How. All he does is complain about how bad every place in the world is. To this guy the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean is bad too . The sun has really bad parts. The deepest part of the universe is bad too
Worked at Hershey for 16 yrs retired moved out of Taxavania 5 yrs ago Tennessee Plateau is now my new home my property tax went from 7,500.00 $ a year to 951.00$ a win win situation 😀👍
@@thornbird6768 nicer climate when it is cold in Northern states. The south can get really hot and humid in the summer. So you pick, cold and winter apparel and paying for heat. Or hot and no clothing and searching for Air conditioning. Either way the energy bills get outrageous. I work outside so no matter where you go in the USA you have to be creative to survive the elements
I worked in Allentown for 10+ years and lived in the Lehigh Valley for most of my life. I only left because of a new job. Allentown is not great, but it’s not terrible either and it’s actually improved significantly since the 90’s.
correct. I live in Western Lehigh (Macungie) and work in Allentown. A lot of people are quick to destroy it because there are problems like any other small City. Going back to the 90's era the worst decision ever was the demolition and ending of Hess' Department Store. to me that was the all -time low point of Allentown. However, Now you have the PPL Arena where there are tons of events including the Flyers AAA as well as Coca Cola Park for the Phillies AAA. Downtown has decent restaurants and some incredibly nice, albeit overpriced Condos now too. it was mostly slums in place of where those are now, so IMO progress. Lived in the area all my life but have traveled to 42 States, just like you said, there are definitely BETTER spots...Definitely WORSE places too!
I grew up in glorious Nanticoke (right next to Wilkes-Barre) from 76 to 96. Every time I fly back to visit family the whole area seems more hostile and run down. Huge demographic shift.
When they say stuff like the community needs to get more involved, what they really mean is that the men in the community need to get more involved. But our culture makes it difficult for a man to take a stand in his community.
I live in the suburbs of Pittsburgh, and love it! Hiking, biking, rolling hills warm weather from mid-April until November. Great skiing in January and February. I moved to South Carolina for a job, and couldn’t wait to get back north.
All cities have bad areas. I personally love visiting the museums and my son loves the Carnegie Science Center! Such beautiful architecture in the city as well.
As a Philadelphian, who moved to the Poconos, one of the big problems is all the big factory employers packed up and moved overseas. No jobs left for the working classes, many of whom were minorities, who made a good, middle class living. I worked with many of these minorities who had two-parent families and received good educations and had professional jobs. It was downward spiral from there, just like when RCA and Campbell's left Camden. Now, with the lack of leadership and the political grifting, it's on the downward spiral. they fool people from out of town to come there and get a great new office job in a big, new, fancy building. I still have kids there who have good professional jobs, so they stay. But they plan to leave when they retire, just as my husband and I did. Makes me sad because my family goes back to Philly in the 1600s and 1700s. Ancestors are rolling over in their graves.
I have enjoyed what Hauntedbearchild has said. Mr. Johnson, the history of the country has to BE EXPLAINED when you explain how DANGEROUS these cities are. THERE ARE NO EXCUSES WITH THE MANAGEMENT OF THIS COUNTRY AT THE FEDERAL LEVEL HOWEVER: 1)The remnants of slavery are still existing in his country. Slavery ended in 1865. There are traditions where some people are having a lot of children. In psychology, there is a theory of psychobiology. When a tree is about to die, it sprays a lot of seeds and hence the child giving theory of humans. 2)At federal level of the United States, the gun control issues is apparently NOT ABLE to be solved with COMPROMISE. The founding fathers of this country would be ashamed. Having said that, the mass shootings seem to be from people of the suburbs who have children some of which are mentally troubled with good access to guns. 3) During the Clinton administration, Bill Clinton believed fiercely in N.A.F.T.A. along with other administrations from both parties. I understand Bill Clinton's viewpoint because by having countries with jobs, people from those countries might not want to leave. However, this treaty has boomeranged as Hauntedbearchild has pointed out. 4)This presentation of this video seemed to have a jovial tone without explaining the history of the United States. All I am saying, is that a presenter should not present this as something that is a joke. Having said that, I would like to get into this youtube business, so the writer of this, you Mr. Johnson, I would appreciate if you could explain how to do this. Sincerely, Melinda Aimee Roth
Nick I worked for a month near Latrobe. I am from MA and I couldn't believe how nice those ppl were. I was thinking what do they want from me. Being from MA I was sus of ppl being kind to me. I couldn't have been as wrong. They were kind to me and very nice. I guess I was wrong for thinking this but it was just wrong of me. Great ppl there!
I used to live just outside of Allentown. As a kid, I was told don't go anywhere between Main and 4th streets; those were the sketchy parts of town. Then it became 7th street. Then 10th. Starting to see a pattern here?
@JSanchez ElOnce idk I live below 20th st and that area is fine and nice where I live its so peaceful and quiet and nice the only thing u hear is the trash truck
I lived in Wilkes-Barre from 1985 to 1987 and it was white people-land. All descendents of the miners who use to extract coal from the mountains. I guess that has changed?
Exactly. I lived there from 1997 to 1999. Also very peaceful and white. I was the only SE Asian/Pacific Islander in the office, and the Catholic Youth Center had only one black child and one half Asian child (mine). Very safe and people were very nice. I guess it has changed.
Johnstown is also a very dangerous city. In the Moxham neighborhood, you can see one gang at each corner of an intersection at night yelling, screaming, and sometimes fighting each other. Murders also occur every week or two.
Wilkes-Barre is where cable TV started. John and Margaret waltson strung twin-wire cable from an antenna atop a large hill down to their TV shop. Then they ran it to their customers house for a charge. They did it to increase TV sales.
I am from a PA town with a very bad reputation for violent crime. In short, it is no surprise. Before my 12th birthday, I thought about leaving that place for good. I have been gone for a while, but Ilive in the area now. I sacrificed to help my family there. I helped too many people in my time, and it just set me back.
now THATS da ol classic Nick we have grown ta know & love !!! BEST 'supporting actor award' for neiborhood security guard & BEST musical soundtrak of the year for a documentary drama film
While I don't necessarily disagree with the towns mentioned; I do think that the conclusion that the only safe places are too unaffordable for most is shortsighted. Most of PA is safe and cheap relative to the rest of the country. I looked at 3300 PA towns for 3 criteria: violent crime rate, property crime rate and cost of living index and compared them to the national averages. Violent Crime - 3181 / 3300 are better than the national average, ie 96.4% are safer than the US average Property Crime - 3121 / 3300 are better than the national average, ie 94.6% are safer than the US average Cost of Living - 2771 / 3300 are less expensive than the national average, ie 84% of PA towns cost less to live in than the US average Towns that are better than the national average in all 3 categories: 2572 / 3300; i.e. 77.9% of PA towns are both less expensive and safer than the US average. This doesn't deny that many of these towns have other issues, but solely on the basis of safe & affordable, there's a TON of options for places to live in PA.
