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Monday, November 22, 2010

And People Ask Me Why I Carry A Firearm

Because my town, Reading, Pa. is the 41st most dangerous city in America (out of 400 ). Which is an improvement. Last year we were number 37.

Yippie kai yea motherfuckers.

Want to know where your town ranks? Go here.

MSNBC:

St. Louis tops list of most dangerous US cities
updated 11/21/2010

TRENTON, N.J. — St. Louis overtook Camden, N.J., as the nation's most dangerous city in 2009, according to a national study released Sunday.

The study by CQ Press found St. Louis had 2,070.1 violent crimes per 100,000 residents, compared with a national average of 429.4. That helped St. Louis beat out Camden, which topped last year's list and was the most dangerous city for 2003 and 2004.

Detroit, Flint, Mich., and Oakland, Calif., rounded out the top five. For the second straight year, the safest city with more than 75,000 residents was Colonie, N.Y.

The annual rankings are based on population figures and crime data compiled by the FBI. Some criminologists question the findings, saying the methodology is unfair.

Greg Scarbro, unit chief of the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting Program, said the FBI also discourages using the data for these types of rankings.

Kara Bowlin, spokeswoman for St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay, said the city actually has been getting safer over the last few years. She said crime in St. Louis has gone down each year since 2007, and so far in 2010, St. Louis crime is down 7 percent.

Erica Van Ross, spokeswoman for the St. Louis Police Department, called the rankings irresponsible.

"Crime is based on a variety of factors. It's based on geography, it's based on poverty, it's based on the economy," Van Ross said.

"That is not to say that urban cities don't have challenges, because we do," Van Ross said. "But it's that it's irresponsible to use the data in this way."

4 comments:

  1. Oh quit being so dramatic. Your city's not even in the top ten.

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  2. I KNOW! We finally fell out of the top ten percent!

    :)

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  3. Ah, maybe next year. We are at least down from 7 to 10.

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  4. Much of our problem is cause by 1) our poverty rate which is, unfortunately, in the top ten in the U.S. (#6) and the drug gangs that have steadily moved in over the last few years.

    But if the gangs keep killing each other off. . .

    ReplyDelete