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I really appreciate this video, because being born n raised I felt u really took da time to actually drive around and get da main hoods per say compared to all these other videoz. Miigwitch means Thank you
@@lordbaelish19 first of all Chicago is way bigger than Minneapolis & St. Paul combined so of course we're gonna have more problems but it looks like Minneapolis can't handle their problems tho
@@tcp612ww3 you're correct & wrong at the same time Minneapolis & St. Paul each have a population of over 300,000 within each city's limit but when you include the metro population which is the surrounding counties & suburbs then it equals out to over 3 million Chicago's metro population alone is over 8 million
@@chination1796 Would you say Chicago is more dangerous than Minneapolis? In 2019, Murderapolis was ranked 19th most dangerous city in the US with Chicago at 20th.
I live right off university Avenue in Minneapolis. I appreciate you showing what has happened to our beautiful city. As a Minnesotan my whole life, I am proud of my state and I do not think we are racist. I hope we can all get back to normal here.
Racial housing covenants began in 1910 in Minneapolis - they are part of the deeds of much of Minneapolis housing. Cargill, the world's largest private corporation, based in Minnesota, is a tool of US Empire. Cargill: Our taxes, global destruction Minnetonka-based Cargill is often noted as the world’s largest private corporation, with reported annual sales of over $50 billion and operations at any given time in an average of 70 countries. The “Lake Office” of Cargill is a 63-room replica of a French chateau; the chairman’s office is part of what was once the chateau’s master-bedroom suite. A family empire, the Cargills and the MacMillans control about 85 percent of the stock. Not only the largest grain trader in the world, with over 20 percent of the market, Cargill dominates another 12 sectors, including destructive speculative finance, according to “Invisible Giant: Cargill and its Transnational Strategies,” by Brewster Kneen. Taking advantage of the capitalist speculative collapse of 1873, Cargill quickly bought up grain elevators. After vast cooperation with the state-sponsored railroad robber barons, central grain terminals averaged extremely high annual returns on investments of 30 to 40 percent between 1883 and 1889. Cargill hired a Chase Bank vice president to secretly help the corporation through the Depression, writes Dan Morgan in “Merchants of Grain.” “There are only a few processing firms,” and “these firms receive a disproportionate share of the economic benefits from the food system,” states William D. Heffernan, professor of rural sociology at the University of Missouri. Details of Cargill’s price manipulations at the expense of farmers worldwide was documented in the classic study, “Food First: Beyond the Myth of Scarcity” by Frances Moore Lappe and Joseph Collins. They report that Cargill has had a history of receiving elite government price information that should be told to U.S. farmers. That secrecy, along with tax-subsidized market control, enables Cargill to buy from U.S. farmers at extremely low prices and then sell abroad to nations pressured under the same destructive elite corporate control. See the Institute for Food and Development Policy’s Web Site at www.foodfirst.org.... Between 1985 and 1992, the legal entity called Cargill received $800.4 million in tax subsidies via the Export Enhancement Program, a continuation of the infamous “Food for Peace” policy, writes Kneen. Promoted by Hubert H. Humphrey and instituted as PL 480, food became a Cold War tool, i.e. “for Peace.” If we can induce people to “become dependent on us for food,” then “what is a more powerful weapon than food and fiber?” Humphrey declared, according to “Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies” by Noam Chomsky. Actually, most of the nation recipients of tax-subsidized Cargill food dumping were, and are, net exporters of food already - policies imposed by colonial trading patterns. The food (for Peace) has been bought cheaply by neocolonial regimes, and then sold at a huge discount on the local market - in Somalia, for example, at one-sixth of the local prices. Many examples of these misguided policies can be found in “Betraying the National Interest: How US Foreign AID Threatens Global Security by Undermining the Political and Economic Stability of the Third World,” by Frances Moore Lappe, et al. Cargill’s undercutting wipes out the local farmers’ self-reliance, while the revenues (going to the elite) are tied to required purchases of U.S. weapons, writes Chomsky, citing “The Soft War” by Tom Barry, 1988. But the main beneficiary of “Food for Peace” has been Cargill. Keen writes, “From 1954 to 1963, just for storing and transporting P.L. 480 commodities, the heavily subsidized giant Cargill made $1 billion.” Indian lawyer N.J. Nanjundaswamy reports that a Cargill motto is, “One who controls the seed, controls the farmer, and one who controls the food trade, controls the nation.” Yudof’s recently stated support of federal foreign policy Title XII is another public promotion of the University of Minnesota-Cargill partnership’s raiding of sustainable agricultural cultures. Cargill is such a damaging threat that in Dec. 1992, 500,000 peasants marched against corporate-controlled trade, and the irate farmers ransacked Cargill’s operations. Fifty people were arrested at the partially completed - and subsequently destroyed - seed-processing plant in Bellary, India. In 1996, 1,000 Indian farmers gathered at Cargill’s office and destroyed Cargill’s records. For more, see www.endgame.org... Cargill has been doing bio-piracy, stealing traditional products. For instance, it used Basmati, a rice from India, as its trade name, and the company continues to be one of the main promoters of corporate-driven intellectual property rights. The U.S. Trade Act, Special 301 Clause, allows the United States to take unilateral action against any country that does not open its market to U.S. corporations. The United States, for example, has threatened to use trade sanctions against Thailand for its attempt to protect