That's great research. I have no doubt it has very accurate. Pennsylvania, from my observations, is a pretty safe place, aside from certain neighborhoods in large towns or cities.
I live in Pennsylvania,and have been here all my life. I live out in the sticks in a really small town,and the only thing I have to worry about here are wildlife in my backyard. lol But I get it,every state has it's bad areas and very happy I never was a part of them.
Lived in Philadelphia 12 years, the only crime I experienced was my car was broken into inside the gated parking lot @ my apartment bldg. And got back from vacation once & somebody was living in my apartment! Lol
Lived there been carjacked in 93. Spent 11 days in hospital been Shot at ...stabbed. Had two guns pointed to my head and misfired and had 4 cars stolen. South philly. Stay out of that progressive controlled hell
Man you ain’t kidding about Wilkinsburg that place gives me chills, driving down some of those roads seeing like the majority of the house’s abandoned and boarded up kind of made you feel like your another dimension.
@@bradklingensmith , & now Wilkinsburg is broke wants to merge with Pittsburgh so they can get cheaper property taxes & dump their crime infested town on Pittsburgh! LMAO
I live in Pittsburgh, about 4-5 miles north of downtown. But I guess I'm one of the lucky ones, have never been robbed, raped, stabbed or shot! It pays to live in a quiet neighborhood with no bars, in a double security apt building too. I turn on the news each morning, surprised what happened only a couple miles from me overnight..damn! 😮
Economy collapse and civil war is coming over us, be prepare for the beginnings of the new Atlantis of Francis Bacon in United State of America. (2020/2070)
I know right? Every morning it's all that is on the news.. with the way the country is right now, drugs, crime, illegal everything, defunding, people not wanting to work who are healthy...it's truly sad
I'm in PA Easton to be exact. Been here 46 yrs and it's not too bad just a 20min drive to good Ole Allentown. I think that it really doesn't really matter where you live anymore . Crime is a possibility whether you live in a high end or low end . Always be aware of your surroundings.
This. Small towns are violent too. Framing it as "look at how violent big cities are!" is intellectually dishonest. The correct narrative is "Look at how badly america screwed up that people are so poor they have to turn to gangs and robbery to survive.".
This video is so helpful! I've got a job lined up after college that's taking me to the Lehigh Valley/Bethlehem area. So now I know to steer clear of Allentown!
@@bettyschneider5268 There has been little real estate development in America except for high-end buyer. Housing for everyone else is bing priced into the stratosphere, and so are rents.
I remember as a kid going to Pennsylvania with my parents from New York. Passing through Allentown wasn't that bad but this was back in the early 90's. Sad that it has gone way down. It was pretty quaint.
Obviously you haven't seen it lately!! TALK about gentrification!!! 1500 dollar a month rent for the fckin city center condos they've built in the 6 block radius
I live in the Lehigh Valley where Allentown is, and yes Allentown is pretty bad. Bethlehem is pretty good except the south side. Easton is only bad in west part. But Allentown's issues beat both cities. Once you go to the suburbs (I.E. Emmaus, Nazareth, Macungie, Hellertown, New Tripoli, Bath etc), it's a lot quieter.
The diner pictured in New Ken is a area that i have to visit on occasion. Social security moved their office out of there. I used to walk the streets in Wilkinsburg! My mom and dad graduated high school there.
The least safe places in PA according to crime statistics: 1. East Pittsburgh, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro) 2. Mount Oliver, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro) 3. Homestead, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro) 4. McKeesport, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro) 5. Chester, Delaware County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington metro) 6. McKees Rocks, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro) 7. Seven Springs, Fayette County (Pittsburgh metro) 8. Ambridge, Beaver County (Pittsburgh metro) 9. Duquesne, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro) 10. Marcus Hook, Delaware County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington metro) If we remove the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia metro areas, the 10 worst (based only on crime stats) are: 1. Farrell, Mercer County (Youngstown, OH metro) [14th overall] 2. Harrisburg, Dauphin County (Harrisburg-Carlisle metro) [15th overall] 3. Bradford, McKean County (Bradford metro) [20th overall] 4. Wilkes-Barre township, Luzerne County (Scranton-Wilkes Barre-Hazleton metro) [21st overall] 5. Plymouth borough, Luzerne County (Scranton-Wilkes Barre-Hazleton metro) [22nd overall] 6. Steelton, Dauphin County (Harrisburg-Carlisle metro) [25th overall] 7. York, York County (York metro) [27th overall] 8. Lancaster, Lancaster County (Lancaster metro) [28th overall] 9. Selinsgrove, Snyder County (Selinsgrove metro) [31st overall] 10. Renovo, Clinton County (Lock Haven metro) [32nd overall] If we only include communities with at least 10,000 people: 1. McKeesport, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro) 2. Chester, Delaware County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington) 3. Harrisburg, Dauphin County (Harrisburg-Carlisle) 4. Philadelphia, Philadelphia County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington) 5. Wilkinsburg, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh) 6. York, York County (York metro) 7. Lancaster, Lancaster County (Lancaster metro) 8. Pottstown, Montgomery County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington) 9. Coatesville, Chester County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington) 10. Yeadon, Delaware County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington) 96.4% of PA towns have lower violent crime rates than the national average. 94.6% of PA towns have lower property crime rates than the national average. **I use "town" as a shorthand for towns, townships, boroughs, cities, villages, home rule municipalities, etc.. The only incorporated town in PA is actually Bloomsburg.
praxedes2, I wonder if you have been to Lancaster and how did you feel there walking around. I'm from NYC and have been thinking about moving there. Thank You in advance for your reply.
@@diose0078 Hi there! I have been to Lancaster, and I felt fine there. I was only there during the daytime though. I'm sure there are others who can answer with more experience, hopefully someone will jump in for you. Best wishes on your relocation!
It's literally not taboo. And if you'd taken a high school economics class, you would understand poverty and crime rates tend to trend together almost everywhere on Earth. When your nation is so broken that people can't afford even a boiler plate decent existence, they start taking. And the thing is, they're not really wrong.
I used your video to decide where to move to. It used to be quiet here , and safe but now crime spillng out from inner city. They break into car by getting the fob code somehow... Getting a BIG dog!
They dont get codes. They use coins and put them where people cant see in the door handle so when you lock the car with the fob it still makes the locking sound but, it does not lock. Always check your door handles. Im from Pittsburgh..things have really gone downhill..self defense and carrying something for safety is a great idea
Once again nick I’m impressed with your awesome 👏🏻 videos you do. Plus your songs are catchy lol 😂 after church watching this video I sang the song 🎵. Your the man !
I grew up in southwestern new york right near PA border, lived outside of Pittsburgh for five years and now live in northeast Ohio right near the WV northern panhandle and I can honestly say that it all feels relatively the same! I think eastern PA can qualify for northeast but I feel that much of the states western half qualified as Appalachia along with the southern tier of New York and the eastern most counties of Ohio along the river
This is what happens when we ship our steel and manufacturing industries overseas and switch to a “service” economy. Crap jobs, no unions, and no future except minimum wage jobs. Everyone can’t get a four year degree but the alternative is horrible.
