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‘We are hiding out with no water’: Detroit privatizers deny poor people their right to water
The San Francisco Bay View - A National Black Newspaper ^ | June 28, 2014 | Tiny aka Lisa Gray-Garcia, Poor News Network

Posted on 06/28/2014 5:50:44 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

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To: jmcenanly

The Detroit river is where the water comes from now.


141 posted on 06/29/2014 4:41:22 AM PDT by cripplecreek (Remember the River Raisin.)
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To: EEGator

He’s donating his skin tags to be used as a burning fuel source...


142 posted on 06/29/2014 4:41:29 AM PDT by Netz
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To: jmcenanly
Where does our drinking water come from?

"In Michigan, we are fortunate that even the less desirable sources are better than many sources that must be relied upon in other areas of the country," she said. "In terms of the degree of treatment necessary to make water potable, groundwater is usually considered the best source, followed by the Great Lakes and then inland streams and lakes." Ann Arbor gets about 85 percent of its water from the Huron River. The raw water from each source is blended together and treated at the city's water treatment plant so all customers receive the same water quality.

YCUA buys its drinking water from Detroit, which gets it from the Detroit River.

143 posted on 06/29/2014 4:47:57 AM PDT by cripplecreek (Remember the River Raisin.)
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To: Mogger

Today , the Child Protection Services would swoop in and “rescue” the children, in other words destroy the family so they can have government jobs.

Drive through any Western State and notice the remains of still standing pioneer homes. Today, that would be considered child abuse by government workers who treasure their jobs more than the welfare of the children. Those tiny little shacks housed **huge** but ***successful*** families.

The poor interviewed in this article are indeed in a Catch 22 when it comes to the CPS..


144 posted on 06/29/2014 5:43:47 AM PDT by wintertime
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To: Still Thinking
Apparently, in these people's “minds”, “public” is synonymous with “free”.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Why shouldn't they think that? They spent 13 or more years in “free” indoctrination camps ( Opps! government single-payer schools) with Marxist trained teachers.

Remember! Any child in a government single-payer school risks learning that the same voting mob that gives them “tuition-free” schooling is also powerful enough to give them **lots** of “free” stuff!

145 posted on 06/29/2014 5:47:46 AM PDT by wintertime
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To: Bogey78O
Let’s see. A group of people want a product but they don’t want to pay for it. They want others to labor for it without compensation.
Where have I heard of this before?
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

If you went to a government single-payer K-12 school or state university or college you lived it every day for years!

Remember. When a child attends a government single-payer K-12 school, then risk learning that the same voting mob that gives them tuition-free schooling can also give them **lots** of “free” stuff!

146 posted on 06/29/2014 5:54:19 AM PDT by wintertime
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To: dsc
Try Here: Williston ND

Even grey haired white guys find jobs there.

147 posted on 06/29/2014 6:02:56 AM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: berdie

I had a well dug, 24 years ago. It cost me $500, and has since given me good, clean water, and 23 years of various veggies, out of my garden.

The small electric pump uses pennies per day, and I have a hand pump for power outages.

All the folks around me have wells....I think I’m the only one with a manual pump, though.

Not that big of a secret.


148 posted on 06/29/2014 6:09:28 AM PDT by SgtBob (Freedom is not for the faint of heart. Semper Fi!)
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To: varyouga
I doubt Detroit well or river water is safe to drink.

I'll bet the well quality is fine, especially in that geographic location...it was covered with a mile thick sheet of ice 15,000 years ago...

What if your local water became polluted, the sole municipality kept increasing your rates and you did not have the means to leave (because nobody wants to buy your polluted property in a dying area)? That is basically what happened in Detroit.

I don't mess with "what if"'s, or straw-man theory...I deal in the now, the facts, realville. If my water were to get polluted, I would clean it with charcoal, and boiling. If it was beyond cleaning, I would move.

I don't live in a municipality.

I’m having very good luck.

Fleeing a top-down authoritarian government, and coming to a country that is rapidly headed that way, doesn't sound like good luck, to me.

I just believe people should be held responsible for stepping on the freedoms of others. The polluters and government agents who allowed it are responsible for the lack of natural drinking water.

