Posted on 04/22/2021 11:09:55 AM PDT by george76
Minneapolis is my home. My happiest memories are here. It’s where I learned to ride a bike, had my first date, received my high school diploma.
But today, I’m too afraid to even walk in my neighborhood by myself.
The ACE Hardware down the street? The one that I used to bike to in the summer? Robbed twice in the past five days.
The Walgreens next to my elementary school? Molotov cocktail thrown into it.
The Lake Harriet Bandshell, where we spent countless Mother’s Days? Homeless encampment popped up next door.
These are the things you don’t read about in the news.
Ten minutes from my house, at 38th and Chicago, there is still an autonomous zone. Police are not allowed to enter. Residents have died because medical authorities couldn’t get through, and carjackers (of which there are MANY) will speed into the zone to escape officer pursuit.
My favorite dinner theater canceled its production of Cinderella because it was “too white.”
My church — my beloved, tiny, Lutheran church — organized social justice marches for our congregation while refusing to reinstate in-person services (they’re still virtual, by the way).
And how about the week of the 2020 riots?
We lived under a curfew for days while looters seemingly roamed freely. Friends fled their home at 3:30 a.m. because the auto parts store behind them was on fire. And then we watched in horror as our City Council members demanded that the city defund the police — as they hired armed security for themselves.
I no longer recognize Minneapolis. I no longer want to live here. We are done, and I am leaving.
I’ve spent the past year watching this city crumble. Burning it wasn’t enough, I guess. Every day, I watched another piece of sanity and stability fall to the hysterical, bloodthirsty, self-righteous mob.
You distinguish between rioters and protestors? Racist. You do not want Marxist-inspired racial justice theories to be promoted in schools? Racist. You thought that maybe “Justice for George Floyd” should be left to the courts, and not mob rule? Super, super racist.
And where were our leaders providing stability and calm and confidence in the system? Nowhere to be found. What we did find were crazed politicians spouting fire and brimstone (I’m looking at you, Maxine Waters and John Thompson) and leaving us to pay the price.
Let me be clear: this city’s demise wasn’t just violent protests and burning buildings, or crime skyrocketing and businesses fleeing. It was also political indoctrination, hypocritical leadership, and the suppression of oppositional thought.
Any condemnation of the violence was denounced as “racist.” Billboards stating simply “Support MN Police” were brutally vandalized. Schools supported BLM walkouts for their students, then shut down in-person classes for fear of violent riots.
And all of this happened against the backdrop of our illogical, inconsistent, overly oppressive COVID-19 restrictions.
It’s easy to look at (for lack of a better word) disaster zones like these and mentally distance yourself from them. Yeah, that’s awful, but those people choose to live there. They’re the ones electing these leaders. This is their problem.
Yeah, it is. It is our problem.
And I can’t help but look around and wonder, “What happened here? Where exactly did it all go wrong?”
Was it the liberal mob? Identity politics? The cries of “RACIST!” when someone disagreed with a particular reaction or policy?
Was it conservative silence as the loudest voices got more and more radical?
Was it our acceptance that “we live in a blue area, this is just the way things are?”
How did it all happen so fast?
Whatever it was, I’m leaving this dark, surreal, twisted version of Minneapolis on Friday. And I pray to God that I never have to come back.
“The author is moving. Not me. Staying in Colorado.”
Yeah, I was like, “whut?”
As a kid, I visited Minneapolis many times to see my Grand parents. I remember crossing the Minnetonka Bridge, I think it was called. I have no reason to go there now. Shame it is such a sad waste. A city destroyed, for what?
Twenty two years ago I lived in Minneapolis for six months and took a pay cut to leave. Hypocritical is a good descriptive word for Minneapolis.
“And I can’t help but look around and wonder, “What
happened here? Where exactly did it all go wrong?””
I find it somewhat amusing the author, one whom has lived
in Minnesota their entire life has to ask that question.
I’ll answer it for you; You people who live in Minnesota
have voted for democrats for how long? And you wonder why
this happened to the once beautiful Minneapolis. That’s
your answer. Voting and elections have consequences as
you’ve finally found out. STOP VOTING FOR ANY DEMOCRATS
EVER AGAIN. There you go, problem solved, this ain’t rocket science.
I’ve moved twice within Colorado due to deteriorating conditions in the last 12 years. 12 years ago I left the Denver metro area. Now I’ve left the little mountain town that was great because it’s close enough to Denver that its getting ruined too. Way out west now, you’d never know the state is blue out here, and no masks anywhere except on those still frozen in their own fear.
It’s amazing how long people will put up with lousy, dangerous living. Got a friend in Denver who has lost two cars totaled by uninsured hit and run drivers in the last 3 years. Fortunately he hasn’t been injured or killed, yet. Another had a hit and run, followed the perp and ended up with a broken hand from being attacked with a hammer. Had the plate number (employee driving company van), police never made an arrest.
Hope you leave your blue politics behind.
Why do you say that to me? I was wishing you luck and you say such a thing.
that middle part is usually the best part
they turned the water up slowly, and all the frogs were fat dumb and happy...
Ronald77 was trying to address the poster, not you. The poster isn’t moving either, there seems to be some confusion. The poster lives in Colorado and didn’t write the article, just posted it.
Yep...
Why do you say that? It sounds sloppy and overboard. Did you read the column? That was not the word-choice or point of view of anyone who has voted Democrat in the past 30 years.
And someone who writes for The College Fix is super-unlikely to be any kind of liberal.
“Did you read the column? “
Yes. My wife is from Minneapolis. Lots of really good people there who are as liberal as the day is long. You infer based on word choice. I rely on my time in the Minneapolis area. I was married in Farmington, MN. I spent time there years ago.
Top. Kek.
You cannot frighten Minnesotans with mosquitos.
It’s the (unofficial) State Bird.
We had enough of the Twin Cities. They sure aren’t the smiling places they used to be. Just moved a month ago from downtown St. Paul (not hit as bad as Mpls) to Alvaton KY (near Bowling Green). Love the people here and the early spring.
nope thye all came from Detroit an Chicago for the welfare benefits and have never left
Still here.
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