It makes me happy when i see someone who totally gets it and tells the truth.Unfortunately you just can't convince enough people of this. Both political parties have been helping this demise of shipping jobs overseas.I personally feel it was all done on purpose to destroy America!
I concur with this. If you are old enough to remember Philly when it was a large manufacturing area you know the difference. Minority families were intact and had good factory jobs. I worked with many of the children of those families who grew up the same way I did. Father worked the good factory job with benefits, Mom stayed home and took care of the kids. The factories left and it all went downhill, especially in the minority communities.
West chester used to have the headquarters of commodore international, the greatest home computer manufacturer ever, so every c64 and amiga lover should definitely move there.
quite some time ago i was on jury duty in Reading pa. we went for lunch and a man i was walking with said to me he grew up in reading with doors unlocked now, its not possible and theres only been one change in that amount of time.
Back in the 80s I only went to Allentown for the mall or Nesters. That may have been in Whitehall. Allentown wasn't that bad back then. Had friends who lived in Marvin Gardens (If you live in the area you know) and it was fine.
I was born in Wilkes Barre, PA and I've lived either in or around the city my whole life. I currently own a building about two blocks outside of downtown. What was stated here about the city is accurate, unfortunately.
The majority of PA towns are safe and affordable. I looked at the numbers and came up with 2572 (out of 3300) PA towns that are both safer than the national average and have a lower cost of living.
@@rtmars9093 This is an 11 month old video, but from my other comments on this video: Most of PA is safe and cheap relative to the rest of the country. I looked at 3300 PA towns for 3 criteria: violent crime rate, property crime rate and cost of living index and compared them to the national averages. Violent Crime - 3181 / 3300 are better than the national average, ie 96.4% are safer than the US average Property Crime - 3121 / 3300 are better than the national average, ie 94.6% are safer than the US average Cost of Living - 2771 / 3300 are less expensive than the national average, ie 84% of PA towns cost less to live in than the US average Towns that are better than the national average in all 3 categories: 2572 / 3300; i.e. 77.9% of PA towns are both less expensive and safer than the US average. This doesn't deny that many of these towns have other issues, but solely on the basis of safe & affordable, there's a TON of options for places to live in PA. So what are you smoking?
Philly.....born and raised....moved out there 11 years ago......glad i did......embarrassing....Not the city of brotherly love..not for a loooooong time.
The Lehigh Valley as a whole is pretty great as far as getting a good mix of the type of life you’re looking to lead. Allentown has it’s rough spots but also has it’s bright ones. East side and south side, along with the non-gentrified area of downtown have a good amount of crime and a little violence. There’s drugs, homelessness and bad schooling. But the west side of the city and the suburbs are some of the best areas in the state as far as schooling, opportunity, and way of life go. There’s amusement/water parks, museums, art districts, nightclubs, ball parks and arenas to name some of the things to do. A lot of history in the city as well. Food scene could be better for a city of it’s size but all in all, if you stay out of the crime ridden area that ALL cities have, you may really like Allentown, Pa and almost certainly the lehigh valley. :)
@@ShaneFleming2016 you got that one right, gotta get out the city or head to the Poconos to get some bang for your buck. Although, some people are willing to pay for that urban lifestyle.
@@ShaneFleming2016 More likely they are priced out of the NYC area. Real estate is a racket in some cities. The principle is incredibly simple: get as much out of the tenant as possible for living where he does. Obviously that's far less in Detroit than in New York City. The only real estate development that I notice even in small-town America i -- this is sixty-five miles away from any city of 50,000 or more -- is high-end housing that one can afford only if one has a high-end career or if one has just sold out the family farm. This is in a poor area that has little to offer. t's been that way since the Crash of 2008.
Reading (where I work) isn't on this list, and I can truthfully say it doesn't seem to be as violent as it once was. But here's a true story: just last night, a fellow patron at a Reading Royals hockey game said when he parked along Franklin St near Santander Arena, he was propositioned by a streetwalker as soon as he got out of his car!
What country are you from? There’s a lot of places in Pennsylvania that have large concentrations of people with Eastern European ancestry. Schuylkill county (where I’m from) has the largest concentration of people with Lithuanian ancestry in the US. Carbon county, to the east, has the highest Slovak concentration. And Luzerne county, to the north, has the highest Polish concentration.
@@pepintheshort7913 My ancestors are Slovak and Lithuanian. I'm from Skook & Carbon - had no idea about this. In regards to the Polish population, there are parts of Chicago that seem like they should be higher than home, but I've never looked at the numbers.
I was shocked to see Wilkes-Barre on that list, that was my spot late 80s, just recently left new Kensington and moved back to pittsburgh, but the footage you showed wasn't middle Pittsburgh, that was a little quiet town on the outskirts called Etna
if allentown is in the top ten of PA that mean PA does not have too many dangerous places because here in allentown almost nothing really bad happend often
The one thing I can say about Allentown is mind your business and be careful who you call friend. I am born and raised in Allentown and I mind my business, work and go home
You could have addressed the open air drug market in Kensington. There’s a few streets you can drive down and grab a bag of fynt or crack right on the sidewalk.
I was born in Allentown, and also lived in Bethlehem and catasaqua. Those towns were not a problem so many years ago. I never had to be afraid. I'm 67 now and have been living in Oklahoma for bout 32 years.. Moved because of marriage to an okie. If it's that bad there now, sure proud I moved so long ago. But I had a fantastic childhood there and my teenage years were great. I still love Pa.
Have you done any videos on any correlation between crime / violence and ethnicity, education etc? Are there any characteristics in common with dangerous areas?
Ohhhhhh yes. In every slum city in America the common characteristics are identical. They were all safe, clean, prosperous cities in the 50 and early 60s.
Pottstown is honestly not scary at all..my dad lived there for 30 years! I would walk down high st, Hanover st., all over for many years, and not scared ever...stay away from Washington Street and don't piss anyone off or deal drugs and you will be absolutely fine....I love pottstown.....
@@dalkhal That's a nice thing for you to say. My Dad's ashes a here down South w/me. The bible says the dead are not conscious of anything at all. *See Ecclesiastes 9:5.
@@dalkhal When we die we don't exists anymore at all. *NOTE: ONLY God has the authority to resurrect a person, if he chooses to give that person eternal life in the heavens -OR- on the earth in Paradise.
Wilkes-Barre at #9?!? Holy crap! My dad was born and raised there. We used go there about once a month because my dad, I guess, was smart enough to move out. I remember Wilkes-Barre being and old town with a lot of old folks. Oh and they had a Planters Peanut factory back in the day.
I live in Wilkes Barre now and it's disgusting. A lot of people flocked here from NJ , Philly, NY when covid started and now it's like the ghetto. I learned the difference between fireworks and gunshots from living here for the past 3 years. Disgusting when you have to live in fear because of all the people that don't give af about their lives or anyone else's. 🤮.
