This is Eric Mortensen's blog. He works @ Blip and lives in Brooklyn.
The realities simply do not support the rhetoric about public safety in border states. As ColorLines’ graphic illustrates, crime in key cities near the U.S.-Mexico border is on the decline—just like it is all over the country. The murder rate in San Diego, Calif., dropped by 25 percent last year. Phoenix’s decreased by 27 percent. El Paso saw a 29 percent drop in murders, bested by Tucson, Ariz., which saw a 46 percent decline in murders. The national murder rate went down just 10 percent from 2008 to 2009. When it comes to violent crime more generally, all four of these border cities hover around four to six violent crimes per capita, just under the national average of 6.6. (via Racialicious)
oh shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-
reforming immigration,...our country as one...stats above....
So equal intellectual weight should be given to “facts” which are incorrect and the conclusions created from them?...
I figure this could be used to support the idea that “illegal immigrants” are linked to murder - because didn’t “illegal...
Disagree! Because there really are people in the middle who are busy and undecided and only hear voices on each side...
Not to be callous, but considering that no amount of logic or reason is going into this rhetoric, do we think that logic...
Every day in the two different government offices I work at I receive letters from constituents who cite the “increasing...
asprettyasasong: abbyjean:
[Image description: A map showing...state of Arizona and parts of each of
art fighting hate. with such a tasty color pallet, too! mmmmmmmm.