines and the non profit
sector should be able to continue some semblance of order.
But in the hood, houses of worship don't even talk to each other,
qualified citizens are too often too self involved and the non profits
don't think far ahead enough to plan these contingencies out.
That, in turn, leaves the next organized level if society, the gangs,
in charge. Doubt it? They've already dropped out of society, formed
their own culture(s), language(s), marked territory and communicate
much, much better than traditional civic society.
So, how would you live in a time when Bloods deliver the bread, make
laws and control access to your block? Scared? Good. I'm trying to
and i'm not making any of this up.
If you really care, pass this around and get involved yourself.


Sent from my iPod

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Today's Daily News

People are dying in the streets: Violence is up in parts of Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx

Thursday, June 3rd 2010, 4:00 AM

Residents in my Brooklyn neighborhood - and many others like it around the city - are grappling with a stunning rise in violent crime that must rank near the top of the list of items Mayor Bloomberg and the City Council address in these final weeks before the June 30 budget deadline.

The 10 precincts in the Brooklyn North command have collectively seen a 19% rise in murders so far this year, up to 43 killings from 36, and 91 reported rapes, up 44% from the same period last year.

Something similar is going on in the eight precincts of Queens South, where the 25 homicides so far this year are a 39% increase over last year's 18.

In the Bronx, murders are up 11% compared to last year and rapes have increased 15%.

The oft-given explanation from City Hall and 1 Police Plaza is that years of driving down crime figures mean that small increases are inevitable.

That explanation - the bureaucratic equivalent of "move along folks, nothing to see here" - provides no comfort. In some cases, it's not even true.

As my Daily News colleague Rocco Parascandola recently reported, East New York's 75th Precinct has seen sizable jumps in murders, rapes, robberies and felony assaults. And homicides in the precinct are up 20% compared with 2001, the year Bloomberg took office, suggesting nearly a decade of progress lost on public safety.

More striking than the numbers are the shocking particulars of the crimes.

Brooklyn recently witnessed the chilling spectacle of 16-year-old Al-Taya Conyers, the daughter of a correction officer, screaming "No! No! No!" and begging for her life shortly before being executed at point-blank range near the Wyckoff Gardens housing project by 18-year-old Kendale Robinson, police say.

A few weeks back, Inspector Jeffrey Maddrey, commander of the 75th Precinct, ended up in a gunfight with teen gangsters while out on a mission of mercy, searching for a lost 7-year-old.

And Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes has busted several sex-slavery rings run by alleged Bloods gang members that imprisoned girls as young as 15 and forced them into prostitution.

Alongside the big-headline stories is the dreary, ongoing toll of young men and women dying violently around the city. I track many of them on my blog, savebrooklynnow.blogspot.com.

The good news is that communities rocked by the upsurge in violence are fighting back.

There was standing room only at a public safety forum held by the Rosa Parks Democratic Club in Crown Heights shortly after shots were fired near the Washington Temple Church and lodged in the door of the house of worship.

More than 100 residents were disappointed that the new commander of the 77th Precinct, Capt. Elvio Capocci, was a no-show at the meeting; close cooperation between communities and cops is an absolute must if we hope to beat back the tide of violence.

Everybody agrees that the crucial ingredient in public safety is active, creative partnerships between law enforcement and block associations, tenant groups, pastors, merchants, principals and unaffiliated civic elders who hold neighborhoods together.

In too many places, the binding has frayed and communities are coming unglued. It's time to reestablish and broaden our police-community alliances and prepare for a long, difficult season of dialing back the violence before it spirals completely out of control.