Commentary
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Our commentary partners will help you reach your own conclusions on complex topics.
Blame lockdowns, not COVID-19, for America’s crime wave
While President Biden delivered his State of the Union address in the US Capitol, there was a carjacking less than 10 blocks southwest of there. There was a dead body found in the bathroom of Union Station, which is five blocks from the Capitol. And there was a shooting in southeast DC within sight of the dome. It was a typical night in the years long crime wave in Washington DC. And the same thing is happening in cities all over America. In his speech, Biden named the cause of this crime wave.
That’s almost correct. But COVID didn’t cause a spike in violent crime. lockdowns caused the spike in violent crime. closing schools, community centers, sports leagues and libraries. While breaking up pickup basketball games and scaring everyone into staying home didn’t merely lead to boredom and loneliness. It led to an epidemic of assaults, carjackings, and murders. The causality is clear when we look at the details of the crime wave.
The prototypical post lockdown crime in DC is a carjacking by a teenager. carjackings in DC quadrupled over the pandemic and two thirds of those arrested for carjackings were teenagers. What were they after? A Joyride, it seems.
Quote, I honestly believe it’s a game, carjacking victim Tariq Majeed told The New York Times, Majeed explained to the Times that in the old days, carjackers sold the cars to chop shops who stripped the cars for parts, but quote, now people are carjacked and the cars are often found afterwards crashed or just left on the street.
The crimes that are climbing are not crimes of opportunity or crimes of desperation. They are thoroughly pointless antisocial crimes in 2021 assaults went up and murders went up. Robberies followed in 2022. But overall, the crime wave is a story of bored aimless kids seeking to feel something in a world where they’ve been robbed of normal human interaction and deprived of the habits of neighborliness and empathy.
Masks don’t help either. Masks are antisocial, preventing people from knowing their neighbors or seeing the passers by as a fellow human. Many introverted journalists actually praise this aspect of masks in 2020, happy that their face coverings protected them from chatty neighbors.
But dehumanizing the people around us makes us less social, and normalizing masks embolden so lawless. The virus itself left awful carnage in the U.S. and around the world. But our response to the virus, most of all, locking children down and depriving them of friendship, learning and community is still taking its toll in cities around the country.
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America’s baby bust portends tough times ahead
In 2007, Americans welcomed approximately 4.3 million babies. But following a decline in birth rates during the Great Recession, birth rates have not recovered. Over the past 15 years, the number of U.S. births has decreased annually, with the most recent 12-month period on record indicating only 3.6 million babies born. Straight Arrow News contributor…
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Inflation is still too high and Biden is still to blame
Democrats are busy celebrating a consistently strong economy under President Biden, citing shocking GDP growth and record-low unemployment. Republicans are responding to the celebration with concerns about rising living costs, housing unaffordability, and continuing inflation. Straight Arrow News contributor Tim Carney points out that many Americans feel left behind by “Bidenomics” and argues that they…
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College just got much pricier for American families
American colleges and universities are among the very best in the world. They are also notoriously expensive, with many graduates working for decades to pay back their college loans. But for many new students and parents hoping to help their children pay for college, tuition just became even more expensive, thanks to a new federal…
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Hunter Biden’s tax evasion charges not the worst part of controversy
On Dec. 7, Hunter Biden was indicted on nine tax charges in California, relating to over $1.4 million in taxes owed between 2016 and 2019. While the back taxes have been settled, a potential conviction could result in a maximum 17-year prison sentence for the president’s son. On Dec. 13, House Republicans voted to formalize…
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How to avoid child smartphone dependency
Smartphones have revolutionized our world — and our behavior, too. While billions of humans now have entire encyclopedias within arm’s reach, those same humans are also at risk of developing an addiction to various apps, social media platforms, games and so on. Questions surrounding the health and wellness of smartphones — as relevant to adults…
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