Kansas City, Missouri

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Kansas City, Missouri is a city in western Missouri. There is also a Kansas City located nearby in eastern Kansas. It is the largest city in Missouri with an estimated population of 444,965 as of 2005,[1] however, the St. Louis Metro region is larger than the Kansas City Metro Area. Typically the two state region is referred to as "Kansas City", and as far as the two specific cities called Kansas City, "KCMO" refers to the Missouri city and "KCK" referring to the Kansas city. Kansas City is known as the "City of Fountains" because it has more fountains than any city in the world other than Rome.[2]

It is home to the NFL's Kansas City Chiefs which were a founding team of the American Football League in 1960 with founder Lamar Hunt. Major League Baseball's Kansas City Royals, makes their home in Kansas City, MO. Both the Chiefs and Royals share a parking lot near each other at the Truman Sports complex off Interstate 70 near Interstate 435. The Kansas International Speedway (KIS) is located in Kansas City, Kansas. The KIS opened in 2004 and host many NASCAR and Indy series races and other events.

The Federal Reserve Bank has one of the twelve system banks of the Federal Reserve System in Kansas City. This makes Missouri unique in being the only state to have two Federal Reserve Banks in the same state.

The Kansas City area is the base of operation for Hallmark, Sprint-Nextel, Applebee's, Garmin, Unity Church, Russell Stover Candies to name a few.

Kansas City area politics

Kansas City, Missouri has had two Republican mayors in the past 100 years. The mayor as of 2020 is Quinton Lucas, a Democrat.

Missouri

  • Missouri's 4th congressional district - the far east suburbs in Ray County plus a vast stretch of rural areas to the east and south. Currently represented by Ike Skelton (Democrat)
  • Missouri's 5th congressional district – all of Kansas City proper in Jackson County plus Independence and portions of Cass County. Currently represented by [[Emanuel Cleaver (Democrat)
  • Missouri's 6th congressional district – all of Kansas City proper north of the Missouri River and plus suburbs in eastern Jackson County beyond Independence and a vast stretch of suburbs and rural areas extending all the way to the Iowa border and more than 100 miles. Currently represented by Sam Graves (Republican)

Kansas

  • Kansas's 2nd congressional district – the extended suburbs beyond Johnson and Wyandotte counties plus the entire eastern third of Kansas. Currently represented by Nancy Boyda (Democrat).
  • Kansas's 3rd congressional district – the near west suburbs in Johnson and Wyandotte counties plus a section of Douglas County and Lawrence. Currently represented by Dennis Moore (Democrat)

Hosted national political conventions

Kansas City has hosted the 1900 Democratic National Convention, the 1928 Republican National Convention, which nominated Herbert Hoover from Iowa for President, and the memorable 1976 Republican National Convention, which nominated Kansas U.S. Senator Bob Dole for Vice President. The 1976 Republican National Convention was held at Kemper Arena.

Kansas City consistently votes Democratic in Presidential elections (due in large part to a large presence of federal employees -- no fewer than 146 agencies maintain a presence in the area due to its central location in the country), however on the state and local level Republicans often find some modest success, especially in the Northland and other parts of Kansas City that are predominately suburban.

2020 Marxist insurrection

4 year old LeGend Taliffero.
See also: 2020 Marxist insurrection

KCUR reported following the Minneapolis riots, Kansas City's Black Lives Matter protests lasted late into the night.[3] The crowd removed barricades and began walking neighborhoods, chanting “Who's streets? Our streets!” and " “No justice, no peace!". Facebook an advertisement saying "Black Lives Matter. Enough is Enough”. More than 3,000 people showed up. Police announced they found “stashes of bricks and rocks in & around the Plaza and Westport to be used during a riot”. The Daily Caller reported:

Kansas City police officers found bricks and rocks staged near protest sites around the city, stoking concerns that individuals or groups had pre-planned looting and destruction that hit the city over the weekend, the department said Sunday.

“We have learned of & discovered stashes of bricks and rocks in & around the Plaza and Westport to be used during a riot,” the department said in a tweet on Sunday.[4]

On May 30, 2020 "protesters" set a police car on fire. broke windows, and vandalized the Country Club Plaza business district including, Foot Locker, Victoria's Secret, H&M, The North Face, Cafe Trio, Season's 52, P.F. Chang's and other employers struggling to revive after the coronavirus lockdown.[5] On June 1, 2020 protests grew more violent as protesters threw rocks and bottles at police.[6][7][8] More than 150 people were arrested.[9] Jackson County’s prosecutor, Jean Peters Baker, refused to file charges against anyone and Mayor Quinton Lucas said he would likely pardon anyone if she did. Meantime the prosecutor encouraged rioters to file charges against police.[10] In the first week of June there were more than 230 arrests at the protest.

Kansas City had 68 homicides when the riots started and was on pace for a recorded year, over the next 90 days the homicides doubled to 139.[11] About three-quarters of the victims are young black mean as well as most of the suspects.[12]

Four-year-old Legend Taliferro was shot while he slept in his bedroom early on the morning of June 29, 2020. Kansas City Police believe this was not a random shooting and that the apartment was targeted.[13] A week later, some 200 federal law enforcement agents from the FBI, U.S. Marshals Service and other agencies surged into Kansas City. Mayor Lucas said he was blindsided by the White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany's announcement of Operation LeGend. The mayor was found later to have been lying.

References