biodiversity. A bill that has been before parliament in India and promoted by Cargill, “takes away all the farmers’ rights, which they have enjoyed for generations - they will no longer be able to produce new varieties of seed or trade seed amongst themselves,” writes Nanjundaswamy. The research center, Rural Advancement Foundation International, found that “fifteen African states, among them some of the poorest countries in the world, are under pressure to sign away the right of more than 20 million small-holder farmers to save and exchange crop seed. The decision to abandon Africa’s 12,000-year tradition of seed-saving will be finalized at a meeting in the Central African Republic. The 15 governments have been told to adopt draconian intellectual property legislation for plant varieties in order to conform to a provision in the World Trade Organization.” Cargill, with extensive funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development, is also destroying the world’s largest wetland - the Pantanal, in South America - in order to dredge a channel that’s designed for convoys of up to 16 soybean- and soymeal-carrying barges, according to the Institute on Food and Development Policy. Cargill has been on the Council of Economic Priorities’ list of worst environmental offenders. Mother Jones magazine and Earth Island Journal report that Cargill is responsible for 2,000 OSHA violations, a 40,000-gallon spill of phosphoric solution into Florida’s Alafia River, poor air pollution compliance and record-high releases of toxic waste. With help from the Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy, located at www.poclad.org..., states have recently begun to respond to citizen pressure and revoke corporate charters. The assets of Cargill should be revoked, allowing the citizens of the United States to give farmers the benefits of fair trade instead of Cargill’s secretive policy of tax-subsidized global destruction.
You just obsolve every person? I've lived all over Minnesota from Albert lea to the boundary waters and yeah there are some racist people. If you're not racist the clearest proof is seen through your reaction and response to racism.
I try to be sensitive towards BLM but hard too support them when they burning down the city. I'm from South Minneapolis and haven't been in those parts for awhile thanks for sharing video.
For everyone watching this just because an area is beat up doesn't make it dangerous. That being said this isn't a "hood". North Minneapolis is the hood even though it isn't as run down looking for the most part,it is the part of Minnesota where gang violence is currently. I have lived in Minneapolis for over thirty years so I know where the good,bad and the ugly is in my home city. If Charlie went through north Minneapolis at night you would see it for yourself.
@@glockboysota2859 Frl. Only thing Northside got over South is aggravated assault n homicides. Robberies, burglaries, the rest b happenin ova South/Southwest
@@jonathanchadwick4405 technically no, yet still a lot goes on well back when I lived there in 2000-2010. I doubt it’d be the same now. The northside definitely has its hoods, especially growing up around all that.
Damn it’s crazy when you know exactly where he’s driving through. Im just outside mnpls, and those were my favorite places to go to before everything went down. Still love lake street, many good memories, but it won’t be the same for a long time.
Minneapolis is one of the most beautiful cities in America. It's a damn shame what happened to east lake street. The city won't recover for quite some time
All one need do, is hit the downtown library, or take out a internet sub to the star trib, and look up Minneapolis, July 1967, April 1968, and September 1968. Yes indeed.
I don't care how poor a neighborhood is, they have no excuses. They can pick up the garbage and cut the grass. I am sure that every town has one public dump where all the trash goes in one big pile.
Ironically, this was uploaded the same day that a second, albeit smaller, riot broke out in downtown Minneapolis, over a guy that the police were chasing who shot himself.
I live in Bloomington Mn, about 20 mins outside of Minneapolis and trust me this is only a small portion.. I'm mean even before they burned shit down, these parts still looked pretty bad.. fyi
This is a sad picture of what has happened to Minneapolis, Minnesota after years of failed Democratic politicians. This use to be a beautiful city, full of all kinds of great places to see & visit. Now, the City is so dangerous from an increase of 96% in homicides, that no one can v entire out. Governor Walz shut down the State that 80% of bars & restaurants are closed permanently in downtown Minneapolis, since the Mayor of Minneapolis refused to ask for help at the end of May, early June & the end of August, downtown Minneapolis is a ghost town. Very few businesses, bars & restaurants are left in downtown Minneapolis. Of the few remaining nice restaurants, most are considering leaving the area. No one is visiting downtown Minneapolis, except criminals & homeless people. Defund the Police Movement by the Minneapolis City Council, has just about destroyed the City. Another interesting point, other Cities around Minneapolis have decided to defund their Police Departments. The State is still partially “shut down” by the Governor. The Mall of America couldn’t pay their property tax bill due in April 2020 & certainly can’t pay their tax bill due in October 2020. The Mall of America was shut down for 3+ months. Currently, the Mall is only open for limited hours each day. Other malls & stores around the State, have very limited hours, too. Very sad situation in greater Minneapolis, Minnesota. On August 31, 2020; another 10% of eating establishments, had to close their doors, permanently. Places that had been in business for 5, 10, 20, & 30 years.
yes Minneapolis was a regional sacred gathering place due to the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers joining as the origin of creation, as per Dakota tradition. So that was thousands of years. Western "civilization" definitely has caused global biological annihilation in the past 500 years with the destruction just accelerating. thanks for sharing.
