Showing posts with label war crimes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label war crimes. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Super Bowl & Jacksonville’s Murder Rate

Mayor John Peyton is boohooing that Jacksonville has lost its Super Bowl spirit. Jacksonville has Florida’s worst murder rate, with no end in sight. During the past week, Jacksonville experienced ten homicides, making it one of the city’s worst for murders. So far, there have been 83 homicides in 2008.

According to the F.B.I.’s 2006 (the most recent) Uniform Crime Report, the national murder index is 5.7 per 100,000 population. In contrast, Jacksonville suffered 110 murders or 13.8 per 100,000 population in 2006. Jacksonville’s overall crime index is 512.3 per 100,000 population compared to a national average of only 323.2 crimes per 100,000 population.

Certainly, a “can-do” attitude is required to solve any problem. However, Jacksonville’s crime problem is not the result of losing “Super spirit,” as Peyton suggests. Michael Hallett, head of University of North Florida's criminology department, nailed it when he said “tears in the social fabric have more to do with municipal spending priorities than a lack of Super Bowl excitement.” It is not a stretch to say that the Super Bowl and the Jaguars have contributed to the current crime wave.

Ever since Jacksonville acquired the Jaguars, city budgets have been skewed. Like imperial Rome, our city has chosen circuses over bread in recent years. The Better Jacksonville Plan exemplified this. The new baseball stadium, municipal arena, and the football stadium expansion were built before the new library and courthouse. While expensive sports and entertainment venues were improved, city budgets for libraries, social services, parks, community centers, youth programs, and mental health care were cut.

Jacksonville continues to lag behind other cities in the number of police officers, despite population increases, some of which were the result of the Super Bowl. Sheriff John Rutherford is correct to say, “We cannot arrest our way out of this crisis.” There is a direct correlation between the number of police per population and crime prevention.

The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office (JSO) may be able to patrol its way out of this crime wave through more pro-active community policing. It worked in the latter half of 2006. Operation Safe Streets (OSS), which funded overtime for JSO officers to do more proactive policing in high crime neighborhoods, saw a “38% decline in murder the second half of 2006 when compared to the first half of the year, which had no OSS overtime.” Helping the decline was “the tens of thousands of citizen contacts that were made and the resulting increase in crime tips those conversations produced” through OSS.

Sheriff Rutherford proposed “the hiring of 225 sworn officers” over a three-year period in his "July 2008 Sheriff's message to the Community." The Law Enforcement and Deterrence Subcommittee of The Jacksonville Journey “recommended the addition of 101 patrol division officers to increase proactive policing levels and help deter crime.” In June, City Council unanimously approved the hiring of 40 additional sworn officers to the JSO in 2008 and another 40 in 2009.

As of 2006, Jacksonville had 1,690 officers or only 2.16 per 1000 population. The U.S. average for officers per 1000 population is 3. The Census Bureau estimated the population of Jacksonville in 2007 was 805,605. These 90 new hires will bring Jacksonville’s ratio of officers to population to about 2.2, still well below average, and a mere .04 increase over the current level. For the city to have 3 officers per 1000 population, we should have an increase of 727 or 2,417 sworn officers.

The Florida Times-Union cites Raymond Sauer, a Clemson University economics professor, “Super Bowls come and go while towns remain much the same after some temporary hoopla. ‘If there's a big event, there's a lot of civic cooperation,’ he said. ‘But for a change in the social fabric, it has to be something on a repeated basis. The Super Bowl doesn't come to town often enough.’"

Sources:

“Peyton yearns for the return of 'Super' spirit,” Florida Times-Union, July 26, 2008 http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/072608/met_309841146.shtml
  • “Rash of shootings has police fatigued,” Florida Times-Union, July 26, 2008 http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/072608/met_309841269.shtml
  • City Data http://www.city-data.com/city/Jacksonville-Florida.html
  • 2006 Uniform Crime Report, Federal Bureau of Investigation http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/cius2006/
  • "City Council agenda," Florida Times-Union, June 25, 2008 http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/062508/met_294895465.shtml
  • "July 2008 Sheriff's message to the Community," Jacksonville Sheriff's Office http://www.coj.net/Departments/Sheriffs+Office/Press+Room/July+2008+Sheriff%27s+Message+to+the+Community+.htm
  • "City Council approves 40 new officers," WJXT-TV 4 http://www.news4jax.com/news/16700910/detail.html
  • "City Council supports hiring more police officers," WTLV-TV 12 http://www.firstcoastnews.com/news/local/news-article.aspx?storyid=112271&catid=3
  • Monday, January 28, 2008

