|
 |
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
The Scuppers This is a new forum for the not necessarily fishing related topics... |
 |
07-23-2007, 11:06 AM
|
#1
|
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: North Cambridge, MA
Posts: 1,358
|
I agree, its not just the Cape, it all of SE Mass., even beyond. Second tier East Coast cities like Boston, Newark, Philadelphia, Baltimore, D.C. have seen crime skyrocket, were talking crime trends that have not been seen since the Reagan era. Philadelphia is averaging a homicide daily (that does not include people wounded or people with bad aim, missing...) and on one day earlier this summer they found 11 people dead in one day. Life has become a lot less promising for those caught in those neighborhoods, and unfortunately drugs seem to be the only employers around. The other problem is labor supply will always exceed the number of street corners so competition needs to be minimized. Drugs are in the suburbs as well, its just a smaller labor pool, less deadly competition. The most qualified street corner drug dealer's resume will always read killer, and if you are willing to kill for the love of money, you will gladly perform other duties (armed robbery, theft, B&E, assault) as needed. Its unfortunate that when the crime is in the city, no one much pays anything more than an interested 10 minutes tuned into the evening news, we are all so removed from those urban concrete and steel jungles, worlds away. However, when the tinted black lexus' with rims the size of a large pizzas start rolling in front of are white picket fences by Ava's wagon, only then do we begin to exhibit any concern.
|
|
|
|
07-23-2007, 11:37 AM
|
#2
|
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Uh, in a spot....
Posts: 5,451
|
You can blame this on a lot of things and it is not just the cape either as someone previously said. To live on Cape Cod takes a serious amount of fortitude. Once anything comes over the bridge, it cost more. To live comfortably you have to either own your own business and be good at what you do, be in a profession like a physician or lawyer and be lucky enough to get linked to an already established group and/or hospital or be employed in some kind of federal/state/municipal job that though might not pay as much as the private sector has grerat benefits and security and most importantly have purchased your home sometime in the late 70's to early 80's.
The middle class here is hanging on by a thread. Being a resort community there is a much more consolidated showing of the upper class have's versus the have nots. Just take a ride by the water these days. You'll notice the small cottages that were strictly built for habitation in the summer are the odd men out as original owners or the surviving kin sell out for hefty returns whereupon the only able buyers take the original place down and build a trophy "summer" place. Monomoscoy Island in Mashpee is a perfect example of this, three trophy homes and one small vintage cottage then four more trophy homes. The original cottage becomes an eyesore to the new more affluent neighbors. Whereupon the capes loses more charm as each goes under the demo ball.
Now, being a resort community the service industry needs workers, people who will work for next to minimum wage and will live in squalor. Town owned housing authority husing and unscrupulous absentee landlords who charge the state for the rentals in run down housing. Typical of this is Hyannis area near Bearses Way. It's a ghetto now. Gangbangers/ drugs hookers and pimpin'. 16 year olds wearing baggy jeans with thier shorts hanging out and hoodies terrorizing the neighborhood and local merchants and all packing heat. Quaint old Hyannis ain't what Patti Page sang about so long ago these days. It's a dirty and dangerous place.
With the influx of displaced families, single mothers with no or little education, a flock of kids and a job at Burger King only breeds trouble.
You can't live here on 50,000.00 a year never mind 12,000.00 so with that comes the situation we have now.
We still have nice places here where you can go sit by a pond and hear no cars but we have the same problems that over the bridges do but except for say Boston, it costs more to live here and if your married both have to work and who's left to mind the kids? 40b housing and lotteries for the same leave ample opportunity for the more undeserving to get in where hard working folks fail. Crime is growing, the summer always sees a surge in it here.
Fall, thank God and the offseason is coming where it slows down a little, not much but a little.
|
Why even try.........
|
|
|
 |
Thread Tools |
|
Display Modes |
Rate This Thread |
Hybrid Mode
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:02 AM.
|
| |