If Only You'd Inform on Your Neighbors, Asheville Edition

Not so very long ago during the wild days of 2020 and BLM the Asheville City Council was denying the police department money for body armor. Now, after three unrelated shootings downtown, the mayor and the chief of police issue a joint statement begging the citizenry to please start turning each other in.

Clearly they have mended fences. Asheville began addressing its public order concerns after the post-2020 era got really out of control downtown; then the 2024 hurricane washed away much of what was left of the homeless community there, giving them a chance to catch up. The activists who had so much sway over the council during the BLM moment are quite dismayed to see this new level of cooperation, but the city is a nicer place to visit than once -- especially for women and children. Even my rather fearsome wife found the place unsettling during the days of high disorder. 

Still, there's surely a balance even in urban areas between defunding the police and trying to encourage Stasi-like programs to spy into the private lives of citizens. Part of the reason Americans have fled to suburban and rural areas is that you can live much more decently without so many other people around, and without the mechanisms of control that 'public order' entails. Even in the city, there has to be a better way.

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