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In the 1980s and early 1990s NYC was basically a gutter. It cleaned up around the mid 90s. Now it's probably the safest big city in America in my opinion. This is a great thing. Do you think NYC will ever turn back to the way it was in the 1980s? Explain why.
I have another question. If some Brooklyn or bronx housing projects were the size as Cabrini green projects, do you think they would be just as bad if not worse? Because I always felt that. If certain housing projects(especially back in the 1980s) in Brooklyn or bronx were just as big and compact(meaning people all packed together on top of each other) as Cabrini green projects or Robert Taylor homes, they would be 10x as bad as they already were and would be even worse due to NYC population.
In the 1980s and early 1990s NYC was basically a gutter. It cleaned up around the mid 90s. Now it's probably the safest big city in America in my opinion. This is a great thing. Do you think NYC will ever turn back to the way it was in the 1980s? Explain why.
I have another question. If some Brooklyn or bronx housing projects were the size as Cabrini green projects, do you think they would be just as bad if not worse? Because I always felt that. If certain housing projects(especially back in the 1980s) in Brooklyn or bronx were just as big and compact(meaning people all packed together on top of each other) as Cabrini green projects or Robert Taylor homes, they would be 10x as bad as they already were and would be even worse due to NYC population.
As you probably know there are alot of new mixed income housing in South Bronx. Eventually the tenants that works and tries to live a normal life will move away due to ghetto element present in the same building and neighborhood. The city then of course fills the vacant apartments with whoever they can find. I think there will be an increase in slummyfication and problems with mainteance of the new buildings that will further escalate the problems that this part of the borough already have.
Nah. Current trends suggest endless gentrification. Pretty soon nobody will able to afford Harlem or many other areas once considered "rough".
Cities in general have been coming back into favor with the younger generations while the suburbs have been declining in popularity. That trend won't reverse itself any time soon I bet.
Nah. Current trends suggest endless gentrification. Pretty soon nobody will able to afford Harlem or many other areas once considered "rough".
Cities in general have been coming back into favor with the younger generations while the suburbs have been declining in popularity. That trend won't reverse itself any time soon I bet.
That's really good! I always ate it when I see people romanticizing about crime in NYC or whatever city it may be. They don't understand how bad it was back the. If they actually lived through it and saw everyone dropping like flies back then, then I doubt they would be romanticizing.
That's really good! I always ate it when I see people romanticizing about crime in NYC or whatever city it may be. They don't understand how bad it was back the. If they actually lived through it and saw everyone dropping like flies back then, then I doubt they would be romanticizing.
Queensbridge Houses is the largest public housing development in the United States.
It is now currently but before they tore down the Robert Taylor Homes in Chicago. The Taylor homes were the largest area of High Rise Public housing in the United States!
One longs for the good old days when one could be thrown in irons for jaywalking...such fond memories of gay bars being shut and bathhouses closed. And his crowning glory of selling Times Square to Disney.
Yep, that brownshirt really knew how to run things.
But, too bad he couldn't get the trains to run on time like his Italian model did.
His only real claim to fame was he was sitting in his office dreaming of his girlfriend when the World Trade Center was destroyed. He put on his baseball cap, posed for a lot of pictures, and thought of Presidential possibilities.
(Psst, the only thing that "cleaned up New York" was the Clinton era prosperity, aka bubble. Just wait to watch the shine come off if this depression lasts much longer and taxpayers stop bailing out banks and Wall Street and New York gets to share the pain.)
One longs for the good old days when one could be thrown in irons for jaywalking...such fond memories of gay bars being shut and bathhouses closed. And his crowning glory of selling Times Square to Disney.
Yep, that brownshirt really knew how to run things.
But, too bad he couldn't get the trains to run on time like his Italian model did.
His only real claim to fame was he was sitting in his office dreaming of his girlfriend when the World Trade Center was destroyed. He put on his baseball cap, posed for a lot of pictures, and thought of Presidential possibilities.
(Psst, the only thing that "cleaned up New York" was the Clinton era prosperity, aka bubble. Just wait to watch the shine come off if this depression lasts much longer and taxpayers stop bailing out banks and Wall Street and New York gets to share the pain.)
Kefir i've never really had any problems with your posts but this one right here is completely retarded and screams sour grapes... To me, what I take from your post is that the first emboldened part is the real reason why you harbor such resentment towards the man that cleaned up this city... To say that all he did was insincerely pose for cameras and have presidential aspirations when the twin towers fell isn't just nonsensical, it's heartless... Unlike our current ridiculously insincere mayor (who if there is a baby boom 9 months from now will talk about the positives that have come from hurricane sandy and how the situation could have been much worse considereing...) Mayor Giuliani was there for the city during such dark times and you could ask any of the tens of thousands of people who lost family members to 9/11 whether they felt Rudy was even remotely insincere and see what they tell you... (you may end up with a black eye asking them)...
I don't blame people for claiming some of Rudy's tactics were unnecessary, racially motivated, etc etc... That being said, for all those people who say things like that, why don't we take a look at the stats... If his methods were racially motivated, shouldn't the italian/russian/albanian/irish mob still be alive and kicking in this city, keeping neighborhoods in constant fear of falling out of line at any point of time... The mob was leveled under Giuliani's tenure as mayor... sure there are little stories here and there and those who romanticize the mob who claim they're on the rise somehow but under his two terms as mayor he took what was a thriving and violent criminal organization and dismantled it top to bottom... I moved to Ridgewood back when the mob still had a serious presence... For all those people who talk about Ridgewood going down the tubes now with all these new hispanic and black faces, fresh pond rd. has never been safer... There used to be shootouts in broad daylight at what is now a beauty salon called Envy on Fresh Pond Rd. The Puerto Ricans and Italians in the neighborhood used to battle it out all the time along Fresh Pond, Forest, Seneca and Cypress... Now that's done...
Rudy did alot for this city and anyone who talks about his lack of contributions is either one of two things, sensitive or dishonest about the realities of how this city was before he took over... He wasn't perfect by any stretch of the imagination, but comparing NYC 1994 to 2002 was like night and day... Not so much crime wise for 2002 to 2012... An argument can be made however that under Bloomberg's tenure, class tension and gaps between rich and poor have only skyrocketed during his campaign...
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