Thank you for that comment. The sad reality is that this crap is happening everywhere, and that we in the Twin Cities and MN have had it rather easy compared to many places around the country and around the world
The Never Ending Cycle: Business don't want to invest and create jobs in places prone to crime, which leads to unemployment, which leads to gang/criminal activity, which creates crime, which makes business not want to invest and create jobs, which leads to unemployment, which leads to welfare, which incentivizes fatherless homes, which produces children who don't have a positive role-model to teach them discipline or responsibility, which leads to many unmarried single-mothers...etc
@@bruceschermerhorn4434 city went to shit after the George Floyd situation leading to cops not showing up to certain areas that’s why everything is boarded
Chantel It’s very dangerous according to FBI statistics and the complaints of residents from there. I’ve spent time in mpls, many brothers losing their lives to none sense. The gangs are homegrown and the members are from there. In the 80s and 90s a lot of cats from Chicago were getting killed in mpls by mpls cats.
No one spraying AKs and fully auto glocks in Australia. America is the most violent first world country by far, it’s borderline 3rd world and this city is a perfect example.
Damn, i used to go to broadway family medicine! That is sad to see that whole area boarded up.The twin cities was me and my daughters favorite place to go to.
Because it ain't the hood that's east lake street in South Minneapolis. North Minneapolis is "the hood". And he only showed the safest area of it at the end of the video.
Crime has fallen across all cities for decades. In Democratic cities and Republican cities. Steadily. But different kinds of cities have different kinds of problems. If you're in orange county, it doesn't make sense to open up a low cost health clinic and homeless shelter in a gated condo community. So Democratic leaning platforms get less traction. If your'e in downtown Detroit, it doesn't make sense to zone for gated communities and lower property taxes and build toll roads. So republican platforms get less traction. Anything making any kind of sweeping statements across all areas is BS. The devil is in the details.
Very cool to get a tour of the place....but wow, the city spends nothing on upkeep. The roads are just potholes, weeds growing everywhere, trees overgrown, piles of junk...
Why do people say don’t drive out at night? I’m from cali and this don’t look like no hood or the projects. I moved to Minnesota and I visited George memorial and it was very much run down over there. But I just keep hearing don’t go out at night
Girl bye. This food drove through town and only show ed a few blocks and who knows when that video was taken. If you go down Lake Street on the north side most businesses are not boarded up anymore and fully open for business. This pool is trying to make the city look like it's a mess and it's just not.
I visited South High School once, it was pretty pleasant over there. A good amount of Somalis there for some reason that caused me to raise my eyebrows a bit, wasn´t expecting that to be honest. Overall an enjoyable moment. Anyone who went to South?
South High isn't too far from Little Mogadishu, aka, the Minneapolis Emirate. During Eid the Muslim call to prayer is broadcast over loudspeakers. It's surreal - like being in a Middle-Eastern country.
I sure think a couple of the areas were 'staged', that AutoZOne sure got razed hella quick and there's already more, overpriced apartments being built there. New post office where the old one was, that might actually have been a good thing, new one looks more modern now.
Sad to see it like this, I remember as a kid Minneapolis being a fairly safe city, I especially remember the Holidazle Christmas Parade, the Downtown Window Displays and the Downtown Dayton's Story book displays, there used to be a lot more civic pride and regional values. But for awhile the city seems to have been more interested in trying mimic NY and Chicago, the reality is Minneapolis today is Just a Lame generic city chasing the trends from other cities that its residents... half or more of whom are transplants who are probably mortified they had to move to the Midwest think are the ideal. So I have little sympathy for MPLS residents, they have voted and supported political movements and ideologies that supported violence for years and now they are reaping the rewards. Police were underfunded in Minneapolis for many years, and after the the political powers in Minneapolis made it clear that they would throw cops to the wolves at earliest sign that the mob desired it, any cops worth a damn quit, the cops who are left on the Minneapolis PD are going to stick there neck out for you, and anyone looking to join Minneapolis PD is either Desperate or an Idiot.
Black people have always been marching against racism and police brutality in Minneapolis i was born there and was in most of the marches in the 80s and 90s and the crime rates were higher Minneapolis was on international news in the mid 90s for its murder rates and has really been on a decline since People who hate black people should not ever be employed to police black communities its a conflict of interest and police departments do next to nothing to prevent racist individuals from working in black communities.
Statistically it’s been like this idk wym lol. Crime rate is nearly record high- multiple homicides reminiscent of the 80’s. Hence how it’s gotten it’s nickname. This ain’t new and I don’t recall anyone over north mimicking Chicago.
I live in the states, and have never been to a city that looked like this. The U.S. is huge, the majority is made up of small towns, and most people don't experience anything like what you see in the video.
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I really appreciate this video, because being born n raised I felt u really took da time to actually drive around and get da main hoods per say compared to all these other videoz. Miigwitch means Thank you
I was subscribed to this channel when he only had a few hundred subscribers. Now look at how many he has. Damn bro you blew up.
Just for his work in Detroit, he should be over a million. CharlieBo313 is a national treasure IMO.
@James Decount lmaoooo
Hes in the middle of blowing up.