I live near the ski resorts south of Wilkes-Barre and the only reason I ever go there, in the day time, is for the malls and maybe a restaurant. In daylight.
Here's my entire Pennsylvania playlist: ua-cam.com/play/PLq-_cmf3H6yp0BbP8pVMHHXi5wHGI-hGU.html
Kensington in Philadelphia looks like an Apocalyptic Zombie era...
100% Agreed
That's probably the worst area in the whole state! Man that place does look apocalyptic.
Most of Kenzo. Just not the part where hipsters live
I was just there last month. IT SUCKS !
@@roncur almost every city on the eastern seaboard sucks. It's all the same. America's government is trash.
Your videos just keep getting better and better!
Is that even possible?
@@NickJohnson not only possible ... Nick someday may be known as the 'white' Dave Chappelle !!!#
go Nick
@@NickJohnson lol
How. All he does is complain about how bad every place in the world is. To this guy the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean is bad too . The sun has really bad parts. The deepest part of the universe is bad too
@@Gmgfjv lol.
Someone should tell that Store owner that if he still calls it pop pop he's not ready to have pop pop yet.
Hello dear , how are you doing? Please can I be your friend? Need someone to be my close friend and always talk to.
Worked at Hershey for 16 yrs retired moved out of Taxavania 5 yrs ago Tennessee Plateau is now my new home my property tax went from 7,500.00 $ a year to 951.00$ a win win situation 😀👍
How the jobs out there?
I always liked the look of Tennessee . I’m not American but the southern states seem to have an old America charm about them 👍🏻 and a nicer climate .
@@thornbird6768 nicer climate when it is cold in Northern states. The south can get really hot and humid in the summer. So you pick, cold and winter apparel and paying for heat. Or hot and no clothing and searching for Air conditioning. Either way the energy bills get outrageous. I work outside so no matter where you go in the USA you have to be creative to survive the elements
All democrat areas. When Phila was controlled by Republicans, it was beautiful
Any jobs in Tennessee with the same pay and benefits you had at Hershey?
I worked in Allentown for 10+ years and lived in the Lehigh Valley for most of my life. I only left because of a new job. Allentown is not great, but it’s not terrible either and it’s actually improved significantly since the 90’s.
correct. I live in Western Lehigh (Macungie) and work in Allentown. A lot of people are quick to destroy it because there are problems like any other small City. Going back to the 90's era the worst decision ever was the demolition and ending of Hess' Department Store. to me that was the all -time low point of Allentown.
However, Now you have the PPL Arena where there are tons of events including the Flyers AAA as well as Coca Cola Park for the Phillies AAA. Downtown has decent restaurants and some incredibly nice, albeit overpriced Condos now too. it was mostly slums in place of where those are now, so IMO progress. Lived in the area all my life but have traveled to 42 States, just like you said, there are definitely BETTER spots...Definitely WORSE places too!
I’m from Emmaus but currently living in Allentown and it’s bad.
@@litoreggie I guess Billy Joel was right after all.
I grew up in glorious Nanticoke (right next to Wilkes-Barre) from 76 to 96. Every time I fly back to visit family the whole area seems more hostile and run down. Huge demographic shift.
I grew up in Williamsport and have noticed the downward trend there as well. I left in 97.
I grew up outside of Philly, and "more hostile and run down" pretty much describes where I grew up too. No desire to ever move back for me.
Absolutely right about the demographic. When all the locals children move out, and we have people from NYC & NJ move in, it's a whole new area.
Grew up on East Camden N.J. moved out in 1969 now my whole neighborhood is a big weeded lot ,retired now Eastern Tennessee is my home 🏡.
Wow off route 11 tiny town not sure if its still Luzerne or not.
When they say stuff like the community needs to get more involved, what they really mean is that the men in the community need to get more involved. But our culture makes it difficult for a man to take a stand in his community.
I've always felt that crime in the street reflects the corruption in the government.
And the number of Walmart’s nearby
Thank you
The one sided government.
PA is corrupt folks
You're right. The government is for the people & it has been infiltrated. The Shining is real.
Remember that the Scranton Strangler is still on the loose.
Really? 😱 😎🎭🤼🤸🤸🤸🤺🤹🤾🚵🚴🚲
Good time to buy a gun! 😎 🔫👩🏻🎭🇺🇸🎰
Hello dear , how are you doing? Please can I be your friend? Need someone to be my close friend and always talk to.
I live in the suburbs of Pittsburgh, and love it! Hiking, biking, rolling hills warm weather from mid-April until November. Great skiing in January and February. I moved to South Carolina for a job, and couldn’t wait to get back north.
I agree!
All cities have bad areas. I personally love visiting the museums and my son loves the Carnegie Science Center! Such beautiful architecture in the city as well.
Where you live fox chapel
As a Philadelphian, who moved to the Poconos, one of the big problems is all the big factory employers packed up and moved overseas. No jobs left for the working classes, many of whom were minorities, who made a good, middle class living. I worked with many of these minorities who had two-parent families and received good educations and had professional jobs. It was downward spiral from there, just like when RCA and Campbell's left Camden. Now, with the lack of leadership and the political grifting, it's on the downward spiral. they fool people from out of town to come there and get a great new office job in a big, new, fancy building. I still have kids there who have good professional jobs, so they stay. But they plan to leave when they retire, just as my husband and I did. Makes me sad because my family goes back to Philly in the 1600s and 1700s. Ancestors are rolling over in their graves.
Idle hands are the Devil's workshop.
I have enjoyed what Hauntedbearchild has said. Mr. Johnson, the history of the country has to BE EXPLAINED when you explain how DANGEROUS these cities are. THERE ARE NO EXCUSES WITH THE MANAGEMENT OF THIS COUNTRY AT THE FEDERAL LEVEL HOWEVER:
1)The remnants of slavery are still existing in his country. Slavery ended in 1865.
There are traditions where some people are having a lot of children. In psychology, there is a theory of psychobiology. When a tree is about to die, it sprays a lot of seeds and hence the child giving theory of humans.
2)At federal level of the United States, the gun control issues is apparently NOT ABLE to be solved with COMPROMISE. The founding fathers of this country would be ashamed. Having said that, the mass shootings seem to be from people of the suburbs who have children some of which are mentally troubled with good access to guns.
3) During the Clinton administration, Bill Clinton believed fiercely in N.A.F.T.A. along with other administrations from both parties. I understand Bill Clinton's viewpoint because by having countries with jobs, people from those countries might not want to leave. However, this treaty has boomeranged as Hauntedbearchild has pointed out.
4)This presentation of this video seemed to have a jovial tone without explaining the history of the United States. All I am saying, is that a presenter should not present this as something that is a joke. Having said that, I would like to get into this youtube business, so the writer of this, you Mr. Johnson, I would appreciate if you could explain how to do this. Sincerely, Melinda Aimee Roth
Nick I worked for a month near Latrobe. I am from MA and I couldn't believe how nice those ppl were. I was thinking what do they want from me. Being from MA I was sus of ppl being kind to me. I couldn't have been as wrong. They were kind to me and very nice. I guess I was wrong for thinking this but it was just wrong of me. Great ppl there!
