Who’ll Stay in Chicago Now?

By John Kass

September 22, 2024

No wonder that Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson continues to suffer those crippling panic attacks of his.

Chicago is falling apart. He’s completely out of his depth. He was unequipped for the job and his campaign was all about slogans, Marxist rhetoric from his allies in the Chicago Teachers Union, and race. Now those who can are in a rush to leave. He’s falling apart. His administration is falling apart. And the city is falling apart rapidly.

Forget the fake news “joy” of the Democratic National Convention that oozed out to promote Kamala Harris.  She won’t help the city. And forget the corporate media cheerleaders who’ve tried to paper-over the city’s infected wounds to promote Democrat power. I spent 40 years covering the city’s politics.

Throughout all those years, the joke in Chicago was that any time things looked bad, at least we weren’t Detroit. But now that’s an insult to Detroit which is on the ascent. And the people of both cities know it. The city’s self-inflicted wounds are septic now.

Chicago, the city of my birth, the great city of great restaurants and earthy but realistic politics, is now a city that is unaffordable and unsafe. The public schools prepare Chicago schoolchildren only for prison, not success in life. Public transportation is dangerous and filthy and smells like a urinal. Only the poor use it or those who have no other choice. The city government is a billion dollars in debt. And the public schools are a billion in debt. Where’s the money? Johnson has no clue.

And now things will get worse beginning today. Chicago, already plagued by violent crime, will get worse beginning Sunday. That’s because Johnson let the contract for the revolutionary crime-fighting technology called ShotSpotter to lapse without a replacement. Although it alerted police to gunshots and helped police make arrests, Johnson derided it as “walkie talkie on a stick.”

Johnson campaigned against it, loudly insisting that it led to “over-policing” which is code used by leftist Democrats to refer to arrests of black youths by police. It’s a racial thing with him. And with all those who backed him politically.

Black aldermen, representing black residents who are most often the victims of violent crime, have tried to keep ShotSpotter alive, knowing that it could lead to more arrests of racial minority gang members, but Johnson has promised to veto any plan to save it. And corporate media types tie themselves up in knots trying to explain a simple, but terrible truth:

The mayor of Chicago would rather protect the violent over his citizens. He’d rather embrace repeat gang offenders than the people who need his protection.  As the corrupt corporate media becomes anxious and defensive about Johnson’s self-destructive reasoning, like the clownish leftist fools mocked by Matt Walsh in “Am I a Racist?” a great city is dying.

Now Johnson’s approval rating is an abysmal 27 percent makes him the most unpopular mayor of a Democrat Convention city in decades.

He has lost allies in the Chicago City Council by not paying attention to what is important: The people of his city. They want to be safe as possible. But he wants to get rid of the ShotSpotter technology that helps police make quick arrests. Johnson apparently doesn’t like that and his political inexperience and buffoonery allowed the City Council to organize against him.

Johnson from happier days leading CTU strikes

Johnson is like an insect that has been pinned. He’s stuck between his political ideology, trying to serve his masters (or mistresses) of the Chicago Teachers Union,  and political survival, hence all those panic attacks.

And obviously the schools don’t educate the children. They can’t even read or do math at grade level, a national disgrace, but now more panic attack news for the mayor: News reports that the schoolteachers were told to give passing grades to illegal migrant children who are squeezing the native born out of classrooms.

Violent crime on the increase—not decreasing as the liars of corporate media keep prattling on about. Crime is up 40 percent over 2019 levels. And we already know that Chicago is the murder capital of America.

Some of you may have noticed something about this column written by a longtime Chicago newspaper man. I’ve put in links to Wirepoints.org and the Illinois Policy Institute, but not the Chicago Sun Times or my old paper the Tribune. Why not? The Trib went woke and broke and neither paper covers crime as they used to.

Fran Spielman and Tim Novak of the Sun Times know what they’re doing. And the Tribune’s Jason Meisner and Ray Long understand political corruption and its corrosive nature. But street crime is as problematic for the papers as ShotSpotter is for Johnson. It is to be avoided politely lest they offend prominent and wealthy Democrats like Gov. Commodius Maximus.