His Baltimore videos right after Trump said what he said really blew him up, Trump said Bmore was a trashy city.
Same here and I think that was close to ten years ago. I've seen them all except for maybe just a handful.
I love blue cities. There are so many kinds of diverse buildings: intact, boarded up, burned down, destroyed.
Andrew Malone 😂
O yes, variatio delectat.
this pretty much happens in any city last Woman killed by cops was a Red City that gripped Trump Nuts
@@SavageBunnyGetMoney excuse him, He means black cities.
@@tekubus If the shoe fits.
*This guy traveled the whole country except ALASKA and HAWAII.* 💯💯💯
Anchorage is like one of the worst.
Oh my ... it's true! 👍
@@tcp612ww3 juno is pretty bad
Did he ever go to Vermont? Lol
What about the Dakotas
Minneapolis is one step away from looking like Detroit sad af
Chicago has more problems
@@lordbaelish19 first of all Chicago is way bigger than Minneapolis & St. Paul combined so of course we're gonna have more problems but it looks like Minneapolis can't handle their problems tho
@@chination1796 You’re entirely wrong. The Twin Cities is bigger than Chicago by 1 million.
@@tcp612ww3 you're correct & wrong at the same time Minneapolis & St. Paul each have a population of over 300,000 within each city's limit but when you include the metro population which is the surrounding counties & suburbs then it equals out to over 3 million Chicago's metro population alone is over 8 million
@@chination1796 Would you say Chicago is more dangerous than Minneapolis? In 2019, Murderapolis was ranked 19th most dangerous city in the US with Chicago at 20th.
Don't always look at the negatives of Democrat-run cities.
Moving Businesses are up 1000% and Plywood sales are up 800%.
Another american city left to rot...
workboots are still free and plentiful
That's sad but funny as hell
And redneck inbreeds and their trashy trump paraphernalia are 99% non-existent!
Lol as if Republicans are actually any better. Don't tell me the party politicians got you brainwashed into believing "sides."
Thanks for showing my home town. I worked at the midtown / Sears & Roebucks on Lake Street. Wow what a trip. Sad sad sad. Happy I moved to Texas.
There was a Sears at midtown? Wow, I had no idea.
I live right off university Avenue in Minneapolis. I appreciate you showing what has happened to our beautiful city. As a Minnesotan my whole life, I am proud of my state and I do not think we are racist. I hope we can all get back to normal here.
One of the sides has to play identity politics. But people are starting to finally see through that. Vote RED Remove Every Democrat
Racial housing covenants began in 1910 in Minneapolis - they are part of the deeds of much of Minneapolis housing. Cargill, the world's largest private corporation, based in Minnesota, is a tool of US Empire. Cargill: Our taxes, global destruction
Minnetonka-based Cargill is often noted as the world’s largest private corporation, with reported annual sales of over $50 billion and operations at any given time in an average of 70 countries. The “Lake Office” of Cargill is a 63-room replica of a French chateau; the chairman’s office is part of what was once the chateau’s master-bedroom suite.
A family empire, the Cargills and the MacMillans control about 85 percent of the stock. Not only the largest grain trader in the world, with over 20 percent of the market, Cargill dominates another 12 sectors, including destructive speculative finance, according to “Invisible Giant: Cargill and its Transnational Strategies,” by Brewster Kneen.
Taking advantage of the capitalist speculative collapse of 1873, Cargill quickly bought up grain elevators. After vast cooperation with the state-sponsored railroad robber barons, central grain terminals averaged extremely high annual returns on investments of 30 to 40 percent between 1883 and 1889. Cargill hired a Chase Bank vice president to secretly help the corporation through the Depression, writes Dan Morgan in “Merchants of Grain.”
“There are only a few processing firms,” and “these firms receive a disproportionate share of the economic benefits from the food system,” states William D. Heffernan, professor of rural sociology at the University of Missouri. Details of Cargill’s price manipulations at the expense of farmers worldwide was documented in the classic study, “Food First: Beyond the Myth of Scarcity” by Frances Moore Lappe and Joseph Collins. They report that Cargill has had a history of receiving elite government price information that should be told to U.S. farmers.
That secrecy, along with tax-subsidized market control, enables Cargill to buy from U.S. farmers at extremely low prices and then sell abroad to nations pressured under the same destructive elite corporate control. See the Institute for Food and Development Policy’s Web Site at www.foodfirst.org....
Between 1985 and 1992, the legal entity called Cargill received $800.4 million in tax subsidies via the Export Enhancement Program, a continuation of the infamous “Food for Peace” policy, writes Kneen. Promoted by Hubert H. Humphrey and instituted as PL 480, food became a Cold War tool, i.e. “for Peace.” If we can induce people to “become dependent on us for food,” then “what is a more powerful weapon than food and fiber?” Humphrey declared, according to “Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies” by Noam Chomsky.
Actually, most of the nation recipients of tax-subsidized Cargill food dumping were, and are, net exporters of food already - policies imposed by colonial trading patterns. The food (for Peace) has been bought cheaply by neocolonial regimes, and then sold at a huge discount on the local market - in Somalia, for example, at one-sixth of the local prices. Many examples of these misguided policies can be found in “Betraying the National Interest: How US Foreign AID Threatens Global Security by Undermining the Political and Economic Stability of the Third World,” by Frances Moore Lappe, et al.