Philadelphia's motto change is simple: the City of Brotherly hate.
Sisterly Love
Kane killed able and they were brothers.
Kane was full of Satan.
Two groups of people are almost exclusively responsible for all of these places being dangerous. Facts are facts whether you want to admit it or not.
Black and Hispanic? You act like yts don’t commit crimes.
That shxt was already dangerous before the Hispanics moved in.
Generations of coal miners living in poverty can cause hell on a community in an industrial town color has nothing to do with it
*Thanks for sharing this alarming content with outstanding narrative Nick n Sage* 👍🇺🇲
Fake news
@@johnnykurplutzo6789 what part is fake ?
@@jeffsea6490 nothing dangerous out here
I used to live just outside of Allentown. As a kid, I was told don't go anywhere between Main and 4th streets; those were the sketchy parts of town. Then it became 7th street. Then 10th. Starting to see a pattern here?
I do. Then 13th, 16th, 19th, 22nd, 25th, 28th, 31st, and so on and so forth. Pattern.
@JSanchez ElOnce idk I live below 20th st and that area is fine and nice where I live its so peaceful and quiet and nice the only thing u hear is the trash truck
@@markjuarbe1048 The pattern is strong. Look again. It’s in the numbers.
Yeah now it’s from front street all the way to 20th
Funny because they pushed all the "inner-city" people outbut it gets worse 🤣
I lived in Wilkes-Barre from 1985 to 1987 and it was white people-land. All descendents of the miners who use to extract coal from the mountains. I guess that has changed?
Exactly. I lived there from 1997 to 1999. Also very peaceful and white. I was the only SE Asian/Pacific Islander in the office, and the Catholic Youth Center had only one black child and one half Asian child (mine). Very safe and people were very nice. I guess it has changed.
the 2010 census said it dropped from 92% in 2000 to 79% in 2010... not sure about 2020
@@UserName-ts3sp 2020 census says WB is 69% white.
Thats most of these places if you wanna be honest. Gentrification's ugly backside
@@tokeypokey yeah it pushes the poor out into the suburbs. i know it's happening in my area
Johnstown is also a very dangerous city. In the Moxham neighborhood, you can see one gang at each corner of an intersection at night yelling, screaming, and sometimes fighting each other. Murders also occur every week or two.
I know, I live in Central City, way too close. Johnstown used to be really nice
The Kensington section of Philly is about as wild as it gets.
Wilkes-Barre is where cable TV started. John and Margaret waltson strung twin-wire cable from an antenna atop a large hill down to their TV shop. Then they ran it to their customers house for a charge. They did it to increase TV sales.
Began in Mahanoy City
@@davekoss3181 that's crazy, I was just on a job in barnesville this past winter and I never knew that
No, there are already at least 492 murders in Philly by now 😂
It's at 500 now
Update 540🤦🏾♂️
Hello dear , how are you doing? Please can I be your friend? Need someone to be my close friend and always talk to.
That intro was hilarious Officer Johnson 😂😂😂😂.
Excellent work again Nick ! I love watching you your videos.
Hi Juan
@@NickJohnson Maybe u could be a police officer if real estate doesn't work out! 😱 👮👮🚓🚔Lol 😂
Lived in Lancaster County and Erie. Both places are very different from one another. I sure Like PA the rural areas are really interesting and rural.
I am from a PA town with a very bad reputation for violent crime. In short, it is no surprise. Before my 12th birthday, I thought about leaving that place for good. I have been gone for a while, but Ilive in the area now. I sacrificed to help my family there. I helped too many people in my time, and it just set me back.
Outside of Philadelphia most of Pa looks worse than it is because it’s so old and rundown.
I live in a beautiful rural small town I pa. Close to the Maryland border.
@@courtneyc5736 Same here. Nice small town of less than 1,600, safe and quiet. Free from those lousy vehicles with "music" in full blast.
now THATS da ol classic Nick we have grown ta know & love !!!
BEST 'supporting actor award' for neiborhood security guard
&
BEST musical soundtrak of the year for a documentary drama film
While I don't necessarily disagree with the towns mentioned; I do think that the conclusion that the only safe places are too unaffordable for most is shortsighted.
Most of PA is safe and cheap relative to the rest of the country. I looked at 3300 PA towns for 3 criteria: violent crime rate, property crime rate and cost of living index and compared them to the national averages.
Violent Crime - 3181 / 3300 are better than the national average, ie 96.4% are safer than the US average
Property Crime - 3121 / 3300 are better than the national average, ie 94.6% are safer than the US average
Cost of Living - 2771 / 3300 are less expensive than the national average, ie 84% of PA towns cost less to live in than the US average
Towns that are better than the national average in all 3 categories: 2572 / 3300; i.e. 77.9% of PA towns are both less expensive and safer than the US average.
This doesn't deny that many of these towns have other issues, but solely on the basis of safe & affordable, there's a TON of options for places to live in PA.
That's great research. I have no doubt it has very accurate. Pennsylvania, from my observations, is a pretty safe place, aside from certain neighborhoods in large towns or cities.
I live in Pennsylvania,and have been here all my life. I live out in the sticks in a really small town,and the only thing I have to worry about here are wildlife in my backyard. lol But I get it,every state has it's bad areas and very happy I never was a part of them.
I live in a small town in PA. Nice and quiet.
@@Kastil Absolutely :)
@@ericathegypsy4946 Hello dear , how are you doing? Please can I be your friend? Need someone to be my close friend and always talk to.
Susquehanna is the worst area around me. no violence, just inbreeding. Hahaaha
Lived in Philadelphia 12 years, the only crime I experienced was my car was broken into inside the gated parking lot @ my apartment bldg. And got back from vacation once & somebody was living in my apartment! Lol
Should have charge them rent money! Lol 😂 💰 🏫🏣🏫🏡🏠🌇🏘🏗🏙🏚🏚🏚🦇🦉🦌
Lived there been carjacked in 93. Spent 11 days in hospital been Shot at ...stabbed. Had two guns pointed to my head and misfired and had 4 cars stolen. South philly. Stay out of that progressive controlled hell
You say that's the ONLY crime but that would be enough for me, thanks.
@@josephpizzo1250 damn wtf that’s wild
@@CapAnson12345 I know right! 😱
I'm surprised Scranton isn't on here, it's in the FBI 100 most dangerous cities in 2021 list.
Man you ain’t kidding about Wilkinsburg that place gives me chills, driving down some of those roads seeing like the majority of the house’s abandoned and boarded up kind of made you feel like your another dimension.
Coming from someone who lives in Wilkinsburg you were spot on LMFAOOO. I can’t wait to leave.
I left in '97, never looked back!
