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Actors Daniel Dae Kim, Daniel Wu offer $25K reward after 91-year-old shoved to ground in Oakland's Chinatown

I live in one of the coastal cities near LAX. Weather is not bad right now, this whole week is going to be in the mid-70's in the daytime, at night it dips into the low 40's at times. But you pay out the nose. A 900 sqft. condo is over a million and a half for example. Very densely packed but clean and well served area with restaurants, hospitals, beaches close by.


Yeah these are the new low temp lighted panels with either LED or LCD backlights. The older ones in California actually used outdoor incandescent or fluorescent bulbs. These panels are rated for outdoor use, and can stand temperatures from below -40 degrees to +120 degrees F.
What the public safety situation like? Places like Irvine say they are the safest city in the country, but digging a little deeper the word is they don’t let people report certain crimes. Also, considering it is a well known upper middle class area break-ins are common.

Did you hear about the Twitter back and forth between Casey Neistat and Seth Rogan after Casey’s car got broken into an he flipped his S*** on Twitter and Seth Replied it is part of living in a Big City.

I think I’d be willing to pay the higher COL (considering the High COL here in NYC), if was safe enough and California looked like it was doing something to keep its books balanced so people wouldn't feel desperate.
 
What the public safety situation like? Places like Irvine say they are the safest city in the country, but digging a little deeper the word is they don’t let people report certain crimes. Also, considering it is a well known upper middle class area break-ins are common.

Did you hear about the Twitter back and forth between Casey Neistat and Seth Rogan after Casey’s car got broken into an he flipped his S*** on Twitter and Seth Replied it is part of living in a Big City.

I think I’d be willing to pay the higher COL (considering the High COL here in NYC), if was safe enough and California looked like it was doing something to keep its books balanced so people wouldn't feel desperate.

The pace and vibe of NYC is totally different than that of LA. LA is very relaxed compared to NYC. People are not high strung like NYC, they are very casual and approachable. It's another world. Residential areas are strictly residential, zoning is very well enforced in textbook fashion.

I have rarely heard of break-ins in the Westside area that I live in. Pretty much unheard of.

LA is also very avant-garde as regards to people's tastes and their open attitudes. Like NYC but more liberal.

Gas station signs and big ugly store signs are controlled and hidden using landscaping to preserve property values.

Irvine is in OC isn't it? Well I couldn't tell you about OC - that is 50 miles away.

Certain areas in LA are better policed where well-heeled families live i.e. wealthier neighborhoods.

Safety depends on property prices. Higher property taxes you pay buys/supports better police services.

Since most of the coastal communities in the Westside of LA county are really expensive - they have very competent police forces (probably the best trained/equipped anywhere) and crime is extremely well-controlled (stopped before it happens). There are routine chopper patrols sometimes at night (you cannot hear them though) and they pursue and apprehend criminals very unobtrusively.

But like I said, the flipside is that property is expensive. But probably not as expensive as NYC.

Like everything else, there's crime to some degree everywhere but you have to talk to local residents about which areas are safe. Some areas are so well policed, that the criminals don't target those places and move onto easier targets. I don't live in sub-par crime ridden areas so I cannot guide you on those.

Los Angeles has five counties and there are good and bad cities in all these counties. You just have to talk to locals and find out. I can only tell you about the Westside where I live. Which is mostly safe and almost boring in that sense, even with some homeless present in downtown Santa Monica.
 
The pace and vibe of NYC is totally different than that of LA. LA is very relaxed compared to NYC. People are not high strung like NYC, they are very casual and approachable. It's another world. Residential areas are strictly residential, zoning is very well enforced in textbook fashion.

I have rarely heard of break-ins in the Westside area that I live in. Pretty much unheard of.

LA is also very avant-garde as regards to people's tastes and their open attitudes. Like NYC but more liberal.

Gas station signs and big ugly store signs are controlled and hidden using landscaping to preserve property values.

Irvine is in OC isn't it? Well I couldn't tell you about OC - that is 50 miles away.

Certain areas in LA are better policed where well-heeled families live i.e. wealthier neighborhoods.

Safety depends on property prices. Higher property taxes you pay buys/supports better police services.