Cargill’s undercutting wipes out the local farmers’ self-reliance, while the revenues (going to the elite) are tied to required purchases of U.S. weapons, writes Chomsky, citing “The Soft War” by Tom Barry, 1988. But the main beneficiary of “Food for Peace” has been Cargill. Keen writes, “From 1954 to 1963, just for storing and transporting P.L. 480 commodities, the heavily subsidized giant Cargill made $1 billion.”
Indian lawyer N.J. Nanjundaswamy reports that a Cargill motto is, “One who controls the seed, controls the farmer, and one who controls the food trade, controls the nation.” Yudof’s recently stated support of federal foreign policy Title XII is another public promotion of the University of Minnesota-Cargill partnership’s raiding of sustainable agricultural cultures.
Cargill is such a damaging threat that in Dec. 1992, 500,000 peasants marched against corporate-controlled trade, and the irate farmers ransacked Cargill’s operations. Fifty people were arrested at the partially completed - and subsequently destroyed - seed-processing plant in Bellary, India. In 1996, 1,000 Indian farmers gathered at Cargill’s office and destroyed Cargill’s records. For more, see www.endgame.org...
Cargill has been doing bio-piracy, stealing traditional products. For instance, it used Basmati, a rice from India, as its trade name, and the company continues to be one of the main promoters of corporate-driven intellectual property rights. The U.S. Trade Act, Special 301 Clause, allows the United States to take unilateral action against any country that does not open its market to U.S. corporations.
The United States, for example, has threatened to use trade sanctions against Thailand for its attempt to protect biodiversity. A bill that has been before parliament in India and promoted by Cargill, “takes away all the farmers’ rights, which they have enjoyed for generations - they will no longer be able to produce new varieties of seed or trade seed amongst themselves,” writes Nanjundaswamy.
The research center, Rural Advancement Foundation International, found that “fifteen African states, among them some of the poorest countries in the world, are under pressure to sign away the right of more than 20 million small-holder farmers to save and exchange crop seed. The decision to abandon Africa’s 12,000-year tradition of seed-saving will be finalized at a meeting in the Central African Republic. The 15 governments have been told to adopt draconian intellectual property legislation for plant varieties in order to conform to a provision in the World Trade Organization.”
Cargill, with extensive funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development, is also destroying the world’s largest wetland - the Pantanal, in South America - in order to dredge a channel that’s designed for convoys of up to 16 soybean- and soymeal-carrying barges, according to the Institute on Food and Development Policy.
Cargill has been on the Council of Economic Priorities’ list of worst environmental offenders. Mother Jones magazine and Earth Island Journal report that Cargill is responsible for 2,000 OSHA violations, a 40,000-gallon spill of phosphoric solution into Florida’s Alafia River, poor air pollution compliance and record-high releases of toxic waste.
With help from the Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy, located at www.poclad.org..., states have recently begun to respond to citizen pressure and revoke corporate charters. The assets of Cargill should be revoked, allowing the citizens of the United States to give farmers the benefits of fair trade instead of Cargill’s secretive policy of tax-subsidized global destruction.
Imagine how different the Twin Cities could have been if these fucking "Covenant Laws" never been impleneted in 1910!
You just obsolve every person? I've lived all over Minnesota from Albert lea to the boundary waters and yeah there are some racist people. If you're not racist the clearest proof is seen through your reaction and response to racism.
1910? Az nem most volt ember.biden president mindent rendbe hoz.majd vissza adja az 1000 milliard dollárt😂
It's amazing how they took a nice city and made a dump.
Eh it was an okay city
Yet it still looks better than some gentrified/gentrifying areas of New Orleans
Really how does the bring justice for George Floyd?
One of the best cities. But these days it is given over to an unproductive liberal mindset
@@dvferyance They got their justice and still rioted...
Dollar General Matters !
DGM! DGM! #DollarGeneralMatters
I try to be sensitive towards BLM but hard too support them when they burning down the city. I'm from South Minneapolis and haven't been in those parts for awhile thanks for sharing video.
Even the areas without riot damage are just covered in garbage. It shows a lot about the local communities.
It’s actually not that bad, I live in Minneapolis.
@@mengxiong7630 I do also and some areas are definitely that bad, obviously its in this video your watching
@@jpeto006 Obviously he's talking about areas not in the video
9:50 lmfaoo "Respect on Another"
Who wrote that? Those that burn down other innocent people's propertie/cars?
You missing the point
Peter Hallen 😂😂😂😂 good effort
What exactly is the point Davey? Also, how has that method worked out and what has it produced in terms of improvement tangibly speaking?
Davey J yeah. And burning down shit etc. helps. Jesus Christ. Grow a brain man
For everyone watching this just because an area is beat up doesn't make it dangerous. That being said this isn't a "hood". North Minneapolis is the hood even though it isn't as run down looking for the most part,it is the part of Minnesota where gang violence is currently. I have lived in Minneapolis for over thirty years so I know where the good,bad and the ugly is in my home city. If Charlie went through north Minneapolis at night you would see it for yourself.
