In your neighborhood, or 'some parts of Atlanta'. If there is horrible crime in your neighborhood why would you live there?
I frequently ask myself why I live here. Because my job is here, and when I first moved to Atlanta I enjoyed being able to commute on foot and later by bike? Because there's a great airport that I can be at in 20 minutes, and from there I can be whisked to Bonaire in 3 hours, Cozumel in 2, etc.? Because I can drive down to Florida in a few hours? Because I can walk to the Georgia Aquarium from my residence in 10 minutes? Sure, I could live in the supposedly safer northern suburbs, further from the airport, but I choose not to. The commuter traffic is abominable--as bad as Los Angeles. So I and many other urban dwellers prefer to tough it out. There are restaurants and bars in town--it's really not so bad a life ... except for the crime and the traffic.
Most of the shootings I see on the news each morning are indeed in parts of the city comfortably distant from where I live. But I can think of very few of my urban dweller friends who have not told me of SOME kind of criminal act they suffered, whether a smash-and-grab from their car, or a home burglary, or something even worse. I live in a supposedly upscale loft condo building--converted old warehouse, etc.--populated by professional types like me. In 15 years here, I have had my car window broken twice--once in the supposedly secure parking lot, and once elsewhere in downtown while parked on the street. Vandals have hit our parking lot several times over those years, and I don't know how many smash-and-grabs there have been in total, but probably quite a few. Similarly to Bonaire, people with convertibles DO leave their car doors unlocked in my parking lot. We haven't had any serious incident of violent crime--the closest might be someone on the first floor who just last week found an intruder on his patio who had somehow hopped over the security fence. The cops were called, and the intruder's story was that he was escaping someone chasing him with a gun. Friends who live in houses, not condo buildings, elsewhere in the urban Atlanta area have suffered burglaries. A simple burglary is a big yawn here. The alarm goes off, and the burglars are gone with the valuables by the time the cops arrive 20 minutes later. This is the reality of a gritty American city. I can't imagine it's better in New Orleans or Detroit or wherever.
I suppose the crime has some impact on the city as a whole, and that the city would have some motivation to crack down on crime. Atlanta is a major convention city, for example. But despite whatever efforts the city has made, the crime persists. I guess the authorities everywhere are just as unmotivated.
So lets think reasonably about statements like that - Atlanta is a city of 500,000, about 5 million if you consider the Atlanta region, the 9th largest in the USA. So you want to compare the crime rate of a tiny 100 square mile island to Atlanta, a place with a 35,000% larger population? Try a comparison like Brunswick Georgia pop (15,000) to Bonaire for a comparison that starts to make any sense.
I don't have
per capita figures to compare, but that's what I would like to see. I suspect figures are hard to come by for Bonaire because so much of the petty crime goes unreported. Burglaries, sure, but not all the smash-and-grabs. Bottom line is that I feel safer in Bonaire than Atlanta. In Atlanta I park my car every day and it's almost always left alone. In Bonaire I believe I can park my truck all over the island during my one week a year stay and it's almost always going to be left alone. If I were a victim of just one smash-and-grab (which I won't be because I leave the windows down) over the course of many many vacation days, I would think little of it. A burglary might be a different matter, but then I am cautious about where I stay on Bonaire.
Your mention of Brunswick, GA is interesting, because I know it's considered a high crime region. I couldn't resist Googling:
"With a crime rate of 92 per one thousand residents, Brunswick has one of the highest crime rates in America compared to all communities of all sizes - from the smallest towns to the very largest cities. One's chance of becoming a victim of either violent or property crime here is one in 11." Brunswick GA crime rates and statistics - NeighborhoodScout
Bonaire seems safe enough from my perspective. Sure, they could improve law enforcement if they want to keep the tourist revenue flowing, as could Atlanta, Brunswick, and many other places. I don't have the answers.