But the website CWB Chicago does cover crime. They cover it very well. For example, CWB has documented another terrible truth: Since 2020, there have been 387 people arrested for murder and attempted murder while they were out on bail for other violent crimes.

And the establishment corporate media? Crickets.

Why do the metropolitan papers avoid street crime? My theory, they’d rather avoid dealing with repeat minority criminal offenders. And they’d rather avoid calling the architects of the chaos to account: Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, Cook County Chief Judge Timothy C. Evans and the Soros prosecutor, outgoing Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx (D-Jussie Smollett).

The papers thunder on about ShotSpotter but leave Toni Preckwinkle alone? The political coverage by the papers is corrupt and embarrassing. But at least the people of Chicago now know where they stand–in the gutter.

Yet CWB Chicago and Wirepoints.org and Illinois Policy address the crime issue thoughtfully. And Blocklub Chicago. But the papers? Who reads the papers anymore? For the columnists? I don’t think so.

We used to read the papers on the el, remember? But who uses the CTA now? A city won’t last long if it  doesn’t educate the kids or offer public transportation. Especially if that public transportation isn’t safe. Who takes public transportation? Not reasonably well off-old guys like me. And not the top CTA brass  Poor women use it, poor people without options, kids who are trying to get home from school, and lost souls.

CTA boss Dorval Carter lives his protected life. The governor and the Chicago City council want him gone. But Johnson protects him. Johnson leaves Dorval Carter–who doesn’t take CTA–alone. Carter is still here drawing a fat salary, still playing the race card and not using public transportation and getting away with it.

Why?

You could also ask that of official Chicago:

Why?

They knew what had to be done–keep the public safe, keep violent predators behind bars, give the children a reasonable chance at an education, clean the urine and the smell from the CTA and make it safe, protect the downtown from the Black Lives Matter rioters of 2020. And they didn’t do it. Instead, they played race card politics and make speeches about guilt and in their world everyone is a victim.

The real victims? The taxpayers and the law abiding. The people who play by the rules are the victims.

Politicians  knew what would happen.  Success in the big-city political trade involves understanding and manipulating human nature. And yet they did nothing.

I can imagine the Democrat machine hacks out there, the new political hacks from CTU and SEIU tweeting up a hissy fit about what I’ve written here, but they can’t silence me now. Don’t they understand simple economics? Without  graybeards who can pay for a decent meal and entertainment, those old guys going downtown taking their wives out on a weekend, would there still be restaurants or theater?

No.

A few years ago I spoke to some very nice people at a dinner engagement in the Gold Coast. These were people with real money. They loved Chicago and didn’t ever want to leave. Betty and I never wanted to leave, either.

But the others at the dinner were isolated and insulated from street crime in Chicago, and they also bought homes in Naples and Marco Island Florida and other civilized places. In my after-dinner talk dinner, I asked them if they planned on ever moving back to Chicago.

Just raise your hands, I said.

No one raised their hands.

So who’ll stay in Chicago now? Only those who are financially tied to it, and those who can’t afford to leave.

But others? They’ve got options, too.

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About the author: John Kass spent decades as a political writer and news columnist in Chicago working at a major metropolitan newspaper. He is co-host of The Chicago Way podcast. And he just loves his “No Chumbolone” hat, because johnkassnews.com is a “No Chumbolone” Zone where you can always get a cup of common sense.

Comments 17

  1. ” You can knock on a deaf man’s door forever!” Nikos Kazxantzakis

    ” As the corrupt corporate media becomes anxious and defensive about Johnson’s self-destructive reasoning, like the clownish leftist fools mocked by Matt Walsh in “Am I a Racist?” a great city is dying.” John Kass

    Jeremiah is known as “The Weeping Prophet” for very much the same reasons.

    1. Pat, it’s heartbreaking to see it happen. You and I have good friends there, good people, cops and firefighters and paramedics. The city workers who actually did their jobs and took away the garbage and killed the rats. But all have been overwhelmed by the barbarians and the Marxist enablers like Boss Toni who run government.

      1. It is heart-breaking, but our friends and family yet within its city limit will continue to vote for BLM Brandon, because the the union, or the precinct captain or WGN tells them to do so. My son loves Mount Greenwood. I hope it does not break his heart.