@Self Help southside is probaly worst then the northside wym aint the hood, you not frm here 🤡 goofy
@@glockboysota2859 Big lows
@@glockboysota2859 Frl. Only thing Northside got over South is aggravated assault n homicides. Robberies, burglaries, the rest b happenin ova South/Southwest
Umm.. im confused, plenty of this footage is from north minneapolis...
They even burned down the Popeye's? They must have been mad!
🤣
Next door to it, was uncle hugos, Americas oldest sci fi bookstore, that had an awesome number of books from the 1950s onward.
The pettiness alone is worse than the damage,why y'all say nothing about those all white meth-infested trailer parks all across conservative areas 😂
Unless I didn’t recognize it or the streets are blocked, he totally missed the burned down police station.
Reppin MN, from the northside n i remember growin up in those neighbohoods
Have u heard of sioux falls?
Not hood
@@jonathanchadwick4405 technically no, yet still a lot goes on well back when I lived there in 2000-2010. I doubt it’d be the same now. The northside definitely has its hoods, especially growing up around all that.
The people of Minneapolis and Minnesota need to make some serious changes in November.
Why?
КГО П did you even watch the video? lol
Trump 2020
Well, elections, i see.
@@Мммакс because we're the second highest tax state. For starters
Damn it’s crazy when you know exactly where he’s driving through. Im just outside mnpls, and those were my favorite places to go to before everything went down. Still love lake street, many good memories, but it won’t be the same for a long time.
Minneapolis is one of the most beautiful cities in America. It's a damn shame what happened to east lake street. The city won't recover for quite some time
this didn't age well
@@jonathanielpringlemaniii how's that exactly? The city hasn't been the same since.
My home state, Minnesota 💙. Doesn’t look half bad on camera, compared to other cities you’ve visited.
doesnt look bad? i had to remind myself couple times im watching footage from america.
😍
@@kaito7530 these inner cities could just as well have been in south Africa
Do citizens of Detroit say the same thing?
kaito i guess you missed the second half of my sentence. But if you haven’t traveled the world much you’d think this is soooo terrible 🙄
I was just in Minneapolis last week. Love the people! Will definitely revisit in the future
Go during the next big riot and see if you still feel the same way
@@educatetheleft I mean to be fair u can say that about a lot of cities
Where’s all those people commenting that Minneapolis is soft and a safe city? Minneapolis has always been a super dangerous city.
All one need do, is hit the downtown library, or take out a internet sub to the star trib, and look up Minneapolis, July 1967, April 1968, and September 1968. Yes indeed.
Right here.. you're not hard
Please don't be afraid to come here! MN is a beautiful clean place with AMAZING tourist attractions!!
agreed
Facts, I lived there several times, good jobs and nice neighborhoods poor and wealthy.
Stay Out of those Alley's Charlie.
Just fired off a Jackson to you. Appreciate the work you do. Stay safe.
"The Man, the Myth, and the Motor."
You fired who? 🙄🙄
I don't care how poor a neighborhood is, they have no excuses. They can pick up the garbage and cut the grass. I am sure that every town has one public dump where all the trash goes in one big pile.
Ironically, this was uploaded the same day that a second, albeit smaller, riot broke out in downtown Minneapolis, over a guy that the police were chasing who shot himself.
That's was a fun night.
Thank you Minneapolis Rioters for making Minnesota RED 2020
Bootlicker...wouldn't have anything to do with racist police force...? Fuck Trump
They still blue bruh! 😅
@@mrconfusion87 Opps forgot about Dominion voting machines and voter fraud
I live in Bloomington Mn, about 20 mins outside of Minneapolis and trust me this is only a small portion.. I'm mean even before they burned shit down, these parts still looked pretty bad.. fyi
This is a sad picture of what has happened to Minneapolis, Minnesota after years of failed Democratic politicians. This use to be a beautiful city, full of all kinds of great places to see & visit. Now, the City is so dangerous from an increase of 96% in homicides, that no one can v entire out. Governor Walz shut down the State that 80% of bars & restaurants are closed permanently in downtown Minneapolis, since the Mayor of Minneapolis refused to ask for help at the end of May, early June & the end of August, downtown Minneapolis is a ghost town. Very few businesses, bars & restaurants are left in downtown Minneapolis. Of the few remaining nice restaurants, most are considering leaving the area. No one is visiting downtown Minneapolis, except criminals & homeless people. Defund the Police Movement by the Minneapolis City Council, has just about destroyed the City. Another interesting point, other Cities around Minneapolis have decided to defund their Police Departments. The State is still partially “shut down” by the Governor. The Mall of America couldn’t pay their property tax bill due in April 2020 & certainly can’t pay their tax bill due in October 2020. The Mall of America was shut down for 3+ months. Currently, the Mall is only open for limited hours each day. Other malls & stores around the State, have very limited hours, too. Very sad situation in greater Minneapolis, Minnesota. On August 31, 2020; another 10% of eating establishments, had to close their doors, permanently. Places that had been in business for 5, 10, 20, & 30 years.
yes Minneapolis was a regional sacred gathering place due to the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers joining as the origin of creation, as per Dakota tradition. So that was thousands of years. Western "civilization" definitely has caused global biological annihilation in the past 500 years with the destruction just accelerating. thanks for sharing.
