SEATTLE, WA. (THECOUNT) — Via Eric Johnson KOMO reporter: Seattle Is Dying. It’s a harsh title. Someone on social media even called it a “hopeless” title. I’ll admit to you that I wrestled with the name for some time. Too dramatic, I wondered? Too dark? In the end I went with it because I believe it to be true. I believe that Seattle is dying. Rotting from within.
It’s about citizens who don’t feel safe taking their families into downtown Seattle. It’s about parents who won’t take their children into the public parks they pay for. It’s about filth and degradation all around us. And theft and crime. It’s about people who don’t feel protected anymore, who don’t feel like their voices are being heard.
This program is not about demonizing those who are struggling with addiction and homelessness and mental illness. On the contrary. Instead, it asks the question, “Why aren’t we doing more? Why don’t we have the courage to intervene in lives that are, in the face of a grave sickness, reeling out of control?”
It’s called, Seattle is Dying, and I believe the title to be true. But it’s not a hopeless program. There are ideas and concepts in the show that could start conversations about change.
SAVANNAH, GA. (THECOUNT) -- Savannah Police have apprehended 31-year-old Terrell Akeem Nelson in connection with…
BAINBRIDGE, GA. (THECOUNT) -- Authorities have identified the victims and the suspect involved in a…
BLOOMFIELD, CT. (THECOUNT) -- Tragedy struck the Bloomfield, Connecticut community on Wednesday when 14-year-old Jahkye…
THE COTSWOLDS, UK. (THECOUNT) -- Ellen DeGeneres and Portia De Rossi, who recently relocated from…
DANVILLE, IL. (THECOUNT) -- A tragic shooting in Danville on Wednesday, November 27, claimed the…
ERIE COUNTY, PA (THECOUNT) -- Governor Josh Shapiro has mobilized the Pennsylvania National Guard to…