      2. Sadly, we were literally taxed out of our home, that, coupled with the Covid policies and BLM riots , we packed up and left Illinois in 2020 after 45 years of residency. I feel for the family members we left behind. We’re retired and could leave but they’re still raising their families. Thankfully it’s still relatively safe in the suburbs. What will it take to change the direction of Chicago politics? I can only pray.

    2. Re public transit: I have been a proponent since toddlerhood, when one of my first memories is jumping off a street car on Augusta Blvd when we lived on Laurel Ave a half century ago
      I have eschewed car ownership except for a few years when I had a job in Oak Brook and had to drive around the state for the hospital association. I have taken buses and Ls, often with frustration for all the years I’ve been an adult here. It is distressing now and I have seen and heard frightening events over the last several years including threats against me. The mentally ill acting out, the young men prying open doors, the verbal threats, the open masturbation – all wretched. I HAVE CHOICES BUT REFUSE TO GIVE UP ON PUBLIC TRANSIT FOR THE CAR CULTURE. I refuse to let the bad riders win. I clapped when a foul-mouthed screaming man and woman exited the bus this week and the woman came back and threatened me for doing that. I simply smiled. I take chances but I am STUBBORN.
      And I am weary of the red-light running, speeding selfish car drivers who have multiplied at the same time. I stood on Bryn Mawr recently, waiting for a green light, and FOUR drivers sped through the red light. The last older guy smiled at me when he did it. Hollywood is a danger zone for the same reason.

  2. This is all so true. I lived there for 60 years, worked in the Loop for 35 years, I could walk around the Loop and north side blindfolded. I loved that city as if it were a living thing.
    But I had enough and left. It was not painful, it was a relief, like when you have a beautiful new car that you love driving, but as the years go by it starts breaking down and parts get expensive. When you finally get rid of it, you feel relieved, not sad. That’s how leaving Chicago is, good memories but relief at getting out and having it in the past. Never regretted leaving for a moment.

      1. It’s no longer “that Chicago” that we remember. It’s an entirely different place now. Nostalgia is fun for a while, but when the reality of what Chicago has become sets in, it’s a no-brainer to leave, and to leave as fast as you can.

  3. I was born, raised and educated in Chicago. I loved the city and the close in suburbs but the city of my youth is no longer. I remember one vacation I spent where my wife and I ate at a different ethnic restaurant every evening. One of our dreams was to retire to a condo downtown. No more.

    Almost two years ago I moved ( was driven out? ) of Illinois to a safe red state. Sad but a wise move.

  4. I fist-pumped as we drove under that “Welcome to Indiana” sign on our way out of Illinois. When we got to our new home in a mid-Atlantic red state, one of the first things I did was to join the local Republican Party and assure them that we were refugees, not missionaries and that our goal was to prevent our new home from becoming like the one we left. One of the gifts that I brought from Illinois was a deeper understanding on the sources of corruption and how they destroy a city and state from within. My new neighbors couldn’t comprehend how it works to destroy communities! The corruption in all politics, ultimately, begins at the local level. I am also grateful that the memories I took with me were of a Chicago when it was, in my opinion, America’s most beautiful big city. Were I to have left Chicago today, I fear that my memories would be heart-breaking.

  5. I never thought I’d see the day when we’d be looking up to Detroit, yet here we are. I’m the only one in my cul de sac out here in DuPage County with a Trump-Vance sign in my front yard. As I ride my bike through 7 Bridges I see a smattering of Harris-Walz signs in front of some very expensive homes. I think to myself they must be Cook County refugees. I quietly loathe them even though I don’t know them. Is that wrong? I guess so but that’s what witnessing decades of stupid policies and resulting elections in Illinois does to an otherwise kind and compassionate person. You know what Chicago has really become? Boring! It is boring in its monotonous stupidity. I’m old enough to remember when the local media covered former Illinois AG Bill Scott’s scandal like a dog with a bone. Or Paul Powell’s shoe boxes full of cash in Springfield. Bring back Eddie V and Harold’s Council Wars ftom the city’s Beirut on the Lake Era. The Chi has become a national joke and quite the Bore! Might have been different if Paul Vallas had won. Embrace the suck, Chicago! I secretly loathe you.

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