In principle, we are in agreement here. There is clearly oppression present in The Lou. I think it's mostly systemic and partly self-inflicted. Bottom line is, until and unless the people are willing to take some ownership of their part the problems and participate in the solutions, nothing substantive will change. If it's only LE doing the changing, the problem has a better chance of getting worse rather than better. The culture needs to change, police can't do much in that regard.
I don't expect a lock down, I just expect the give and take to go both ways. They've opened meetings to people, brought in federal officials to listen and dictate rules, they're forgiving warrants by the hundred thousand. They're being as PC as they can without selling out. Yet, the fallout from a no-bill announcement will look the same as it would if they did none of that stuff. Again, they are addressing the rhetoric, not the actual problems.
I am sure they would answer in the affirmative. I'd prefer to ask what[/] they find oppressive about their lives and visit every single respondent who cites systemic problems rather than rhetorical ones. I'd ask those people to articulate how they would deal with gangsters and thugs. I'd imagine their answers wouldn't look much different than how LE deals with them now.