My family left in the late 1950s. And you tell people it's a dry town and they don't believe you.
@@bradklingensmith , & now Wilkinsburg is broke wants to merge with Pittsburgh so they can get cheaper property taxes & dump their crime infested town on Pittsburgh! LMAO
I grew up in Wilkes-Barre I moved out of the state of PA back in 2014 and I never thought about going back I'm really happy in the mid Atlantic
I live in Pittsburgh, about 4-5 miles north of downtown. But I guess I'm one of the lucky ones, have never been robbed, raped, stabbed or shot! It pays to live in a quiet neighborhood with no bars, in a double security apt building too. I turn on the news each morning, surprised what happened only a couple miles from me overnight..damn! 😮
Economy collapse and civil war is coming over us, be prepare for the beginnings of the new Atlantis of Francis Bacon in United State of America. (2020/2070)
I know right? Every morning it's all that is on the news.. with the way the country is right now, drugs, crime, illegal everything, defunding, people not wanting to work who are healthy...it's truly sad
I'm in PA Easton to be exact. Been here 46 yrs and it's not too bad just a 20min drive to good Ole Allentown. I think that it really doesn't really matter where you live anymore . Crime is a possibility whether you live in a high end or low end . Always be aware of your surroundings.
GOD bless you!! I live down freemansburgh Ave off of stefko Blvd behind valley farm market!!
This. Small towns are violent too. Framing it as "look at how violent big cities are!" is intellectually dishonest. The correct narrative is "Look at how badly america screwed up that people are so poor they have to turn to gangs and robbery to survive.".
These dangerous cities all have the same thing in common.
Democrats?
Yup we all know what that is but can’t say
Gee, I was going to set up my homeless tent in Philly; I'd better re-think that strategy.
Yeah they might have room in California? He did a video on Homeless there! 📼🎥🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🦇🐀🐁🐍🏕🎪⛺🏗🛣🛤🏘🏚🏚🇺🇸🎭😔 😱
Skid row is nice this time of year!
This video is so helpful! I've got a job lined up after college that's taking me to the Lehigh Valley/Bethlehem area. So now I know to steer clear of Allentown!
Allentown has a lot of nice suburb areas and main streets worth visiting. There are some crowded inner city areas that aren't as nice.
Some parts in Bethlehem is bad too. also close by the Wind creek casino
I hope you moved to Northampton County to live, just north of that area.
Bethlehem is pretty shitty also
If they could build an all star team of Officer Nick, SuperGayCop and Kyle Rittenhouse, Pennsylvania would be cleaned up in next to no time.
Omg
Lolololok
Yup,
😆
Don't be mean to Nick he is a lot nicer guy than Rittenhouse! Nick won't sue or shoot you if you disagree with him! Nick is alright ya'll
I used to go to college in Erie PA, that city could have been on here. Very dangerous downtown
Not really
I’m from Erie and at one point it was very dangerous and High crime area.
I'm glad I'm not anywhere near PA. I'm on the west Coast.
@@tomaguilar7974 oh where all the homeless live? 😱 🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🏚🦇⛺⛺⛺🏗🎪🇺🇸🎭
@@bettyschneider5268 There has been little real estate development in America except for high-end buyer. Housing for everyone else is bing priced into the stratosphere, and so are rents.
I remember as a kid going to Pennsylvania with my parents from New York. Passing through Allentown wasn't that bad but this was back in the early 90's. Sad that it has gone way down. It was pretty quaint.
Well a bunch of New Yorkers decided to stay so...there goes the neighborhood.
Obviously you haven't seen it lately!! TALK about gentrification!!! 1500 dollar a month rent for the fckin city center condos they've built in the 6 block radius
Moron@@thomaspitts9949
I live in the Lehigh Valley where Allentown is, and yes Allentown is pretty bad. Bethlehem is pretty good except the south side. Easton is only bad in west part. But Allentown's issues beat both cities. Once you go to the suburbs (I.E. Emmaus, Nazareth, Macungie, Hellertown, New Tripoli, Bath etc), it's a lot quieter.
On the reality cop show 'On Patrol', Wilkes-Barre, PA is one of the cities filmed there. You can see the amount of crime there.
Woodward is absolutely beautiful! It is the middle of nowhere and Amish country but extremely nice
he looks like a character David Arquette would play dressed up like that cop..lol
Thanks for bringing the information bro..😂😂😂😂
Nick, The beastie boys came to mind 💡at the start of this show, and especially after you sprinted off 😂
Haha I love that band
@@NickJohnson 😎🎸😎🥁
The diner pictured in New Ken is a area that i have to visit on occasion. Social security moved their office out of there.
I used to walk the streets in Wilkinsburg! My mom and dad graduated high school there.
Hey, my home state. I'm pretty much in the middle in jersey shore. Love your videos Nick. Especially your songs
The least safe places in PA according to crime statistics:
1. East Pittsburgh, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro)
2. Mount Oliver, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro)
3. Homestead, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro)
4. McKeesport, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro)
5. Chester, Delaware County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington metro)
6. McKees Rocks, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro)
7. Seven Springs, Fayette County (Pittsburgh metro)
8. Ambridge, Beaver County (Pittsburgh metro)
9. Duquesne, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro)
10. Marcus Hook, Delaware County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington metro)
If we remove the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia metro areas, the 10 worst (based only on crime stats) are:
1. Farrell, Mercer County (Youngstown, OH metro) [14th overall]
2. Harrisburg, Dauphin County (Harrisburg-Carlisle metro) [15th overall]
3. Bradford, McKean County (Bradford metro) [20th overall]
4. Wilkes-Barre township, Luzerne County (Scranton-Wilkes Barre-Hazleton metro) [21st overall]
5. Plymouth borough, Luzerne County (Scranton-Wilkes Barre-Hazleton metro) [22nd overall]
6. Steelton, Dauphin County (Harrisburg-Carlisle metro) [25th overall]
7. York, York County (York metro) [27th overall]
8. Lancaster, Lancaster County (Lancaster metro) [28th overall]
9. Selinsgrove, Snyder County (Selinsgrove metro) [31st overall]
10. Renovo, Clinton County (Lock Haven metro) [32nd overall]
If we only include communities with at least 10,000 people:
1. McKeesport, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh metro)
2. Chester, Delaware County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington)
3. Harrisburg, Dauphin County (Harrisburg-Carlisle)
4. Philadelphia, Philadelphia County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington)
5. Wilkinsburg, Allegheny County (Pittsburgh)
6. York, York County (York metro)
7. Lancaster, Lancaster County (Lancaster metro)
8. Pottstown, Montgomery County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington)
9. Coatesville, Chester County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington)
10. Yeadon, Delaware County (Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington)
96.4% of PA towns have lower violent crime rates than the national average.
94.6% of PA towns have lower property crime rates than the national average.
