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The City Where the Sirens Never Sleep (Detroit is dying. But, it is not dead yet)
Weekly Standard ^ | Dec 30,2008 | Matt Labash

Posted on 01/01/2009 8:10:59 AM PST by SeekAndFind

"This is the place where bad times get sent to make them belong to somebody else, thus, it seems easy to agree about Detroit because the city embodies everything the rest of the country wants to get over."

--Jerry Herron, AfterCulture: Detroit and the Humiliation of History (1993)

Detroit My plane hadn't even finished descending through the snow-drizzly sheets of December gray, when already, I heard someone crack on it. "Ladies and Gentlemen," a Northwest flight attendant announced, "Welcome to lovely Detroit, the one and only home of the Detroit auto worker of America. Happiness is a way of travel, not a destination."

The lawyer sitting next to me sniggered. He was only buzzing in for a day or so, but knowing I was a reporter, come to write a story on the city, he asked, "How long are you in for?"

"About a week," I responded.

"Good luck with that," he said, piteously shaking his head. "It sucks."

Before I'd left, I'd asked an acquaintance if he was from Detroit. "Indeed I am," he said, "Give me all your f--ing money." Another colleague, always mindful of my desire for maximum material, suggested, "You should go when it's warm, you'd have a better chance of getting hurt."

Somewhere along the way, Detroit became our national ashtray, a safe place for everyone to stub out the butt of their jokes. This was never more evident than at the recent congressional hearings, featuring the heads of the Big Three automakers, now more often called the Detroit Three, as that sounds more synonymous with failure. Yes, they have been feckless and tone-deaf in the past, and now look like stalkers trying to make people love them with desperation moves such as Ford breaking the "Taurus" name out of mothballs, or Chrysler steering a herd of cattle through downtown Detroit for an auto show (some of the longhorns started humping each other in front of reporters, giving new meaning to the "Dodge Ram," which they were intended to advertise).

But with millions of jobs on the line, including their own, the Detroit Three honchos went to Washington to endure the kabuki theater, first in their private jets, then in their sad little hybrids. All to get their slats kicked in by Congress (and who has been more profligate than they) in order to secure a bridge loan to withstand an economy wrecked by others who'd secured no-strings bailouts before them. The absurdist spectacle was best summed up by car aficionado Jay Leno: "People who are trillions of dollars in debt, yelling at people who are billions of dollars in debt."

It happens, though, when you're from Detroit. In the popular imagination, the Motor City has gone from being the Arsenal of Democracy, so named for their converting auto factories to make the weapons which helped us win World War II, and the incubator of the middle class (now leading the nation in foreclosure rates, Detroit once had the highest rate of home ownership in the country), to being Dysfunction Junction. To Detroit's credit, they've earned it.

Before arriving, I conducted an exhaustive survey, reading everything I could about Detroit, including and especially the journalistic labor of the diligent if shell-shocked scribes of the Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press. How bad is Detroit? Let's review:

Its recently resigned mayor, Kwame Kilpatrick, he of the Kangol hats and five-button suits, now wears jailhouse orange as he's currently serving a four-month sentence as part of a plea agreement for perjuring himself regarding an extramarital affair with his chief of staff, which yielded soupy love-daddy text messages that would make Barry White yak in his grave. Those in Detroit who are neither recipients of sweetheart contracts nor Kilpatrick family members on the city payroll at inflated salaries think he got off easy. Because what led to the perjury was concealing an $8.4 million payout from city coffers to settle a whistleblower suit brought by cops who'd been fired for investigating, among other things, the murder of a stripper named Strawberry who, prior to her death, was allegedly beat up by Kilpatrick's wife when she caught her entertaining her husband.

In a city often known as the nation's murder capital, with over 10,000 unsolved murders dating back to 1960, the police are in shambles through cutbacks and corruption trials. (They have a profitable sideline, though, as one of the nation's largest gun dealers, having sold 14 tons of used weapons out-of-state.) Their response times are legendarily slow. Their crime lab is so inept that it has been closed. One Detroit man found police so unresponsive when trying to turn himself in for murder that he hopped a bus to Toledo and confessed there instead.

Detroit schools haven't ordered new textbooks in 19 years. Students have reported having to bring their own toilet paper. Teachers have reported bringing hammers to class for protection. Declining enrollment has forced 67 school closures since 2005 (more than a quarter of the city's schools). The graduation rate is 24.9 percent, the lowest of any large school district in the country. Not for nothing did one frustrated activist start pelting school board members with grapes during a meeting. She probably should've reached for something heavier.

