Posted on 09/06/2014 10:44:57 AM PDT by Oldpuppymax
The argument against liberals ever being in charge of our lives can be reduced to a single word: Detroit.
Detroit has fallen from its position as one of the greatest cities in America at the beginning of the 1950s to a perfect reminder of what liberal Democrats will do when given enough power and enough time to show who they really are.
The Motor City had an unbroken succession of liberal Democrat mayors for more than 40 years and each of these men has contributed to the steady decline of their city. Acting in concert with greedy unions these mayors first turned Detroit into their private kingdom, and then looted its treasury for every cent they could.
In the 1970s and through until 1993 when he finally left office, Detroits first Black Mayor, Coleman Young polluted the citys government. It was fair to say that from the Police Department to the School Board to the Sanitation Department, every one of Detroits agencies was corrupt. Yet Coleman Young was just the beginning.
In 2001 when Kwame Kilpatrick became mayor the decline of Detroit progressed at warp speed. He was just as corrupt in his personal as his political life, being a thief and very possibly a murderer. By the time he left office for his new home in a federal prison, Detroit had fallen into such disrepair that reclamation was impossible. His successor, Detroit Pistons great Dave Bing was ill equipped for the job...
(Excerpt) Read more at coachisright.com ...
re: On the first scheduled payday for teachers after Bing took office he required all School System employees to come to his office and personally sign for their check. The result was horrifying. At the end of the day there were 37 actual paychecks and 220 direct deposit slips totally over $208,000 that went unclaimed.
So what does this mean? Is the writer saying that the 220 remaining employees were bogus? They didn’t show up because they didn’t exist?
In Detroit, they would use POP cans, not SODA cans.
how long will it be before we hear Homer Simpson Say ...”Oh Detroit”
The citys public schools, which have shrunk to about 90,000 students from more than 160,000 nine years ago, are also undergoing big changes. Robert C. Bobb, the emergency financial manager, has closed schools, laid off employees and begun investigating numerous thefts, the systems real estate deals and questions about whether scores of people receiving paychecks are really on the payroll.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/26/us/26detroit.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
The Sixties was also the moment when Detroit began to experience its reversal of fortune. The city was hit particularly hard by the social turbulence of this revolutionary era, most notably a rising militancy among local community organizers angered by what they perceived to be the slow pace of civil-rights reforms[8]although Detroit had a large and prosperous black middle class, higher-than-normal wages for unskilled black workers because of the auto industry, and two black U.S. congressmen. Moreover, Detroit had acquired millions in federal funds through President Lyndon Johnsons Great Society programs and invested them almost exclusively in the inner city, where poverty and social problems were concentrated. The Washington Post claimed that Detroits inner-city schools were undergoing the countrys leading and most forceful reforms in education.[9] Housing conditions were not viewed as worse than those of other Northern cities. In 1965, the American Institute of Architects gave Detroit an award for urban redevelopment.[10]
Nonetheless, Rev. Albert Cleague and other Detroit-area activists openly called for black separatism and self-determination on the premise that whites would never voluntarily choose to share political power with blacks.[11] At a July 1967 Black Power rally in Detroit, the radical H. Rap Brown gave voice to the citys growing unrest when he warned Motown that if it did not make sufficient reforms, we are going to burn you down.[12]
This inflammatory racial discontent grew at a time when the Democratic Party, claiming to be sensitive to the problems of minorities, was completing a takeover of city government. In 1961, the reins of political power in the city fell permanently into Democrats hands. In the 53 years that have passed since then, Detroit has not had a single Republican mayor. Indeed, it has elected only one Republican to its City Council since 1970.[13] As it was becoming a failed city, it was also becoming a political monoculture.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_Cities_Program
So how is Mayor Duggan (Irish ancestry) doing?
Detroit. Chicago. Los Angeles. Philadelphia. New Orleans. Washington DC. California. .......... evidence galore.
Growing up in the suburb of St. Clair Shores, I had a front row seat watching Coleman Young run Detroit into the ground.
Yes. Shadow employees where someone else pockets the money is one of the things that happens in government programs I have heard.
and nobody at the fire station has the wherewithal to get one of those free smoke detectors they give away and mash the button when a call comes in?
Or can they not afford to give away the smoke detectors any more?
And pronounce it; “pahp”.
Did they have to show a picture ID?
I grew up in scs too.
Interestingly, the Detroit fire department is probably the best in the world at structure fires. Lot of practice and different tactics.
They could use abandoned buildings or neighborhoods and charge other departments to send firefighters in for serious training.
I think with their skills they would do well.
Devil’s night in Motown was probably the best intensive FD training since WW2 Europe.
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