The_Kew_Tour wrote: » Cork used see be great City. So glad I decided enough is enough and moved out of it. Best thing I ever did. Each to their own though. These types of attacks are happening all over, they just seem be more accepted now.
s1ippy wrote: » - Douglas SC getting nearly burned down by a lady driving in with smoking car bonnet whose engine then exploded
smurgen wrote: » Was in the city over the weekend and I must say there's a definite change in how it feels now. It seems like a free for all with drug addicts and alcoholics. Seem two incidents Saturday in broad daylight that looked violent.
Straight Talker wrote: » it seems the new dedicated garda unit, to deal with drug related crime in town, is not making much of a difference.
wally1990 wrote: » Walked through North main street for the first time in a long long time , christ, it is absolutely an awful looking spot now, very run down , the top half is brutal from the casino/slots shop down to the hardware store , the bottom half isn't much better
rob316 wrote: » Place should be bulldozed to the ground, its an absolute eyesore. Dunnes leaving that street but the final nail in it.
rob316 wrote: » I see more and more people approached for money and they are handing it over. It must be intimidating for them, I don't even acknowledge when I'm asked I just walk on. "Sorry bud do ya have €2 for the bus" The city isn't policed, most of us saw frontline gaurds on the beat for the first time in a while during the lockdown. Still its far from the worst and alot of the incidents the OP mentioned above are regular occurences in most cities.
LessOutragePlz wrote: » No city in the world is going to be perfect, us Irish love a good moan and focusing on the negative aspect of things. Cork city has plenty of positive things going for it and they far outweigh the negatives.
Straight Talker wrote: » I think the spate of violent crime in the city, within the past year has been unprecedented. There always has been crime in Cork, but we have seemed to have reached the bottom of the barrel this past year. I agree that the city is far from the worst, but the difference between the city now compared to 10 to 15, or even as recently as 6 years ago is pretty jarring. I ignore these people as well, but it must be very intimidating for women and the elderly etc. Cork has a lot of positives, it's a great city overall, but at the moment the city centre is overrun with junkies and winos. You say that things aren't that bad, well they aren't that great either.
igCorcaigh wrote: » Most of the winos are sound. Difficult lives, but harmless. I remember around 10 years ago a lot of the new types came in from Dublin and places, some of them were nasty. Big heroin problem now, totally due to bad government policy if you ask me, but I have no idea how either of these cohorts contribute to the crime problem we have.
Voltairey wrote: » There were a lot of people just staggering around the place. I can't walk very fast due to an injury
whisky_galore wrote: » Was checking my phone waiting for someone and this oul codger wino asks for spare change. I ignored him. Then he asks a second time and gives me a shoulder, then I told him to fûck off for himself.
s1ippy wrote: » Developments on the murder of Francis Dunne over the weekend, which is great news. The rumour mill had it that the person who did it was long gone out of the country but that was very much unfounded.https://twitter.com/CorkSafetyAlert/status/1282659166427975680?s=19
corks finest wrote: » Yes it's gone to ****