Ice Maiden wrote: » Can't relate at all tbh. Is this happening or is the Prendeville show (hysterical programme) just saying it? Are these constant incidents or isolated individual ones? Cork is amazingly safe. Much more so than Dublin/Limerick. What parents are afraid to leave their children go into town? I agree there is a lack of police but no way do junkies and violent offenders have free reign of the place.
xabi wrote: » Take your head out of the sand, city is disaster zone.
xabi wrote: » that's your impression, mine is different and a lot of people I know have the same opinion, Cork is not a safe city. I recently had reason to be in Gurranabraher and Shandon Street, I felt really uneasy there and couldn't wait to get away.
xabi wrote: » that's your impression, mine is different and a lot of people I know have the same opinion, Cork is not a safe city. I recently had reason to be in Gurranabraher and Shandon Street, I felt really uneasy there and couldn't wait to get away. Used needles left in parks, outside schools, in family restaurants, muggings with machetes', unprovoked attacks every weekend, drunks freely pissing on the street, being accosted by junkies and drunks every single time im out, the list goes on...
Ice Maiden wrote: Can't relate at all tbh. Is this happening or is the Prendeville show (hysterical programme) just saying it? Are these constant incidents or isolated individual ones? Cork is amazingly safe. Much more so than Dublin/Limerick.
xabi wrote: » I recently had reason to be in Gurranabraher and Shandon Street, I felt really uneasy there and couldn't wait to get away.
stefanovich wrote: » Limerick is very safe, not sure where you get your information.
A Rogue Hobo wrote: » Cork city centre is very safe. There's definitely rough areas to it but it is a fraction of the problems Dublin has trust me.
testaccount123 wrote: Neither Cork or Dublin are dangerous cities. Grow up lads.
A Rogue Hobo wrote: » I lived in Dublin for almost 20 years, it's gotten a lot worse in the last 4-6 years mostly from a huge lack of Garda presence, and I'm not including the time 10 years ago when I was mugged.
bk wrote: Now if you want to see a real dangerous city, try Rio. They turn off the traffic lights there at 10pm as no one stops for the traffic anyway after 10 due to fear of armed car jackings. Every house is surrounded by 10 foot, razor wire tipped fences and has bars on all the windows and doors. Nice apartment buildings have private security at the door armed with shut guns/assault rifles and bullet proof jackets!
A Rogue Hobo wrote: » Yeah, I don't think anyone here was claiming Rio is exactly the most tranquil place in the world though? Haha. Thankfully our cities will never be that bad, don't think anyone here is saying that. I'm more coming from the point of view that it's a bit sad to see our standards of cities dip, when our country is known to be such a welcoming place to come to.
bk wrote: » But the OP was calling Cork dangerous when it really isn't. Yes it has become a very little bit less attractive, with more obvious number of junkies on our streets, but that really doesn't make it dangerous. Yes, we do need to tackle the junky problem. Yes we need more Gardai on our streets, we need more laws to move on beggars and troublesome people. But we also need to tackle the root cause of these junkies. I think we need to follow Portugal's example of decriminalising drugs, while putting more resources into rehabilitation.
xabi wrote: » Trust me, it's not safe.
munstermagic11 wrote: » I walked through the city for a number of hours at the weekend, safely. So I can't trust you.
xabi wrote: » So did I, saw at least 3 drunks /junkies pissing in the street, asked for a fag twice by zombies, its an intimidating place at night, cant see how anyone can say otherwise.
munstermagic11 wrote: » Because thousands of people frequent the city at night without issue, that's why. If three people pissing and being asked twice for a fag end up frightening you, then you need to get out of the city fast and move to a remote location.