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His policies around being soft on crime (do you know what NYC was like in the 90's? It's not some distant history), the free bus fare, the city owned grocery stores, the rent control, are all policies that many feel threaten the economic viability and safety of the city.

If you don't think any of those policies are contentious, you are living in a bubble and greatly disconnected from huge portions of the population.





You mean the 1990s which brought us "broken windows" policing and the frequent use of racist stop-and-frisk? When I visited Queens 15 years ago, what worried me most was the chance of interacting with cops on a power-trip.

The 1990s when NYPD cops Sean Carroll, Richard Murphy, Edward McMellon, and Kenneth Boss shot Amadou Diallo? When NYPD cop Justin Volpe sodomized Abner Louima with a broken broom handle? When NYPD cop Francis X. Livoti choked Anthony Baez for accidentally hitting a police car with a football?

If you don't think the history of being hard on crime is contentious, you are living in a bubble and greatly disconnected from huge portions of the population.

Other places have free public transport (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_public_transport). How has that threatened the economic viability and safety of those places?

And isn't it funny how the people who complain the most about free public transport have a large overlap with the people who didn't want congestion charges but instead wanted free access to city streets for their multi-ton private vehicles?

How could city owned grocery stores threaten the economic viability and safety of NYC? The only way that makes sense to me is if the economics of NYC depended on having a working class which is always on the edge of food insecurity. Were that the case, the economics structure of NYC must change, yes?

Since homeless shelters threaten the economic viability of hotels and rental companies, and libraries threaten the economic viability of bookstores, I suppose we should get rid of those too.


>(do you know what NYC was like in the 90's? It's not some distant history)

I do. And today is light years better than it was in the 90s. In fact, there were crack dealers on my corner in the 90s. They're not there any more. Or on 95th street and Amsterdam.

And there aren't any hookers on 90th street and Broadway or 58th and Sixth like there were in the 80s.

And I didn't know Verdi Park was called "Verdi Park" back then either. I just thought they called it "needle park" because it was kind of shaped like a needle. Silly me.

Or the side streets between 38th and 42nd streets from 10th Avenue to the West Side Highway literally covered in hundreds/thousands of used condoms every morning

And the 80s were much, much worse than the 90s. And don't even get me started on the 1970s, when there were street gangs every few blocks.

Oh, and back then (not much change AFAICT), the cops were just the biggest and best-armed gang.

Oh, I'm sorry haven't you lived in NYC for nearly 60 years too?

Soft on crime because Mamdani wants to send non-cops to help people having mental episodes? Soft on crime because he wants to enforce the law and close Rikers?

Free buses? Really? that's not exactly going to break the bank. And even so, the MTA needs to approve that -- and the MTA is controlled by the Governor, not the Mayor.

Five grocery stores in areas which aren't served by private ones? How exactly is that going to threaten[0] (perhaps USD$10 million to acquire space and set them all up, then presumably it can cover its costs from, you know, selling groceries -- or even USD$2.5 million in subsidies) the economic viability of NYC which has a budget of USD$116 Billion[1]?

Crime is down at levels not seen since the early 1960s (before I was born -- that's relevant because I've lived in, with the exception of a year here, six months, three months elsewhere, etc. in NYC my whole life) and crime is at its lowest in all that time. Free buses are a few tens of millions and a few grocery stores are chump change[2] in NYC.

>If you don't think any of those policies are contentious, you are living in a bubble and greatly disconnected from huge portions of the population.

I take issue with that characterization. How long have you lived in NYC?

[0] https://pos.toasttab.com/blog/on-the-line/cost-to-open-a-sup...

[1] https://www.nydailynews.com/2025/06/30/nyc-council-passes-11...

[2] https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/chump%20change

Edit: Fixed prose/punctuation.


Good point, I agree Mamdani's soft-on-crime policies are bad. Really wouldn't want to go back to the era you're describing.

>I agree Mamdani's soft-on-crime policies are bad.

which policies?

I really don't know what you're talking about.

I read through his platform[0] and I don't see anything that's "soft" on crime.

Please do enlighten me as I'm apparently quite confused.

[0] https://docs.google.com/document/d/1a7ejjSZWWIAcxfcWnkYaqvnj...




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