there s nowhere else to go. there s hundreds of tent cities. this just happens to be the largest one. what they re doing is now the city is trying to work with a lot of the nonprofits and they ve decided to spend like $4 million trying to help people in the camp get housing, actually subsidizing the rent for a year or two. the only problem is they ve given people vouchers and those people cannot find a place that will accept them. it s just the cost of living has gone skyrocketed. so now they re looking at, okay, we need to build affordable housing. it s not a place where there s public housing projects or anything like that so that s the issue. alexia campbell, thank you very much. the piece is online at nationaljournal.com. great job. still ahead, jon stewart s hilarious take on the st. louis rams nonapology apology. plus, defense secretary by default. we ll take a look at the man who was left standing when the music stopped. poor guy. i really feel so sorry for him. i ve been
though. i m asking in the south bronx. we re talking ferguson, not the best part of st. louis or downtown st. louis, so if are you if ferguson, a lot of people don t realize, it s a crime ridden neighborhood where this happened. who are you looking at? again, i don t want to get storm tracker 2000ed. i want to stick to data. you know, because mike bloomberg said something in the new yorker or the new york magazine that offended a lot of people. he said, look at the hard numbers, too es are the two areas where we have an overwhelming majority of crime in new york city and these are the people demographically based on data post-likely to exit crimes. that s where we focus our policeing on. there is a flaw. exactly. if the stop and frisk were located in the south bronx or those neighborhoods, i would believe that. they re not. you keep talking stop and frisk. i m talking policing in general. if you are talking about