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David Holmes's avatar

Great analysis. I’m from Milwaukee which has a similar reputation and challenges, as well as genuine need address the violence problems. But I was heartened late last year in terms of reputation when Milwaukee was ranked the 3rd best large US city to visit by Condé Nast subscribers trailing only San Diego and Chicago (top city). Chicago was a factor in Milwaukee’s high ranking. My assumption is that Condé Nast subscribers actual go to visit a lot of cities and are a little more sophisticated than the average respondent to Gallup polls.

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Chuck MacDonald's avatar

While true that the lion’s share of violence occurs in a few south and west side neighborhoods, it seems much more random and widespread now. Even the “good” neighborhoods suffer from pretty horrific spillover crime.

Chicago had it going on pre-pandemic. Construction cranes all over the place, a lot of neighborhood rebirth, population that was increasing in a lot of areas, a growing number of tourist with the dollars they spent, and a beautiful downtown that was second to none in this country.

No longer. The Floyd riots ruined, in a couple years, the positive momentum that took a couple decades to build. Stop blaming the bad rep and outcomes on Republicans and “partisan politics”. Chicagoans need to take a look in the mirror. They had a chance to right the ship, but voted for an even more incompetent identity politics activist mayor, and are getting exactly what they voted for.

I’m a born and bred Chicagoan. I was always one of the city’s biggest cheerleaders, but can’t deny what I saw with my own eyes. I’m saddened and angered by what has happened to my hometown. I hope it can survive and recover, but I doubt I’ll see that in my lifetime. We left the city, the county, and the state in late 2020. I will always love Chicago, but don’t like it very much anymore.

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