Liberals and crime spikes
Cities need to keep people safe while not repeating the mistakes of the past
AFTER THE sweet tea was poured but before the tomato soup arrived, in the middle of a crowded restaurant, Bill White lifted his shirt-tail to reveal the rubberised grip of a .38 revolver. “Everyone’s got one these days,” he says. Over lunch, he and two other residents of Buckhead, the wealthy northern section of Atlanta, swap stories: packs of cars blocking intersections for illegal street races, would-be thieves casing houses, neighbours too frightened to leave their homes. Lenox Square, an upscale mall, installed metal detectors after a spate of shootings. Mr White is CEO of the Buckhead Exploratory Committee—a group of residents who have organised to push for Buckhead’s independence from Atlanta, driven, he explains, by three factors: “crime, crime and crime”.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Reality bites”
United States June 5th 2021
- Liberals and crime spikes
- The January 6th commission and the two main weaknesses of America’s democracy
- Congress is set to make a down-payment on innovation in America
- The pandemic pushed more Americans to try out van life
- Horseracing, the sport of kings, needs more punters and fewer drugs
- Hispanic Americans are most vulnerable to covid-19
- Fewer Americans are going hungry
- Who owns the national pastime?
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