I believe the original post was about people not paying their water bill, and having service disconnected. If you want a service, any service, you have to pay for it.

As far as government agents go it should only be the local court...if some person, company, or corporation is polluting your water, you sue them in court to make things right.

Water is as essential and natural as air and must remain available as it did in nature.

Water is abundant, and still available in nature, but it is not a Constitutional Right. You can provide it by your own means, as I have, or you can have someone provide it for you....and pay for it.

149 posted on 06/29/2014 7:33:34 AM PDT by SgtBob (Freedom is not for the faint of heart. Semper Fi!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
plantation prisons. couldn't read any farther than that comment. shaking head jpg
150 posted on 06/29/2014 8:11:14 AM PDT by ColdOne (I miss my poochie... Tasha 2000~3/14/11))
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I wonder if these people in Detroit know that all those illegals crossing the border get all the water they want?


151 posted on 06/29/2014 8:13:44 AM PDT by ColdOne (I miss my poochie... Tasha 2000~3/14/11))
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To: Aliska

The government, be it local, state, or federal produces nothing, and therefore has nothing to sell for profit. It must confiscate from you, and me property (earned wages are property) to give to others. That is not a legitimate, Constitutional function of government.

Government largess has caused the problem. “Look how good we are! We gave money to the poor!” Good intentions, right? We’re not allowed to talk of the consequences, because of political correctness. Glad I’m not PC;-)

This largess has successful destroyed the black family, and some whites. It has removed the father from the responsibility of raising a family, and child bearing into a hobby. Their condition of life is one borne of irresponsible behavior, bad decisions, choice, or a combination. Do I want to reward that? Not so much, but the government compels me to do so under threat of fines, or confinement.

If people were to take advantage of their freedom, and “play” by the rules of Common Law, everyone would benefit. Everyone providing for their own family, shelter, clothing, food, water. Yes there would be few, but some who couldn’t provide for themselves, and I think that’s where Isaiah’s admonition comes in play. I think it’s an admonition to individuals, not government.

I’ve had strays under my roof many times two legged, and four, and no strangers. The two legged provided labor for their keep, the four legged provided a big wet tongue, cold wet nose, and a tail wag for their’s....and security...keeping squirrels out of the garden:-)


152 posted on 06/29/2014 9:54:19 AM PDT by SgtBob (Freedom is not for the faint of heart. Semper Fi!)
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To: JoeFromSidney
The little boy in the Russian video was carrying it in a bucket. All sorts of thoughts of appreciation and taking for granted ran through my mind. Maybe his mother or grandmother needed to do some dishes or cook or clean or all three, how much do they need to haul to take a bath? Don't even think about the toilet, may be out back. Then if there is sickness. Imagine trudging for it in their horrible winters.

I have found wheelbarrows in my advanced age a little tricky to balance and with a heavy load, easy to tip over. I was hauling 50# or so bags of compost, topsoil. The river rock. Forget it. I worked out of the trunk of my car until it was used up lol.

153 posted on 06/29/2014 11:54:59 AM PDT by Aliska
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To: SgtBob
Thank you for the thoughtful response to my post. When I back off and look at the bigger picture, I agree with you entirely. And that is how it used to be. The government was not in the business of micromanaging any kind of welfare unless it would be pensions for the wars.

And yes they have destroyed families; news and Hollywood, the music industry had a hand in it too with declining morals.

Let's hope those people in Detroit had their DPT shots. I will tell how it used to be before we had those, lost several ancestors. One was in KC, MO, Mother died of typhus, looked and looked for one son and found him in the same register 10 days later dying of the same thing. Unsanitary conditions cause it and it doesn't necessarily mean people were dirty but kids, outdoor toilets, flies, doesn't take much.

So I rail against so many immunizations now but haven't lost a family member from that for maybe 2 generations now.

I can talk both sides of the welfare/disability situation. And absolutely you do not want to reward bad behavior.

The only thing that has contributed to it you didn't mention is that so many jobs have been outsourced that a lot of these people could have done for better wages. But it looks to me like they have just written off blacks in favor of Hispanics.

Destruction of the family is the key. Until we get some of our morals back which isn't going to happen, it is just going to get worse until Christ Himself comes back.

