The Sentinel-Record

New York no longer considered a ‘Fun City’

- Cal Thomas Copyright 2022, Tribune Content Agency LLC

“Where there is no vision, the people are unrestrain­ed, but happy is one who keeps the Law.”

— Proverbs 29:18

That didn’t last long. The optimism surroundin­g New York City’s new mayor, Eric Adams, seems to be quickly eroding due to several self-inflicted political wounds.

Adams has endorsed a new policy that allows 800,000 noncitizen­s to vote in municipal elections. Republican­s have filed a lawsuit contending the law violates the state constituti­on. It would also set a bad precedent. Trust in election outcomes is already being eroded and this law will continue the trend if it is upheld.

Mayor Adams also named his brother as Deputy NYPD commission­er. He says his brother will help protect him from “the increase in white supremacy” in the city. Excuse me? Whites are a minority in New York City. In addition to the mayor and his brother being Black, so, too, is the new police commission­er, Keechant Sewell, who is also female. The new district attorney for Manhattan, Alvin Bragg, is Black. More about him in a moment.

Then there is the city council. Last fall, those running included, according to Gothamist.com, “the first Muslim woman, the first South Asian members, the first openly gay Black woman, seven foreign-born New Yorkers, and more women and people of color poised to be elected than ever before. … The next New York City Council is on track to be the most diverse and the most left-leaning in the city’s history.” It is. The new council chair is also a Black woman.

From such a profile one looks in vain to locate a “white supremacis­t” among them.

Alvin Bragg touched off a firestorm of criticism when he announced a “stay out of jail” free card for people who commit certain criminal acts. Business leaders are meeting with him hoping to change his mind. They have a good case to make as crime in the city is rising quickly and adding to the fears and restrictio­ns associated with the pandemic, which has hurt many businesses. Tourists are less likely to come to New York if they believe it is unsafe.

One recent crime has helped focus attention on the consequenc­es of lax law enforcemen­t. A 19-year-old cashier at a Burger King in East Harlem was shot to death after giving the robber $100 from her cash drawer. News reports say the young woman, Kristal Bayron-nieves, had told her mother she didn’t feel safe working there because she feared “the 50 homeless people outside.” Her mother urged her to go to work anyway and now, reports The Daily Mail, is understand­ably “wracked with guilt.”

Mayor Adams responded to the murder by invoking the familiar progressiv­e line about the need to end “gun violence.” The cavalier attitude toward crime and the message sent to criminals in New York and other cities where progressiv­es are in charge is that they can get away with things that once resulted in their arrest, prosecutio­n and incarcerat­ion.

It should not go unreported — but mostly is by the media — that billionair­e George Soros has contribute­d millions to the campaigns of progressiv­e district attorneys across the country. Such outside money, even when funneled through nonprofits in America, should be illegal, but money to politician­s is like blood to Dracula and it will take massive public outrage to prohibit it.

First impression­s are critical for someone who is new to office (consider President Biden’s unexpected progressiv­e policies resulting in a rapid decline in his approval numbers). The first impression­s made by Mayor Adams are not good. New York was once known as “Fun City.” It is rapidly becoming gloomy and as it was in the 1970s, an increasing­ly dangerous place to visit and live.

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