Preparing For Crime: Random Thoughts And Baseball

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According to a new report Click here to learn about third-party website links on America's cities, St. Louis and Detroit top the list as least safest in the nation. You will recall these two cities fielded baseball teams last week in the World Series Click here to learn about third-party website links. Both cities enjoyed exposure to a national TV audience and were able to boast their rejuvenated downtowns. I hope development efforts reach deep and represent an earnest try at making the cities good places to live.

(These two teams met in the 1968 World Series, a year after devastating riots and destruction in Detroit. That series is locally considered a major factor in healing divisions Click here to learn about third-party website links within the burning city.)

If it's crime that makes a place generally unsafe—rather than, say, lousy roads Click here to learn about third-party website links, bad weather or falling pianos Click here to learn about third-party website linkswhy is it that people commit crime? Click here to learn about third-party website links And so much of it? The answer is very complex, of course, and can't be pinned to one reason. Economics is a fundamental place to start, though Click here to learn about third-party website links.

One version of a clean, bustling American fantasyAll over the world, it's getting tougher for people to get a start Click here to learn about third-party website links economically, experts say. Even with experience and talent Click here to learn about third-party website links, circumstances may conspire to keep someone out of work Click here to learn about third-party website links. On top of that, British experts now profess the environment is ready to play a role Click here to learn about third-party website links in economics.

And the population is growing Click here to learn about third-party website links, even as money and weather work up (apparently) to doomsday for Mayfield Click here to learn about third-party website links. There are opportunities though, if you're willing to try someplace new. The Christian Science Monitor Click here to learn about third-party website links tells of a growing need for artisans and skilled workers in the "remote" West, where thriving industries can use people from dying industries. All it takes is a little getting used to.

The problem is pretty neatly summed up here: Plants are closing Click here to learn about third-party website links, and folks need to find a way to put food on the table Click here to learn about third-party website links.

3 Comments

your new report is amazing!

Thanks, Monica!
(Are you speaking as a Tiger fan or as a cattle rustler?)
(CR)

Tiger fan

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