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Detroit wants to save itself by shrinking
msnbc ^
| 3-8-10
| Associated Press
Posted on 03/08/2010 8:09:59 PM PST by cajuncow
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1
posted on
03/08/2010 8:09:59 PM PST
by
cajuncow
To: cajuncow
So Detroit is going Green?
2
posted on
03/08/2010 8:13:29 PM PST
by
LukeL
(Yasser Arafat: "I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize")
To: cajuncow
A really big Devil's night?
3
posted on
03/08/2010 8:14:03 PM PST
by
MrEdd
(Heck? Geewhiz Cripes, thats the place where people who don't believe in Gosh think they aint going.)
To: cajuncow
Roughly a quarter of the 139-square-mile city could go from urban to semi-rural.Ashes to ashes, dust to dust.
Bing-O!
4
posted on
03/08/2010 8:14:13 PM PST
by
mlocher
(USA is a sovereign nation)
To: LukeL
I hear it’s going muzzie.
5
posted on
03/08/2010 8:14:22 PM PST
by
Graybeard58
("0bama's not just stupid; He’s Jimmy Carter stupid”. - Don Imus)
To: cajuncow
Seems like a prudent plan. I’d also recommend this approach for 95% of New Orleans.
6
posted on
03/08/2010 8:16:17 PM PST
by
Mad_Tom_Rackham
(It is the duty of the patriot to protect his country from its government -- Thomas Payne)
To: cajuncow
Here’e your forty acres....
7
posted on
03/08/2010 8:17:53 PM PST
by
digger48
To: cajuncow
OK. And who gets to pay for this? Us?
8
posted on
03/08/2010 8:18:09 PM PST
by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: cajuncow
The network of city halls was established by former Mayor Coleman A. Young, who believed it was important to bring City Hall to the people instead of forcing them to visit downtown, where the Central District office exists in the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center.Need we say more?
To: mlocher
I think this would be amazing if they could do it.....understand that even people in run down neighborhoods who have been there a long time will not want to leave....
but the possibilities are enormous...
imagine driving into a city to find lovely gardens and walking paths and birds and butterflies...
Dave Bing ...good luck.....you might be the answer for Detroit...
10
posted on
03/08/2010 8:18:44 PM PST
by
cherry
To: digger48
Heree your forty acres....Sorry, all out of mules, here's an old chevy.
To: cajuncow
Somehow I doubt that there’ll be a single welfare sponge parasite that will leave Detroit as a result of this shrinkage.
To: cajuncow
If they made Detroit the setting for the next Transformers or Blues Brothers movie, they could make money tearing down all those buildings.
To: cajuncow
Reminds me of “New Detroit” concept in RoboCop....
14
posted on
03/08/2010 8:23:32 PM PST
by
cranked
To: cajuncow
Pros and cons with this decision. While it’s good that the city consolidates its services and expenses it’s bad that federal $$ will be necessary for the transition and also that some homeowners will be forced to move out against their wishes. Leftist liberalism helped destroy a once thriving city.
15
posted on
03/08/2010 8:26:13 PM PST
by
tflabo
(Restore the Republic)
To: Gay State Conservative
I don’t think that’s the goal. If Detroit can gather all the sponges together that would free up areas to be greened.
16
posted on
03/08/2010 8:27:30 PM PST
by
HiTech RedNeck
(I am in America but not of America (per bible: am in the world but not of it))
To: Gay State Conservative
Before any changes are made a marketing campaign will inform residents, said Carnell, whose responsibilities as a group executive for the mayor's office include community relations, health and human services. "People have to understand what the rationale for change is and how it will affect them," she said. "You can't just shut the door." Still, Detroiter LaNell Buffington, 73, is dubious about the proposed changes, and questioned whether they would be economical. "What's wrong with these people?" she asked. "They're closing all these things ... It don't make no sense."
To: cajuncow
I think this is fantastic. Good luck to Detroit. God knows it needs it.
18
posted on
03/08/2010 8:29:01 PM PST
by
1rudeboy
To: cherry
imagine driving into a city to find lovely gardens and walking paths and birds and butterflies...
Such wonderful sources of jobs, economic activity and a strong tax base......
19
posted on
03/08/2010 8:34:01 PM PST
by
Kozak
(USA 7/4/1776 to 1/20/2009 Reqiescat in Pace)
To: cajuncow
Roughly a quarter of the 139-square-mile city could go from urban to semi-rural. Make it 3/4 and you're talking.
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