The only one of those that's going to be truly effective is bringing down the poverty rate. It's the same problem as with bad school performance: nobody wants to admit or deal with the actual underlying cause (poverty), so instead, an aggressive campaign against 'wrongdoers' (criminals) or 'incompetents' (teachers) is proposed. With crime rates, it's actually counterproductive to just try and throw more force at the problem because you're only going to have more people in jail and prison convicted of felonies who are then effectively ostracized from society and fall into a feedback loop of poverty and crime.Gandalf wrote:It's easier. Duh.PeZook wrote:Yet it seems that keeping a suspected terrorist in prison is more important than trying to lower your stagerring murder rates.
Combating that murder rate would require way more police, social programs that might curb poverty and not pay off for a decade, or gun control. There's no easy answers there.
Why doesn't anyone want to confront poverty? Well, because poor people obviously deserve it, and if they want better lives they need to work and pull themselves up by their own bootstraps, so there's no sense in suggesting that we create another BIG GOV'T ~*~entitlement~*~ to try and do anything about it, now, is there? SARCASM. SARCASM.
Out of curiosity, how many people have died from inner city gang murders in the past year? That's not an area I'm really familiar with.