Thank you for that comment. The sad reality is that this crap is happening everywhere, and that we in the Twin Cities and MN have had it rather easy compared to many places around the country and around the world
This was 4 years ago, you should see it now and how much worse its gotten. Walz REALLY f'd us over and here he is running for VP.
No matter how bad this city gets and no matter where I move it will always be home.
The good to watch yo videos is that i just know exactly where I cannnot never stomp lol
Why didn’t you go to the 3rd precinct and the Target?That was the craziest place.
Fr. And the Arby’s straight up got disintegrated lmao
He forgot about Cup Foods that's the whole epicentre ... and is now sacred ground
@@edwardmiessner6502 can't get in there lol
The Never Ending Cycle:
Business don't want to invest and create jobs in places prone to crime, which leads to unemployment, which leads to gang/criminal activity, which creates crime, which makes business not want to invest and create jobs, which leads to unemployment, which leads to welfare, which incentivizes fatherless homes, which produces children who don't have a positive role-model to teach them discipline or responsibility, which leads to many unmarried single-mothers...etc
Looks like detroit
Hell no not even close
Of course the CareerForce building is clean and intact
Looks like a Smaller version of Chicago
Looks like Detroit
It does kind of, doesn’t it?
It didn’t always
@@dallastx3322 what happened?
@@bruceschermerhorn4434 city went to shit after the George Floyd situation leading to cops not showing up to certain areas that’s why everything is boarded
Hell no not even close to how messed up detroit looks
Oml finally somebody start recognizing da nawfside foe😭really dangerous asl rn
Wtf is this ooking and eeking?
Go drink milk
Not really. North side is nothing compared to other places. It’s the ppl from Chicago that come here
Chantel It’s very dangerous according to FBI statistics and the complaints of residents from there. I’ve spent time in mpls, many brothers losing their lives to none sense. The gangs are homegrown and the members are from there.
In the 80s and 90s a lot of cats from Chicago were getting killed in mpls by mpls cats.
Fr
Minneapolis has been my home for the past 13 years. Beautiful city and state. Highly underrated.
Have you heard of the city sioux falls?
That awkward moment when your neighborhood is on this channel lol
😁💯
Them bway niggas was like : LOUD LOUD🤣😭🍃
This is Democrat Amerika welcome to it
Louisville is Republican
Ron Desantis and raiding our nations capital and CRT is Republican America ,who can judge really ? Your all trash 😊
Derek Chauvin is GUILTY!!! Prince is looking down smiling 😇
Should've drove through Cedar Riverside plaza and Little Earth housing projects
Still much better than Detroit.
@Sooner Than Later you're probably right lol
A lot of Detroit people got killed in Minneapolis.
@@glitch30rnd oh snap
This is nothing , this looks like paradise compared to Australian indigenous settlements .
Bugger off
So try on to meet rio de janeiro in Brazil and u 'll see what is dangerous, if u survive of course lol
@UCZEGhSzSzlizXYdrXw37WKQ of course, this like the most latin countries, unfortunately
No one spraying AKs and fully auto glocks in Australia. America is the most violent first world country by far, it’s borderline 3rd world and this city is a perfect example.
7:15 LOOKING LIKE SOMALIA
That what "we" want the rest of the nation to look like, after the election.
Damn, i used to go to broadway family medicine! That is sad to see that whole area boarded up.The twin cities was me and my daughters favorite place to go to.
They showing Minneapolis, MN. After the George Floyd riot's, before that you rarely saw boarded up businesses etc
How many job opportunities did it give the city? Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
Moving companies are seeing a dramatic increase in business !
*_"Whooo could imagine..._*
*_That they would Freak Out_*
*_in Minnesota..."_*
*RIP FZ*
Now check out kenosha
This doesn’t look bad at all....just a few rundown areas
Because it ain't the hood that's east lake street in South Minneapolis. North Minneapolis is "the hood". And he only showed the safest area of it at the end of the video.
Crime has fallen across all cities for decades. In Democratic cities and Republican cities. Steadily.
But different kinds of cities have different kinds of problems. If you're in orange county, it doesn't make sense to open up a low cost health clinic and homeless shelter in a gated condo community. So Democratic leaning platforms get less traction. If your'e in downtown Detroit, it doesn't make sense to zone for gated communities and lower property taxes and build toll roads. So republican platforms get less traction.
Anything making any kind of sweeping statements across all areas is BS. The devil is in the details.
Great Minneapolis hood video
Very cool to get a tour of the place....but wow, the city spends nothing on upkeep. The roads are just potholes, weeds growing everywhere, trees overgrown, piles of junk...
You’re my hero You’re my friend You’re beautiful
Trump 2020
BIDEN 2020!!!
Fuck you
What a shame look at all of those mom and pop stores and businesses gone even though they had nothing to do with it 😕
I wonder if heaven has a ghetto?
No.Jesus would not tolerate this crap!