I understood the passage from Isaiah was for individuals. There was no government welfare ever until the Anglo nations went for it. In my mind I see a picture of people able and willing to work marching on ahead, living more or less by Judeo Christian values, ongoing inflation that never gets rolled back, and the people who choose to have multiple children out of wedlock what is left for them? It's just spiralled out of control, left behind to be repeated by future generations only there is going to be a breaking point where it can't go on the way it has.

Churches used to help, didn't say anything about that; it gets too complicated; I don't know if they could collectively sacrifice and carry the whole load or not. I don't expect churches to help drug users and alcoholics but then something has to be done for their dependents if they have any.

So that woman at the well Jesus talked to. That water was free but she had to go fetch it. The building of the well had been long since "amortized" and any periodic maintenance was probably borne by the community for the good of all. Just a guess, not idealizing that society but they did have a number of things going for it. Jubilee. Now it's some church ritual, I don't know the purpose of it.

154 posted on 06/29/2014 12:30:50 PM PDT by Aliska
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To: varyouga
I doubt Detroit well or river water is safe to drink.

boil it.....bleach helps some problems too.

155 posted on 06/29/2014 3:33:05 PM PDT by terycarl
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To: terycarl

Then they can by Mio by the case.

It really changes your water.


156 posted on 06/29/2014 3:34:29 PM PDT by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: Smokin' Joe

I haven’t seen want ads like that in decades.


157 posted on 06/29/2014 3:37:31 PM PDT by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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To: cripplecreek

The Detroit system covers a large area, about 1000 sq miles and has bonding for over $1 billion worth of construction in the next four years to maintain its system.

I noticed from me fact sheets posted from last year, the average residential service is for 1000cuft of water for about $90/mo.

The article indicated the customer was being charged for about $200 or about 2000 cuft of water.

1000 cuft of water is about 7480gal or about 250gal/day.

Military planners for infantry plan on as little as 5gal/day/capita. Water districts usually plan for about 200 gal/day/capita. 1000cuft water/month is quite a bit for a family of 4.

In the desert, we consume about 400cuft water / month for a couple who water plants, twice daily, but don’t have trees or grass. Our bills should be around $40/mo for water and sewer in SoCA. $80/mo isn’t unreasonable, but memorable, and that is in an area having to bring water in several hundred miles, or bore deep, say 1000ft for reliable wells.

IMHO, the Detroit system has a large fire protection grid one way of dealing with the problem is to simply charge $50/mo water will for continued service, then file mechanics lein or a bond on properties where the full charges are unable to be paid as is done for a water bond. Meanwhile, provide an open tap at hydrants near parks for people to fill up coolers and containers, if they are that desperate.

That means the tenant can still get water for daily living in their homes, but they can’t sell the property until the debt is paid off.

There is a very well refined branch of law regarding water rights. Water rights usually are associated with land ownership and vary from state to state. Liberals typically believe such rights may be privatized, while conservatives generally believe one of very few services which may be regulated are the provision of utilities, i.e. commonly needed services provided for a least cost for everybody in the community, because everybody has to have those resources. Utilities frequently take advantage of economies of scale to produce large volumes of a commodity with a distribution and service network included t in the utility cost.

Most utilities throughout the US have not been maintained or kept pace with useful life amortization. Many will need replacement in 20 years.


158 posted on 06/29/2014 4:36:01 PM PDT by Cvengr (Adversity in life and death is inevitable. Thru faith in Christ, stress is optional.)
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To: SgtBob
That is great and you are very fortunate.

However, I doubt that would work for the average city/suburb dweller.

And truthfully a lot of rural folks are out in the cold as well. Myself included. Sometimes the water table is too deep and the water to alkaline to drink.

I live on a lake and could haul water if push came to shove...but until that happens I think I'll just pony up the dollars to have a faucet turn on and water come out.

159 posted on 06/29/2014 6:56:41 PM PDT by berdie
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To: GeronL

Then kick the squatters and water system non payers out of the City owned home.


160 posted on 06/30/2014 1:21:59 PM PDT by Robert357 (D.Rather "Hoist with his own petard!" www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1223916/posts)
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