Scenes From The Destruction of New York City

The New York City riots were just a blip in the largest series of coordinated antifa/#BlackLivesMatter riots sweeping the country then, but this video indicates that the looting and destruction in de Blasio’s New York City was far more more extensive than the media let on.

I had a friend who recently visited NYC, and he says from the Holland Tunnel to the Williamsburg Bridge through lower Manhattan almost everything was still boarded up and covered with graffiti, with lots of trash on the sidewalk. “Looked like a scene from an early Scorsese movie.” Is it any wonder that people are fleeing the city in droves?

It’s not just a few Upper West Siders who are fleeing New York: Moving companies say they’re swamped with calls from residents looking to ditch the city — even though the COVID crisis has waned.

One likely reason: The virus was but the last straw; New Yorkers are fed up with the shootings and lootings, homelessness on the streets, sub-par online schools, sky-high taxes and the sheer obliviousness of pols like Mayor Bill de Blasio and Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Snip.

It’s been “insanely busy,” Roadway Moving president Ross Sapir told Fox. Indeed, he says this has been the busiest summer ever for the company. “For the last three months, we couldn’t keep up with demand.”

Oz Moving says the number of relocations continues to rise at a “substantial rate.” It was booked to capacity earlier in the year than in any of the previous 27 years.

United Van Lines, too, cites a whopping 95 percent spike, year over year, in interest in moving out of Manhattan between May and July, versus just 19 percent nationally.

Sure, many of those who’ve headed out were merely trying to escape COVID, which socked the city in the spring. Some may even return; a reported spike in storage-space business is a sign they will.

Yet the fact that the rush for the exits continues to grow, even as new coronavirus cases have plummeted, suggests other reasons. Like the crime wave: The number of shootings per day, for instance, has doubled since last year. Other crimes are up, too.

City and state officials have fueled crime, setting inmates at jails and prisons free and handcuffing cops, and they refuse to do anything meaningful to roll it back. Prosecutors, too, are declining to prosecute. Judges are letting suspects walk.

Last month, Bronx Criminal Court Judge Jeanine Johnson released an illegal-immigrant rape suspect, on no bail. Last year, she let a convicted killer and reputed gangbanger walk bail-free after a gun bust.

Quality of life has plunged, as well. Even the owner of an Upper West Side hotel the city’s now using to house homeless derelicts has put his nearby mansion up for sale, as The Post reports Wednesday.

Lousy schools and even worse online classes provide yet another reason for folks to skedaddle.

Ditto for high taxes, which de Blasio — and fellow Democrats in the Legislature — are itching to raise even more.

It’s so bad that Andrew Cuomo is begging rich New Yorkers to return.

It took 30 years and Rudy Giuliani to rescue New York City from its reputation as a crime-ridden hellhole. It’s taken Bill di Blasio, George Soros and one disasterous year to undo all that.

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3 Responses to “Scenes From The Destruction of New York City”

  1. JAL says:

    Just an obsevation — the NYC boarding up could be protective against vandalism.

    When the riots started I observed a very nice hotel in the Biltmore area of Asheville NC had boarded up its first floor windows and protected some sculpture with plywood to protect against possible damage. This was not in the “downtown area,” where most protests / mob action could occur but in a definite nice touristy area outside the Biltmore Estate.

    It made me quite angry that the hotel, in an abundance of caution, felt it necessary to take this action. What is going on is insane and has to stop.

  2. I moved to NYC in 1987 for work. It was a shithole. Then Guiliani came along and made NYC the safest big city in America.

    Now it’s a shithole again. Only without the cheap rents of the ’70s and ’80s.

  3. johnb. says:

    Wherever these people move they bring their disease with them, confident that it will work this time.

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