**I use "town" as a shorthand for towns, townships, boroughs, cities, villages, home rule municipalities, etc.. The only incorporated town in PA is actually Bloomsburg.
praxedes2, I wonder if you have been to Lancaster and how did you feel there walking around. I'm from NYC and have been thinking about moving there. Thank You in advance for your reply.
@@diose0078 Hi there! I have been to Lancaster, and I felt fine there. I was only there during the daytime though. I'm sure there are others who can answer with more experience, hopefully someone will jump in for you. Best wishes on your relocation!
@@praxedes2, Thank You, for your reply
very nice of you.
I do love the small towns in PA such as Greencastle and waynesboro are just adorable
I attend Temple University in Philadelphia and it’s honestly not that bad as what it’s made out to be by mass media
Really???
It's Kensington beach aka zombie land
I drive through there a few times a month for work and it’s awful, don’t sugarcoat it
Been liking u & ur channel since the beginning & you've only gotten better & better 😂
I wonder what the correlation is between violence and broken homes. It's taboo to discuss even though it's the elephant in the room
It's literally not taboo. And if you'd taken a high school economics class, you would understand poverty and crime rates tend to trend together almost everywhere on Earth. When your nation is so broken that people can't afford even a boiler plate decent existence, they start taking. And the thing is, they're not really wrong.
Great video as always
More concerning about Pottstown is how they street park their cars…. Who backs into street parking spots like that??
Most of NYC or so I've heard. It's actually safer if you think about it.
Lived in Manayunk /Philly for 15 years. The riots were the last straw. Police stood down for a week. Philly has become unlivable.
Hello dear , how are you doing? Please can I be your friend? Need someone to be my close friend and always talk to.
It's the lack of good leadership, for one thing.
I used your video to decide where to move to.
It used to be quiet here , and safe but now crime spillng out from inner city.
They break into car by getting the fob code somehow...
Getting a BIG dog!
Maybe get 2 big dogs & gun? Lol 😂 😎😷🔫 🐶🐺🦊🦍🐵🐒🐗
They dont get codes. They use coins and put them where people cant see in the door handle so when you lock the car with the fob it still makes the locking sound but, it does not lock. Always check your door handles. Im from Pittsburgh..things have really gone downhill..self defense and carrying something for safety is a great idea
@@gwenjoy2538
Man, that's crazy. I was wondering how they pulled that off.
@@palapalak.8907 when you work in the industry long enough you hear it all.
Dogs can be shot. Get a gun.
That is so sad and heartbreaking.... that families or anyone lives there!
My hometown, Reading, is not on the list? Wow.
I knew Chester and Harrisburg would make the list but you forgot York and Lancaster!!!
Once again nick I’m impressed with your awesome 👏🏻 videos you do. Plus your songs are catchy lol 😂 after church watching this video I sang the song 🎵. Your the man !
Pennsylvania is probably my favorite Northeastern state, though it feels much more like Ohio than it does New York.
PA is definitely more like Ohio or western NY than the Northeast. Only Philadelphia is the exception.
I grew up in southwestern new york right near PA border, lived outside of Pittsburgh for five years and now live in northeast Ohio right near the WV northern panhandle and I can honestly say that it all feels relatively the same! I think eastern PA can qualify for northeast but I feel that much of the states western half qualified as Appalachia along with the southern tier of New York and the eastern most counties of Ohio along the river
@@Mattrino101 I've been looking at St. Clairsville myself!
@@Mattrino101 Pittsburgh is the Paris of Appalachia
except for Philadelphia
This is what happens when we ship our steel and manufacturing industries overseas and switch to a “service” economy. Crap jobs, no unions, and no future except minimum wage jobs. Everyone can’t get a four year degree but the alternative is horrible.
It makes me happy when i see someone who totally gets it and tells the truth.Unfortunately you just can't convince enough people of this. Both political parties have been helping this demise of shipping jobs overseas.I personally feel it was all done on purpose to destroy America!
I concur with this. If you are old enough to remember Philly when it was a large manufacturing area you know the difference. Minority families were intact and had good factory jobs. I worked with many of the children of those families who grew up the same way I did. Father worked the good factory job with benefits, Mom stayed home and took care of the kids. The factories left and it all went downhill, especially in the minority communities.
It was the democrat party that sent jobs overseas start with bill clinton and nafta
Unions are part of the reason why many companies moved away, or closed down. Check coal towns for example.
Thank you for putting the truth out there for people who are considering to move to PA. Please continue to put the facts out there.
West chester used to have the headquarters of commodore international, the greatest home computer manufacturer ever, so every c64 and amiga lover should definitely move there.
I remember Commodore. Really nice first computer and it had fun games. Amiga was also nice.
West Chester's still a decent place, though, isn't it? Unlike Chester...
quite some time ago i was on jury duty in Reading pa. we went for lunch and a man i was walking with said to me he grew up in reading with doors unlocked now, its not possible and theres only been one change in that amount of time.
Back in the 80s you could walk all over Reading and feel pretty safe.
Back in the 80s I only went to Allentown for the mall or Nesters. That may have been in Whitehall. Allentown wasn't that bad back then. Had friends who lived in Marvin Gardens (If you live in the area you know) and it was fine.
I was born in Wilkes Barre, PA and I've lived either in or around the city my whole life. I currently own a building about two blocks outside of downtown. What was stated here about the city is accurate, unfortunately.
I live in a small town in PA and it's very safe. Also, not expensive!
The majority of PA towns are safe and affordable. I looked at the numbers and came up with 2572 (out of 3300) PA towns that are both safer than the national average and have a lower cost of living.
Hello dear , how are you doing? Please can I be your friend? Need someone to be my close friend and always talk to.
@@praxedes2 what you smokin?
@@rtmars9093 This is an 11 month old video, but from my other comments on this video:
Most of PA is safe and cheap relative to the rest of the country. I looked at 3300 PA towns for 3 criteria: violent crime rate, property crime rate and cost of living index and compared them to the national averages.
Violent Crime - 3181 / 3300 are better than the national average, ie 96.4% are safer than the US average
Property Crime - 3121 / 3300 are better than the national average, ie 94.6% are safer than the US average
Cost of Living - 2771 / 3300 are less expensive than the national average, ie 84% of PA towns cost less to live in than the US average
Towns that are better than the national average in all 3 categories: 2572 / 3300; i.e. 77.9% of PA towns are both less expensive and safer than the US average.
This doesn't deny that many of these towns have other issues, but solely on the basis of safe & affordable, there's a TON of options for places to live in PA.
So what are you smoking?
@@praxedes2 just stating the facts
The Chrysler guy Lee Iacocca (or however you spell it) grew up in Allentown from what I heard.
Nice stash Nick!🥸
Philly.....born and raised....moved out there 11 years ago......glad i did......embarrassing....Not the city of brotherly love..not for a loooooong time.
