Wehrwolfen
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- May 11, 2013
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By Colin Flaherty
October 11, 2013
Rochester city councilman Adam McFadden has to be wondering why so many people are still so puzzled at the frequent black mob violence in Rochester.
After all, McFadden explained it all to us just two years ago.
"I think what you saw at the beach is what we've been seeing in many of our neighborhoods for two decades," (black) Councilman McFadden told WHAM TV. "It's just that you had a lot of people there who are not used to that culture and got to witness it personally."
He was talking about how a mob of 200 black people were fighting and destroying property at a local beach during a Memorial Day Rib Festival. Thirteen black people were arrested. At least one police officer was hurt. A lot of it was caught on video.
Read more: Articles: The Blood Flows in Rochester
Rochester is the next Detroit. People are leaving, homes are abandoned and Governor Cuomo has done nothing to stop the abandonment of the city. The major companies like Kodak and Xerox no longer support the city. Like the auto industry no longer supports Detroit.
I live in Rochester. The idea that Rochester is the next Detroit is utterly preposterous.
yeah, the very idea that Rochester will become the home of three large American car company's is absolute nonsense.
I don't think that's quite what the OP meant.
I don't think that's quite what the OP meant.
Now we can understand you. Your a product of Love Canal.
Love Canal = 80 miles from Rochester. That's in Niagara Falls, genius.
If you're going to regurgitate idiotic American Thinker pieces about a place that neither you nor, I would venture, the jackass who wrote the article have ever been or know anything about, don't be surprised when someone who actually lives there points out exactly how wrong it is.
EDIT: Also, that's "you're."
Rochester itself has a high crime rate that is rising still higher.
Crime rate in Rochester, New York (NY): murders, rapes, robberies, assaults, burglaries, thefts, auto thefts, arson, law enforcement employees, police officers statistics
Crime in Rochester, just like crime in any other city, is highly compartmentalized into the crappy neighborhoods. To say it is rising is incorrect; it's been trending down or stagnant for the last several years.
I'm pretty sure you got everything else you know about Rochester from Wikipedia, and just filled in the blanks with conservative bull feces.
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