No cause heaven ain’t real
My cousin died last year and I still can’t let go spice 1
It’s called hell moron
Why do people say don’t drive out at night? I’m from cali and this don’t look like no hood or the projects. I moved to Minnesota and I visited George memorial and it was very much run down over there. But I just keep hearing don’t go out at night
My city😭
I work at children's hospital for 12 years down there deeply saddens me. friends and I enjoy going to eating I see they're no longer there
Girl bye. This food drove through town and only show ed a few blocks and who knows when that video was taken. If you go down Lake Street on the north side most businesses are not boarded up anymore and fully open for business. This pool is trying to make the city look like it's a mess and it's just not.
@@ursilaminor6447 Yeah I live on the North side so....🙄 It's still sad to see the city you grow up in (south side) go through all that🤷🏿♀️
Our city! Love Mpls!
Why did it end up like this? The root cause that is
Minneapolis use to be beautiful before the riots
Holy shit u made it up here!
Nice humble people
I enjoy your travels I like to see travel other city too I haven't seen you do long Beach California
En todo el mundo pasa lo mismo, hasta en u.s.a. .lugares importantes más inversión, aquí en mazatlan, México, pasa lo mismo.
Some of those businesses look like they never did recover... The pandemic reduced their hours, and the riots closed them for good!
I named my kitten charlie bobo lol
The large building was Sears and Roebuck in my youth. These days , it is changed to completely something else. Diversity
diversity is the key
Leave it - when they take you to court to clean it up tell the judge I didnt want it destroyed
And still today, some areas are still boarded up. At least in NoMi. I love my city
What is a NoMi?
North Minneapolis, just abbreviated. :)@@77D777
I visited South High School once, it was pretty pleasant over there. A good amount of Somalis there for some reason that caused me to raise my eyebrows a bit, wasn´t expecting that to be honest. Overall an enjoyable moment. Anyone who went to South?
South High isn't too far from Little Mogadishu, aka, the Minneapolis Emirate. During Eid the Muslim call to prayer is broadcast over loudspeakers. It's surreal - like being in a Middle-Eastern country.
Whats wrong with somalis? Racist much
@@billjohnson2081 What can you do about it? Also, if I recall correctly, people are free to practice whatever religion they want in this country.
This is our city
I sure think a couple of the areas were 'staged', that AutoZOne sure got razed hella quick and there's already more, overpriced apartments being built there. New post office where the old one was, that might actually have been a good thing, new one looks more modern now.
I think it's so hilarious to see the city burn the way that it did for my own particular reasons lol
Scum bag peice shit
Gabe Rezin just like the people who partake in causing the damage
Fuck you
Sad to see it like this, I remember as a kid Minneapolis being a fairly safe city, I especially remember the Holidazle Christmas Parade, the Downtown Window Displays and the Downtown Dayton's Story book displays, there used to be a lot more civic pride and regional values. But for awhile the city seems to have been more interested in trying mimic NY and Chicago, the reality is Minneapolis today is Just a Lame generic city chasing the trends from other cities that its residents... half or more of whom are transplants who are probably mortified they had to move to the Midwest think are the ideal. So I have little sympathy for MPLS residents, they have voted and supported political movements and ideologies that supported violence for years and now they are reaping the rewards. Police were underfunded in Minneapolis for many years, and after the the political powers in Minneapolis made it clear that they would throw cops to the wolves at earliest sign that the mob desired it, any cops worth a damn quit, the cops who are left on the Minneapolis PD are going to stick there neck out for you, and anyone looking to join Minneapolis PD is either Desperate or an Idiot.
Black people have always been marching against racism and police brutality in Minneapolis i was born there and was in most of the marches in the 80s and 90s and the crime rates were higher Minneapolis was on international news in the mid 90s for its murder rates and has really been on a decline since
People who hate black people should not ever be employed to police black communities its a conflict of interest and police departments do next to nothing to prevent racist individuals from working in black communities.
Statistically it’s been like this idk wym lol. Crime rate is nearly record high- multiple homicides reminiscent of the 80’s. Hence how it’s gotten it’s nickname.
This ain’t new and I don’t recall anyone over north mimicking Chicago.
Kathlin i missed you so much 😢
RIP 🙏 Prince 💜
Go Minnesota United FC ⚽️
Anchorage Alaska Hoods + Hood Interview please.
I like Minneapolis,but the HOOD looks Tame compared to North St. Louis
have you heard of sioux falls?
Charlie man, you were about 6 block from George Floyd Monument, why didn't you go by there???
Too scared.
Who in name of god would ever want to live in the states😩
I live in the states, and have never been to a city that looked like this. The U.S. is huge, the majority is made up of small towns, and most people don't experience anything like what you see in the video.
What’s interesting in this video is you don’t see one white person anywhere in this town any more!
The city is majority white
Broken hearted 💔. These is my city
The North side always had a bad rap
This is what nwo looks like, beginning stages.
Weees deserve better. Come on man. Building back better.
Still Mpls is the best place to live point blank 🎉
Keep it , it's yours .
St George The Worthless set the place back 10 to 15 years. Sad
Why you keep playing the same thing over
I was home sick I’ma real 38th and Chicago baby
Damn Minneapolis :/ my hometown
Why you driven threw the alleys
2:50 those stingers by ensue and grabs on the wall🙌🏼🔥🔥