The Lehigh Valley as a whole is pretty great as far as getting a good mix of the type of life you’re looking to lead. Allentown has it’s rough spots but also has it’s bright ones. East side and south side, along with the non-gentrified area of downtown have a good amount of crime and a little violence. There’s drugs, homelessness and bad schooling. But the west side of the city and the suburbs are some of the best areas in the state as far as schooling, opportunity, and way of life go. There’s amusement/water parks, museums, art districts, nightclubs, ball parks and arenas to name some of the things to do. A lot of history in the city as well. Food scene could be better for a city of it’s size but all in all, if you stay out of the crime ridden area that ALL cities have, you may really like Allentown, Pa and almost certainly the lehigh valley. :)
Biggest downside is how expensive it is.
@@ShaneFleming2016 you got that one right, gotta get out the city or head to the Poconos to get some bang for your buck. Although, some people are willing to pay for that urban lifestyle.
@@shotbytux7688 Poconos are nice but seems people are fleeing NYC metro for there.
@@ShaneFleming2016 More likely they are priced out of the NYC area.
Real estate is a racket in some cities. The principle is incredibly simple: get as much out of the tenant as possible for living where he does. Obviously that's far less in Detroit than in New York City.
The only real estate development that I notice even in small-town America i -- this is sixty-five miles away from any city of 50,000 or more -- is high-end housing that one can afford only if one has a high-end career or if one has just sold out the family farm. This is in a poor area that has little to offer. t's been that way since the Crash of 2008.
Sheeeeeeetttt homie
Ha, I live in between Philly and Chester, it’s a few minutes to walk to chester and i’ve heard some weird things
Lot of great places in Pennsylvania. Unfortunately the bad places are really bad.
You pronunciation of Wilkes-Barre is spot on
Reading (where I work) isn't on this list, and I can truthfully say it doesn't seem to be as violent as it once was. But here's a true story: just last night, a fellow patron at a Reading Royals hockey game said when he parked along Franklin St near Santander Arena, he was propositioned by a streetwalker as soon as he got out of his car!
And was she any good
Lol 😂 🚶🏃🏻🏃🏻🏃🏻💃🏻👯👭🕺🕴🏻
@@samidan91 The gentleman joked that he spent as much time with her as it took the opposing team to score against Reading - 21 seconds!
I was surprised Reading didn’t make the list, but after doing a bit of research it looks like things aren’t as bad as they were 10 years ago.
Reading is not in the list? “clutches chest”
Moved out of the city October 1st. It’s a shame because I lived there 46 years. It’s not the city I grew up in.
13:10 didnt know that. I'm from 54th and kingsessing ave. I grew up there in the very early 80s. My family moved just before it got bad.
This sounds absolutely crazy to me as Eastern European
You don't have a Multicultural problem there
@@TheSanityMachine33 we have a close proximity to Russia, that's even worse.
@@dvanerdivkanade How about afro America right here in good old USA 🇺🇸🎭🗿🗿🗿😱
What country are you from? There’s a lot of places in Pennsylvania that have large concentrations of people with Eastern European ancestry. Schuylkill county (where I’m from) has the largest concentration of people with Lithuanian ancestry in the US. Carbon county, to the east, has the highest Slovak concentration. And Luzerne county, to the north, has the highest Polish concentration.
@@pepintheshort7913 My ancestors are Slovak and Lithuanian. I'm from Skook & Carbon - had no idea about this. In regards to the Polish population, there are parts of Chicago that seem like they should be higher than home, but I've never looked at the numbers.
This list was more sensible than others
I was shocked to see Wilkes-Barre on that list, that was my spot late 80s, just recently left new Kensington and moved back to pittsburgh, but the footage you showed wasn't middle Pittsburgh, that was a little quiet town on the outskirts called Etna
The state has some beautiful places! However, too cold for me!
Nick, your videos are always nice , thanks.
The cities are not dangerous.... it's the people living in the cities who are dangerous.
Yeah..😁😅
& because of dangerous people it causes a city to be dangerous
It’s dangerous. Paint it whatever way you want.
Thank you someone said it
No shit captain obvious
if allentown is in the top ten of PA that mean PA does not have too many dangerous places because here in allentown almost nothing really bad happend often
Johnstown, PA. Gun violence and broken homes galore.
The one thing I can say about Allentown is mind your business and be careful who you call friend. I am born and raised in Allentown and I mind my business, work and go home
You could have addressed the open air drug market in Kensington. There’s a few streets you can drive down and grab a bag of fynt or crack right on the sidewalk.
The Mayor and DA do nothing to help Philadelphia, neither does the Governor.
Crazy timing look into Allghenny county news, six separate shootings yesterday. This is unusual, just popped up on my news feed an hour or so ago
Johnstown should be on your list
I was born in Allentown, and also lived in Bethlehem and catasaqua. Those towns were not a problem so many years ago. I never had to be afraid. I'm 67 now and have been living in Oklahoma for bout 32 years.. Moved because of marriage to an okie. If it's that bad there now, sure proud I moved so long ago. But I had a fantastic childhood there and my teenage years were great. I still love Pa.
Wow! That is some dangerous neighborhoods .
Have you done any videos on any correlation between crime / violence and ethnicity, education etc? Are there any characteristics in common with dangerous areas?
Long Term Democratic control.
Ohhhhhh yes. In every slum city in America the common characteristics are identical.
They were all safe, clean, prosperous cities in the 50 and early 60s.
Pottstown is honestly not scary at all..my dad lived there for 30 years! I would walk down high st, Hanover st., all over for many years, and not scared ever...stay away from Washington Street and don't piss anyone off or deal drugs and you will be absolutely fine....I love pottstown.....
One more thing-pottstown is NOT !Pottsville!! Totally different places
It’s not bad at all when you go down high street and see all of the crack heads pushing their shopping carts. Pottstown is a dump
My Dad died in Philly b4 he could leave due to a heart attack. I'll always regret him not moving down South after retirement.
It’s ok he’s in heaven
@@dalkhal That's a nice thing for you to say. My Dad's ashes a here down South w/me. The bible says the dead are not conscious of anything at all. *See Ecclesiastes 9:5.
@@tonyawms3186 does it? What does that mean they aren’t conscious at all, are you saying when we die we just die and nothing after?
@@dalkhal When we die we don't exists anymore at all. *NOTE: ONLY God has the authority to resurrect a person, if he chooses to give that person eternal life in the heavens -OR- on the earth in Paradise.
@@tonyawms3186 is that a jehovah witness belief?
Wilkes-Barre at #9?!? Holy crap! My dad was born and raised there. We used go there about once a month because my dad, I guess, was smart enough to move out. I remember Wilkes-Barre being and old town with a lot of old folks. Oh and they had a Planters Peanut factory back in the day.
I live in Wilkes Barre now and it's disgusting. A lot of people flocked here from NJ , Philly, NY when covid started and now it's like the ghetto. I learned the difference between fireworks and gunshots from living here for the past 3 years. Disgusting when you have to live in fear because of all the people that don't give af about their lives or anyone else's. 🤮.
I live near the ski resorts south of Wilkes-Barre and the only reason I ever go there, in the day time, is for the malls and maybe a restaurant. In daylight.