Since most of the coastal communities in the Westside of LA county are really expensive - they have very competent police forces (probably the best trained/equipped anywhere) and crime is extremely well-controlled (stopped before it happens). There are routine chopper patrols sometimes at night (you cannot hear them though) and they pursue and apprehend criminals very unobtrusively.

But like I said, the flipside is that property is expensive. But probably not as expensive as NYC.

Like everything else, there's crime to some degree everywhere but you have to talk to local residents about which areas are safe. Some areas are so well policed, that the criminals don't target those places and move onto easier targets. I don't live in sub-par crime ridden areas so I cannot guide you on those.

Los Angeles has five counties and there are good and bad cities in all these counties. You just have to talk to locals and find out. I can only tell you about the Westside where I live. Which is mostly safe and almost boring in that sense, even with some homeless present in downtown Santa Monica.
Very informative, thanks
 
The pace and vibe of NYC is totally different than that of LA. LA is very relaxed compared to NYC. People are not high strung like NYC, they are very casual and approachable. It's another world. Residential areas are strictly residential, zoning is very well enforced in textbook fashion.

I have rarely heard of break-ins in the Westside area that I live in. Pretty much unheard of.

LA is also very avant-garde as regards to people's tastes and their open attitudes. Like NYC but more liberal.

Gas station signs and big ugly store signs are controlled and hidden using landscaping to preserve property values.

Irvine is in OC isn't it? Well I couldn't tell you about OC - that is 50 miles away.

Certain areas in LA are better policed where well-heeled families live i.e. wealthier neighborhoods.

Safety depends on property prices. Higher property taxes you pay buys/supports better police services.

Since most of the coastal communities in the Westside of LA county are really expensive - they have very competent police forces (probably the best trained/equipped anywhere) and crime is extremely well-controlled (stopped before it happens). There are routine chopper patrols sometimes at night (you cannot hear them though) and they pursue and apprehend criminals very unobtrusively.

But like I said, the flipside is that property is expensive. But probably not as expensive as NYC.

Like everything else, there's crime to some degree everywhere but you have to talk to local residents about which areas are safe. Some areas are so well policed, that the criminals don't target those places and move onto easier targets. I don't live in sub-par crime ridden areas so I cannot guide you on those.

Los Angeles has five counties and there are good and bad cities in all these counties. You just have to talk to locals and find out. I can only tell you about the Westside where I live. Which is mostly safe and almost boring in that sense, even with some homeless present in downtown Santa Monica.

Not to be a stalker, but Casey Neistat lives in Santa Monica from what I could gather. Not a bad neighborhood. Probably why he felt pi**ed off that the break in could happen there

 
Not to be a stalker, but Casey Neistat lives in Santa Monica from what I could gather. Not a bad neighborhood. Probably why he felt pi**ed off that the break in could happen there


Yeah lately too many renters and non-residents in these cities. Can't blame non-resident people for wanting to live here, being that most places in these cities are less than fifteen minutes from the beach.

But yeah, one off things do happen. Does not mean it's a trend.

These are people's backyards in Venice Beach....

venicebeach_losangeles_waterfront__homes-9463f0af85c6b820daf7b86c409497e4.jpg
 
Yeah lately too many renters and non-residents in these cities. Can't blame non-resident people for wanting to live here, being that most places in these cities are less than fifteen minutes from the beach.

But yeah, one off things do happen. Does not mean it's a trend.

These are people's backyards in Venice Beach....

venicebeach_losangeles_waterfront__homes-9463f0af85c6b820daf7b86c409497e4.jpg

That’s true, and the cops got his stuff back ASAP and arrested the guy. Yeah Venice,CA wouldn’t be Venice without the canals. It’s not just the boardwalk along the beach.

BTW, The youtuber “German in Venice” documented the two month process of the LAPD clearing the beach of all the homeless and at last could the permanent homeless population was only 160, which they got into shelters.
 
Typical properties in Santa Monica, which is one of the older turn of the century cities in LA. These houses were built in "Spanish Revival Mission Architecture" style in the 1920's for movie stars back then, this is a pervasive style for local housing even today all across coastal California. But we have strayed far from the subject of the thread, my apologies.
1080px-North_of_Montana_Santa_Monica_CA5.JPG


1087px-North_of_Montana_Santa_Monica_CA1.JPG
 

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