Monday, September 1, 2025

Flashback 2012: The whole world is watching — even if we aren’t

Paris catacombs

      Last week Donald Trump referred to Chicago as a "killing field" and "a disaster." More lies designed to justify his sending in the National Guard and federal law enforcement. Part of his general program of corrupting the military and turning it into a private army so he can squelch opposition when he corrupts the 2026 elections. But also playing to the long-standing slander that Chicago is a blood-soaked city. It is not; its reputation is.


     Earlier this month, men wearing balaclavas and carrying assault rifles burst into a jewelry store in Grenoble, France. They fired into the glass cases, clubbed the jeweler with a rifle butt, grabbed the loot and fled with a hostage.
     “It’s worse than Chicago!” one bystander told the Le Parisien newspaper.
     One of the many ironies of Chicago’s deadly summer is that while many here expend scant concern about the problem — no worries, not my part of town — the world is gazing at it with horrified fascination.
     “Velkommen til dodens by” a recent headline in Norway reads. “Welcome to murder city.”
     “Chicago gang crime murder out of control,” announces a headline, in Chinese, on the SinoVision.Net website. The story begins: “This summer, Chicago is filled with blood, sweat and tears.”
     That’s a common mistake. To assume the city is in a general grief state — it must be, given the toll — and miss that Chicagoans who aren’t themselves in high crimes areas seem willing to shrug off the problem. Abroad, neighborhood distinctions that help Chicagoans feel secure fly by observers, who treat the city as if it were one unified place.
     “Nine dead, thirty-two wounded in an exchange of gunfire,” began a story in Le Monde, as if they also all occurred at once. “This is the heavy toll of last weekend.”
     Chicagoans know to remain mute at the racial aspect of the killing — it goes without saying. Not so in other countries
     “A total of 433 people died on these streets last year, most of them African Americans killed by African Americans,” explained a story on the Australian Broadcast Corporation’s website titled, “Murder City.”
     That story ran May 29, before the lethal summer even began, a reminder that one reason our murder epidemic so resonates abroad is because it meshes with the “rat-tat-tat” view the city is already saddled with.
      “ Ti aspetti la citta di Al Capone,” is the first sentence in an Italian journalist’s 2004 book about Chicago. “You expect the city of Al Capone.” Well some do, obviously.
      At times, the foreign press seems so shocked it has to stretch the facts.
     “Forget the Windy City or the City of Broad Shoulders,” the Australian story reports, fancifully. “The people who live here call it murder city, or Chi-raq.”
     Since when?
      While the local media focuses on detailing the drip-drip-drip of shootings, abroad they seem more given to general shock. We forget how rare murder is elsewhere. More murders have occurred this year in Chicago, with a population of 2.8 million, than were committed last year on the continent of Australia, population 22 million. Nearly twice as many, and it’s still August. Our murder rate is 10 times theirs. Yet there can be this strange disconnect. Just as soldiers and their families bear the brunt of our wars, so members of the blood-soaked communities grieve and suffer while the rest of the city turns a blind eye and goes blithely about its business.
     I drove the length of Chicago on Wednesday, to Hegwisch, which to a foreigner might seem directly on the bloody South Side. To a local, it’s a world away, a sleepy enclave as menacing as your grandmother’s sewing bag. The threat of crime never crossed my mind, until I got home and read an email from a concerned reader in Norway that ended, “hopefully u n ur family r safe.”
     In Northbrook? Safe as can be. Not everyone is so lucky. The media hasn’t been indifferent — the Sun-Times certainly splashes the story over the front page with sickening regularity. But if people aren’t actually being killed en masse the night before, the sense of urgency falls away. A 15-year-old kid shot a cop Wednesday night and the cop shot him back. And that was a mild night, relatively.
     Part of it has to be racial. If those were white people dying the media would be far more worked up. One 23-year-old athlete from Wheaton killed in St. Louis got more attention than a dozen 23-year-olds killed on the South Side receive. Part has to be the problem is so entrenched. What can be done? Putting cops on the street can thwart it for a while, but the underlying issues remain, ticking. Cops can’t be on every corner 24 hours a day. Crime is both the symptom and cause of every other social problem — no jobs, poor education, bad parenting, drugs. We’ve tried to address them before and failed, and now the poster boy for ignoring social issues, Mitt Romney, might just end up president.
     If blood on our streets doesn’t bother us, maybe blood on our reputation will.
     “Called the deadliest ‘alpha world city’ — with that title comparing it to global cities like New York, London, Los Angeles or Tokyo — Chicago has seen 19.4 murders per 100,000,” London’s Daily Mail reported.
     Why do I suspect that some people will read “deadliest world city” and come away thinking, “Hey, Chicago’s a world city! Cool.”
     —Originally published in the Sun-Times, August 31, 2012

