Revive The Big 4 and send them in.
Revive The Big 4 and send them in.
Same. Will only go there during the day and early evening and never stay later than that.
Sad as I used to go often back even to the days of Stella!
Somebody call me?????
I have to disagree. I lived in Chicago for 2 decades, crime is everywhere. I lived a few blocks from Navy Pier for 4 years, was a victim of 3 crimes. Walk through Chicago's River North neighborhood any weekend night, drug dealing and use is in abundance, and I'm not referring to pot. Chicago has been a longtime hub of Mexican heroin and cocaine
Detroit revenues are up. The city needs to hire more cops. Give community policing a solid try, it seems to be helping in Chicago.
Violent crime is really fucking bad for business. Bad for the neighborhoods. Expensive problems come with it. Detroit and Lansing should know that by now.
From what y'all have posted here, I wouldn't even recognize the place any more. No Stella, no International .... I don't remember the name of the bakery I use to hit for a Baklava and a bag of other stuff. Engine 9 isn't even there any more. We used to park there and walk around the block.
You don't know the half of it and you probably never will. It doesn't make the news or it gets swept under the rug.Detroit revenues are up. The city needs to hire more cops. Give community policing a solid try, it seems to be helping in Chicago.
Violent crime is really fucking bad for business. Bad for the neighborhoods. Expensive problems come with it. Detroit and Lansing should know that by now.
Of course I can't find any real information now, but it seems I read at one time that she used to be a decent person in her younger days. All you read about is her time in the GT area after whatever caused her decline.
There are mountains of apathy around here on the issue of violent crimes in Detroit for sure. Downplayed and hidden from view, absolutely.
The proof is in the 25 threads a year started on this board on how badly a train is needed to get to the GD airport like it is Detroit’s most pressing need while not one gets started about the many square miles of Detroit where it is downright dangerous for a kid to grown up in. No expatriate experts, no maps, no ideas on how to fix the problem thrown out.
Violent crime played a major role in crippling Detroit in its history and it is fully capable of doing it again if it remains unaddressed by another generation.
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Concerned Citizen - Was this heinous act committed by a group of terrorist? Should we call the folks at Homeland Security to help make the community safe!
Radio Show Voice - No, the perps don't have a political agenda so they are not classified as terrorists. No need to call Homeland Security.
Concerned Citizen - But they are terrorizing the law abiding citizens that have jobs and pay taxes.
Radio Show Voice - No need to worry. They're just street thugs shooting up the town. When it comes to public safety, it all about the money, the jurisdiction and power. Then comes public safety. It's just another day keeping it real in the D and every other big city in America.
Announcer: In next weeks episode, someone goes Eastside!
There are mountains of apathy around here on the issue of violent crimes in Detroit for sure. Downplayed and hidden from view, absolutely.
The proof is in the 25 threads a year started on this board on how badly a train is needed to get to the GD airport like it is Detroit’s most pressing need while not one gets started about the many square miles of Detroit where it is downright dangerous for a kid to grown up in. No expatriate experts, no maps, no ideas on how to fix the problem thrown out.
Violent crime played a major role in crippling Detroit in its history and it is fully capable of doing it again if it remains unaddressed by another generation.
It's still a major role. Worse part is the cops, [[apologies to the gang and drug squads) do nothing. You tell them "they're right there", they tell you "you'll have to come down and make a police report". Then it gets written up as "property crime". The only time it becomes a problem is when it happens in the green zone. We want people to keep coming to the coliseums and to keep buying designer boxer shorts.
Last edited by Honky Tonk; May-07-19 at 12:44 AM.
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There you go. Actually I've been around long enough to remember both photos.
You must be younger than I am. I do remember the portrait artists, but we went down there before Greektown "took off". It started going downhill [[IMO) when they opened those 3 floors of shops. That's when Greektown became "discovered". @ first it was good, then it became over crowded, and petty crimes started. [[purse snatching, chain snatching, car break-ins, etc.) Now it sounds like it's escalated to a whole new level. I stopped going when you waited 45 minutes in line, outside the restaurant, only to be told, after being seated, they were out of this and out of that. The food also became cookie-cutter mundane.
Last edited by Honky Tonk; May-07-19 at 06:58 AM.
Hah, a lady never tells her age...... I sorta liked the 80's Trapper's Alley days; there was still a feel of the old GT remaining. Though I never liked all that restaurant wait and rush and not so great food as things progressed.
And another one...
https://www.detroitnews.com/story/ne...wn/1401177001/
Yeah, I am done with GT. Maybe an occasion Pizza Pappalis on a Thursday early evening -- out by 6PM. Never on a weekend at night, late.
Last edited by Zacha341; June-09-19 at 11:17 AM.
It was probably the Nazi's.
^^^ Nah! They'd long gone, leaving us to ourselves.........
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