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    Explore "violent crime" with insightful episodes like "Crime Wave in the U.S. Capital | Saturday Extra", "The stretched-too-thin blue line", "Finding Solutions For Crime – Without Politics Getting In The Way", "Violent Crime Is Spiking. Do Liberals Have an Answer?" and "Ep. 530 - Young Mother Murdered In Horrific Video. BLM and Antifa Ignore, As Usual." from podcasts like ""Morning Wire", "Today, Explained", "Consider This from NPR", "The Ezra Klein Show" and "The Matt Walsh Show"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    The stretched-too-thin blue line

    The stretched-too-thin blue line
    FBI data shows police departments have been solving fewer violent crimes since 2020. Data analyst Jeff Asher explains where policing is failing, and Dallas Police Chief Eddie Garcia talks about what cops say they need. This episode was produced by Hady Mawajdeh, edited by Matt Collette, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by David Herman, and hosted by Noel King. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained Support Today, Explained by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    Finding Solutions For Crime – Without Politics Getting In The Way

    Finding Solutions For Crime – Without Politics Getting In The Way
    When Chicago mayor Lori Lightfoot lost her re-election bid this week, many people saw the result as a referendum on how she handled crime.

    But crime is not just a Chicago issue. Nationally, murders, shootings, and thefts are up. Communities that feel under siege are looking to hold elected leaders accountable for their failure to address the problem. But when agreements on how to solve crime break down along party lines -and even within parties- are politics hindering potential solutions?

    Host Michel Martin talks to Thomas Abt, senior fellow at the Council on Criminal Justice, about non-partisan, research-based solutions. We also hear from Ja'Ron Smith, a fellow with Right on Crime, a conservative criminal justice reform coalition.

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    Violent Crime Is Spiking. Do Liberals Have an Answer?

    Violent Crime Is Spiking. Do Liberals Have an Answer?

    Early estimates find that in 2020, homicides in the United States increased somewhere between 25 percent and nearly 40 percent, the largest spike since 1960, when formal crime statistics began to be collected. And early estimates indicate that the increase has carried over to 2021.

    Violent crime is a crisis on two levels. The first, and most direct, is the toll it takes on people and communities. The lost lives, the grieving families, the traumatized children, the families and businesses that flee, leaving inequality and joblessness for those who remain.

    It’s also a political crisis: Violent crime can lead to more punitive, authoritarian and often racist policies, with consequences that shape communities decades later. In the 1970s and ’80s, the politics of crime drove the rise of mass incarceration and warrior policing, the political careers of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, the abandonment of inner cities. If these numbers keep rising, they could end any chance we have of building a new approach to safety, and possibly carry Donald Trump — or someone like him — back to the presidency in 2024.

    There’s still time. Just this week, Philadelphia’s progressive district attorney, Larry Krasner, handily fended off a primary challenge. But the politics are changing, and fast: Democratic primary voters in New York City say crime and violence is the second most important problem facing the city, behind the coronavirus but ahead of affordable housing and racial injustice. And just a few weeks ago, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms of Atlanta, who was facing political challengers attacking her for being soft on crime, announced she would not seek re-election in the fall.

    So do liberals have an answer to violent crime? And if so, what is it?

    James Forman Jr. is a professor of law at Yale Law School and the author “Locking Up Our Own: Crime and Punishment in Black America,” for which he received a Pulitzer Prize. In the book, Forman uses Washington, D.C., of the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s as a case study to explore the political and psychological dynamics that rising crime produces. We discuss the toll of living amid both street and state violence; what the crime wave of the ’70s and ’80s did to Black politics; the causes of the “Great Crime Decline”; the extent to which policing and prisons actually reduce crime; why we should think of violence the way we think of pandemics; the Black community’s complex views of policing; the three-pronged approach liberals should take to safety; and much more.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    “The Long Reach of Violence” by Patrick Sharkey 

    “The U.S. public’s support for being tough on crime has been a main determinant of changes to the incarceration rate” by Peter Enns

    “Modeling Contagion Through Social Networks to Explain and Predict Gunshot Violence in Chicago, 2006 to 2014” by Ben Green, Thibaut Horel, and Andrew V. Papachristos

    Vox/Data for Progress poll April 2-5, 2021

    “State Reforms Reverse Decades of Incarceration Growth” 

    Recommendations: 

    "Ghettoside" by Jill Leovy 

    "Becoming Ms. Burton" by Susan Burton and Cari Lynn

    "The Condemnation of Blackness" by Khalil Gibran Muhammad 

    You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of "The Ezra Klein Show" at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast, and you can find Ezra on Twitter @ezraklein.

    Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com.

    “The Ezra Klein Show” is produced by Annie Galvin, Jeff Geld and Rogé Karma; fact-checking by Michelle Harris; original music by Isaac Jones; mixing by Jeff Geld, audience strategy by Shannon Busta. Special thanks to Kristin Lin.

    Ep. 530 - Young Mother Murdered In Horrific Video. BLM and Antifa Ignore, As Usual.

    Ep. 530 - Young Mother Murdered In Horrific Video. BLM and Antifa Ignore, As Usual.

    Today on the Matt Walsh Show we are going to discuss the horrific murder of a young mother in Chicago. The crime was caught on tape and the footage is perhaps the worst thing you’ll ever see. Yet the case was ignored by BLM and Antifa. Also Five Headlines including the claim from an ACLU lawyer that JK Rowling is contributing to “genocide” by defending biological reality. And Joe Biden is the subject of today’s Daily Cancellation.


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