    In Defense of the Confederate Flag

    Recently, I read a scree against the honor and dignity of the Confederate battleflag by a Eureka, California newspaper reporter named Glenn Franco Simmons, entitled "Confederate flag represents ungodly suffering". the article appeared in the January 26, 2008, issue of The Eureka Reporter. (See http://eurekareporter.com/article/080126-confederate-flag-represents-ungodly-suffering#comment-1332 ). Below is my response to his diatribe:

    I am proud to be the second woman to uphold the honor and dignity of the Confederate flag. I was born in "Land of Lincoln" Illinois where Lincoln is worshipped as a demi-god. I grew up with the northern version of history. For its antidote, I also highly recommend reading DiLorenzo's excellent THE REAL LINCOLN.

    Fortunately, an American History teacher in Colorado taught me in high school to question and examine what I thought I knew. Doing so, I set out in my senior year to research and write a term paper on "The War Between the States: the Southern Viewpoint." I came to understand that most of what I had been taught about the causes and origins of this terrible conflict was wrong.

    Today, I live in Northeast Florida. I have continued to study this era in history and have visited many of the sites where this great conflict occurred. One of the things that fascinates me is the number of blacks who owned slaves in the South.

    Did you know that the largest slave-holder in Jacksonville, for example, was a former black slave woman, Anna Kingsley? Interestingly, despite her obvious economic interests in preserving slavery on her multiple plantations, she supported the Union during the war. Why did she side with the supposed enemy of slavery? Because she feared that if the South was a separate country, the North would impose stiff tariffs on the production of her plantations, and she was dependent on those New England markets for her sugar, rice, and indigo. As with all wars, it was primarily about economics.

    Of course, to attempt to ban or denigate the Confederate flag because it was the supposed flag of slavery is silly. More U.S. flags flew over slave markets than any C.S.A. flag ever did. The flag in question was a battleflag. Actually, it was originally a naval flag for Confederate boats only. As another commentator pointed out already, the U.S. flag was the banner of the exterminators of many Indian civilians. True, the KKK and other such groups display the Confederate battleflag. However, their own rules require them to have an American flag and the Bible at every official event. Should we, therefore, ban the American flag and the Bible from display because they misuse them?

    The War between the States was the first modern war of attrition. The Confederate generals were men of honor and character. They did not target civilians; their goal was to engage rival military forces. Sherman, with the complicity of Lincoln, deliberately targeted civilians and introduced the concept of "total war." Today, under the Geneva Conventions, they could be brought up on charges of war crimes and would be found guilty.

    Today, the Confederate flag represents the desire for self-determination and freedom from tyranny to those of us who proudly display it. For those who wish to learn more about these issues, I recommend THE SOUTH WAS RIGHT by the Kennedy brothers.

    How Many of Me Are There?


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    Favorite Books

    • Adrift by Steven Callahan
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    • Christmas Train, The by David Baldacci
    • Christy by Catherine Marshall
    • Civil War Two: The Coming Breakup of America by Thomas Chittum
    • Conquer the Crash by Robert P. Prechter, Jr.
    • Contemplation in a World of Action by Thomas Merton
    • Dark Night of the Soul, The by St. John of the Cross
    • Death Comes to the Archbishop by Willa Cather
    • From the Ground Up: The Story of a First Garden by Amy Stewart
    • Great Late Planet Earth, The by Hal Lindsey
    • Hidden Dangers of the Rainbow, The by Constance Cumbey & Ron Rigsbee
    • Introduction to the Devout Life by St. Francis de Sales
    • Life on the Mississippi by Mark Twain
    • Man Who Walked through Time, The by Colin Fletcher
    • My Antonia by Willa Cather
    • Old Glory: A Voyage Down the Mississippi by Jonathan Raban
    • Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard
    • Religions of Man by Huston Smith
    • Republic, The by Plato
    • Running with Angels by Pamela H. Hansen
    • Seven Storey Mountain, The by Thomas Merton
    • Skipping Christmas by John Grisham
    • The Girl of the Sea of Cortez by Peter Benchley
    • The Pleasures of Philosophy by Will Durant
    • Walden by Henry David Thoreau
    • Walk across America, A by Peter Jenkins