Posted on 02/22/2013 11:26:12 AM PST by Olog-hai
Forbes put Detroit Mayor Dave Bing on its cover in 2011 for a story with the optimistic headline: City of Hope. The premise was that the city had hit rock bottom and was poised for a turnaround.
Right now, its all about survival, Bing told Forbes.
Two years later, Detroits problems continue to multiply, sadly. It is still dealing with high levels of violent crime and unemployment. Home prices, already at historic lows, plummeted a further 35% during the past three years to a median of $40,000 as net migration out of the city continued.
The latest blow was Tuesdays announcement that the city is on the verge of being taken over by the state. Detroit is in a financial emergency and cannot pay its bills. The city has been issuing debt to fund day-to-day operations. The continuing problems propelled Detroit to the top spot in our 2013 ranking of Americas Most Miserable Cities.
(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
Detroit is a perfect example of when parasites are left to fend for themselves. These people can’t exist without sucking off resources from good and decent hardworking people. All the filthy libs should be forced to live in Detroit, then we could see how really racially sensitive they are.
Wow, always nice to see you’re thinking along the same lines some great man once traveled. Not that I’ll ever be great. But at least I’m on the right track!
But it’s infuriating to think that those whom socialists want everyone else to suffer along with (no matter how innocent the third party might be), stupidly brought their intolerable misery on themselves — in close cahoots, of course, with the very socialists who are now preaching at us, pretending to be on some kind of moral high-road above us. That’s probably one of the worst sentences ever constructed by a native speaker of the English language, lol. But, what the hey, I’m so mad I could spit!
Flint is my home town. It was a really nice place when we had Republican mayors. Great school system, great health system, vibrant cultural centers, and lots of trees. I wanted to live on Chervrolet Avenue because of all the huge old houses. However, I left because there were no jobs. Most of my family has left, either out of the city or out of state. None of my friends live within the city limits anymore. You can’t go for a walk anymore because of all the loose pit bulls. When the vital people get outta Dodge there remains a vacuum which gets filled by people who don’t have any incentive to produce. People like me left for greener pastures. It’s a real dang festering shame. Flint was a great little city. We were Buick.
My post was sarcastic and probably seemed quasi racist. My point was that these areas were once shining jewels of civilization. Then the masses took over, led by community agitator types like Barack Obama. Blacks in these instances are only the vessel used by the agitators to affect change. It is easy to mobilize people by shouting racism. Nevertheless, these localities have gone downhill. And, no, Chicago is not Detroit. But it isn’t paradise either.
#9: Lake County, Illinois
Something fishy here - 1) Lake County is a county, not a city; 2) Lake County includes Barrington, Barrington Hills, Bannockburn, Deerfield, Highland Park, Highwood, Kildeer, Lake Barrington, Lake Forest, Lincolnshire, Long Grove, North Barrington, Old Mill Creek, and Riverwoods, all pretty ritzy addresses (I’d guess at least half the Chicago Bears and similar fraction of the Bulls lived in Lake County - and that includes a mansion in Bannockburn that Michael Jordan is trying to unload).
Lake County has plenty of trashy areas - much of North Chicago and Waukegan are dumps, but “#9 least livable *city”? - that’s just silly.
I can honesty say that I’ve seen cities/towns in Africa,Asia and South America that appear more prosperous and civilized than the parts of Detroit I’ve seen.
Oh, I didn’t have any problem with your post...it just made me curious to see exactly what is the racial break-down of Detroit. I know alot of people who are ‘from Detroit’...all white, and all have decided to leave.
A liberal will call this ‘white flight’ and blame them for all of Detroit’s problems.
A typical man on the street intuitively knows (but isn’t brave enough to state it out loud) that the problem runs deeper.
And I think you nailed it with this statement:
“It is easy to mobilize people by shouting racism.”
It is human nature - once you give yourself permission to fail, because there is a full time scapegoat that can be blamed, you will no longer attempt to reach your full potential.....and you get places like Detroit. I think George W. Bush called it the ‘soft racism of low expectations’.
Hmmm. Michigan, Illinois, and California seem to host most of the these “miserable” cities. I wonder what they have in common?
Humans. Every state has a city that is on the lower rung. Michigan’s problem is who has been in charge and an industry that died/is dying. Illinois and California are run by the Mafia.
Key to the death of the auto industry is unions. Democrats and unions go hand in hand.
On Detroit's east side, neither gated nor heavily guarded........
On Detroit's east side, neither gated nor heavily guarded........
Wow, those are gorgeous! They must be well hidden from normal travel paths AND the media. Bet they are the only property taxed areas that are keeping the city breathing.
You remember flint being nice? When do you celebrate your 90th birthday?
Goto the right areas, there’s areas around fox theatre, MGM grand, Leland hotel, harpos.. They’re actually decent areas.
I don’t doubt there’s some nice areas; but, their existence does not change the fact that the city is in terrible decline. It should be used as a case study for other cities.
It should be the other way.. Lots of nice areas with little bubbles of poverty. Difference between the political parties.
I live in a small town.. There’s two blocks (on different sides of town) that are raunchy, and the occasional house that’s run down. Mostly a nice area.. But we go well over 70% republican. There’s the difference.
You are way off. I am not yet 60. I bumped into my choir director in high school who is over 90 and he told me that the year I graduated, which was 1971, was the best year he had in his entire teaching career. He added that it quickly deteriorated shortly after that. He ended up leaving like everyone else did.
That was kind of a joke..
I’m younger than you, and from lansing. I remember my dad having to commute in the 80s to flint and he always carpooled. I was much older before I understood why if the guy he carpooled with called in sick, so did he. There was no way he was going there alone.
Any time I have to go out that way, I pack an extra mag.
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