"Stop! This is the empire of death."


6 comments:

  1. I my over 70 years in Rogers Park, there has been just one shooting on my block which resulted in one murder & one other shot. It was one black gang member pissed off at another black gang member supposedly taking away the first one's girlfriend. I heard the shots & the people screaming about 10 PM on a late cool August night. It took several years but the cops finally caught the idiot killer & he was sent away for a long time.
    Something is seriously wrong in the heads of all of these gang members who think that a gun is the solution to all of their problems!

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  2. I don't have the answers. But this feuding billionaire vendetta is getting ridiculous. Just this morning on the 6am news, it was announced, so far, 50 people shot, 8 dead, some in a park this morning! But we won't get the official "tally" until tomorrow morning. Happy Labor Day! And then the very next story is Pritzker making the rounds of Sunday news shows talking about how Chicago doesn't have a problem and they better stay away, blah, blah. I think this makes him look completely out of touch. And if he doesn't want Trump and the National Guard in Chicago, maybe keep his butt in town and try take some kind of action instead of trying to convince the country there's no problem here with his delusional thinking.

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  3. There is certainly crime in some Chicago neighborhoods .. Englewood comes to mind. And in some suburbs as well. When I first moved to Blue Island, my North side friends asked if I wasn't afraid to live in the blood-soaked South side. It wasn't, and I wasn't. The current president has plans to "clean up" Chicago and sweep crime from the streets. But his private army won't go near the actual areas where there is crime. They'll be visible at Navy Pier and guarding The Bean and maybe the Museum Campus. It's all for show and to fool folks into believing he's strong and in control. But crime in Chicago will continue as the real criminal crouches in the White House.

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  4. Over the last few years there has been a constant banging of the drum by the streeterville alderman that crime needs to be brought under control downtown just last week there was a heist at some jewelry store tourists get mugged and there is crime downtown Street takeovers and flash mobs the wealthy want more presence downtown so why is it a recurring theme in the comments that because some of the proposed deployment would be downtown that it wouldn't be anywhere else in town it would it just wouldn't get coverage.

    I think there are many questions to be answered about whether or not any president has the power to send in the troops to quell an emergency.

    My understanding has always been that the governor can do it or ask for federal assistance but our governor refuses to even consider that there are problems large enough in the city that they need to be addressed with additional policing

    The Chicago Police department is not doing its job it's like a blue flu that has lasted for years call them try to get themto come it's almost impossible.

    It's taken weeks out here on the West side to get them to stop the regular Saturday night 300 person flash mobs that are out in front of my business they refuse to try

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  5. Drumpf doesn't have the courage to send the National Guard to the red cities and states with higher crime rates than here.

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  6. In the early 1970's I was paired with a similarly aged French penpal. The primary goal was for me to practice my French, and for her to practice her English, while also learning about another culture. One of the first things she asked me was about the high crime in Chicago, Al Capone and the gangsters on the streets.
    In 2014, my nextdoor neighbors moved to AZ. Until that point, they had both been lifelong Chicagoans. We stayed in touch after the move. Shortly after Trump took office in 2017, they started to worry for my welfare. They encouraged me to move, suggested I change jobs, urged me not to go downtown for social events, etc. All because of the rampant and out-of-control crime in Chicago. At first I tried to counter their worry with some reality-testing. I pointed out that crime rates were lower than when they were living here and noted the crime was occurring in the exact same neighborhoods as before, far from the places I went. It never mattered. Now when they bring it up I just change the subject.

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