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Feeling unsafe these days? Too bad, says Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Hizzoner angrily defended his record on public safety Tuesday morning, dismissing anyone who criticizes his criminal justice policies as anti-cop.

“I have absolute faith in the NYPD, and I’ll say it to anyone. Anyone who bets against the NYPD, anyone who bets the city is going to get unsafe, they don’t know what the hell they’re talking about,” de Blasio raged in a testy interview on “Good Day New York.”

When the Fox 5 show’s co-host Lori Stokes asked if “they have equal faith in you,” de Blasio snapped, “Ugh, give me a break!”

He went on to rage against police union leaders and demanded respect for the NYPD rank-and-file officers.

“I would like attention for some union loudmouths, more respect for the average officer who goes out there every day, busts their butt and actually drives down crime,” de Blasio fumed.

“If you want to honor the men and women of the NYPD how about respecting the fact that they continue to succeed and they will continue to succeed,” he added.

Ed Mullins, head of the NYPD sergeants union, is under internal investigation for tweeting a declaration of “war” against the mayor.

De Blasio dismissed New Yorkers who say they feel unsafe by pointing to his decision to bulk up the police force in 2016 as well as declining crime rates.

“I mean, come on, Lori, this isn’t a game,” de Blasio said. “How do you put more than 2,000 more officers on patrol and crime goes down six years in a row and people are trying to do this whole hype about, ‘Ohhh, I don’t feel safe.’ ”

The mayor allowed that “some people don’t feel safe, I want them to feel safe” but suggested they weren’t being serious.

“If we’re going to have a serious conversation in this city about where we’re going, you can’t miss the fact that there’s 2,000 more officers on patrol,” de Blasio said. “You can’t miss the fact that every indicator proves that we’ve driven down crime while healing the relationship with communities.”

He said former Mayor Michael Bloomberg caused a “huge problem” with stop and frisk that he’s rectified it by ending the practice and encouraging cops to establish relationships with residents on their beats.

At a Forest Hills, Queens, town hall last week, a resident told the mayor, “New York City is becoming crime city” and another said, “Mr. Mayor, I do not feel safe.”

Last month the mayor’s police commissioner, Dermot Shea, attributed a 32.5 percent increase in robberies, a 61 percent spike in car theft and an 18 percent jump in burglaries to bail reform.

The Big Apple also saw an increase in shootings and murders last year, but the overall rate of major felony crimes declined.

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