An internal audit, which was 14 months late, estimates next year's city deficit to be as high as $200 million (helped along by $335,000 embezzled from the Department of Health and Wellness Promotion). With a dwindling tax base--even the city's three once-profitable casinos are seeing a downturn in revenues (the Greektown Casino is in bankruptcy)--the city has kicked around every money-making scheme from selling off ownership rights to the tunnel it shares with neighboring Windsor, Canada, to a fast food tax. It's perhaps unsurprising that Detroit now has the most speed traps in the nation.

It also has one of the highest property tax rates in Michigan, yet has over 60,000 vacant dwellings (a guesstimate--nobody keeps official count), meaning real estate values are in the toilet. Over the summer, the Detroit News sent a headline around the world, about a Detroit house that was for sale for $1. But it's not even that uncommon. As of this writing, there are at least five $1 homes for sale in Detroit.

The city council has been such a joke that one former member demanded 17 pounds of sausages as part of her $150,000 bribe. Its prognosis for respectability hasn't grown stronger with Monica Conyers, wife of congressman John Conyers, taking the helm. She has managed to get in a barroom brawl, threatened to shoot a mayoral staffer as well as have him beaten up, and twice called a burly and bald fellow council member "Shrek" during a public hearing. But with all the problems facing the city, the council still found time to pass a nonbinding resolution supporting the impeachment of George W. Bush.

How bad is Detroit? It once gave the keys to the city to Saddam Hussein.

Over the last several years, it has ranked as the most murderous city, the poorest city, the most segregated city, as the city with the highest auto-insurance rates, with the bleakest outlook for workers in their 20s and 30s, and as the place with the most heart attacks, slowest income growth, and fewest sunny days. It is a city without a single national grocery store chain. It has been deemed the most stressful metropolitan area in America. Likewise, it has ranked last in numerous studies: in new employment growth, in environmental indicators, in the rate of immunization of 2-year-olds, and, among big cities, in the number of high school or college graduates.

Men's Fitness magazine christened Detroit America's fattest city, while Men's Health called it America's sexual disease capital. Should the editors of these two metrosexual magazines be concerned for their safety after slagging the citizens of a city which has won the "most dangerous" title for five of the last ten years? Probably not: 47 percent of Detroit adults are functionally illiterate.

On the upside, Detroit ranks as the nation's foremost consumer of Slurpees and of baked beans on Labor Day. And as if all of this isn't humiliating enough, the Detroit Lions are 0-14.

The best description of the feel of the place came to me from Jason Vines: "We're all Kwame-fatigued, the economy is crap, and the Lions suck. We're tired." A former executive with both Ford and Chrysler, Vines spun me around the decimated, half-abandoned neighborhood of Highland Park, which Chrysler left in the early '90s for the greener pastures of Auburn Hills. It's hard to fault them, he notes, since bullets used to occasionally whiz into the Chrysler buildings from the surrounding neighborhood.

Like many Detroiters (he lives in a posh suburb, where houses on his block have remained unsold for six years), he's bracing for one or all of the Big Three going down. He predicts millions will be thrown out of work, right down to the diner owner in Utah who serves lunch to the people who produce the screws which are bought by the widget manufacturers who produce a component that goes into a seat of a Ford automobile. The diner owner thought he wasn't in the auto business. "But he was," says Vines. "He just didn't know it."

Precisely what caused all this mess is perhaps best left to historians. Locals' ideas for how it happened could keep one pinned to a barstool for weeks: auto companies failing or pushing out to the suburbs and beyond, white flight caused by the '67 riots and busing orders, the 20-year reign of Mayor Coleman Young who scared additional middle-class whites off with statements such as "The only way to handle discrimination is to reverse it," freeways destroying mass transit infrastructure, ineptitude, corruption, Japanese cars--take your pick.

What's clear, though, is that Detroit has failed, that it's broken and cracked. It is dying. But it's not yet dead. Although it has lost over half its population since 1950, 900,000 people still live there. I went to Detroit to experience a cross-section of those who live between its cracks, who either choose or are stuck with living among the ruins.

CLICK ABOVE LINK FOR THE REST


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; US: Michigan
KEYWORDS: bluezones; detroit; dying
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To: wgflyer

You really think the problem is the teachers?


21 posted on 01/01/2009 8:41:24 AM PST by ladyjane
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To: SeekAndFind

Posted a week ago:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2154297/posts


22 posted on 01/01/2009 8:44:36 AM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: wgflyer
...since it has been so long since the school system last updated the text books, the books may not be dumbed down to today’s modern standards.

Those text books may actually have some educational value, being devoid of all the social engineering crapola that is fed to kids these days.

23 posted on 01/01/2009 8:45:39 AM PST by Starboard
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To: SeekAndFind

This was already posted, but it’s an important piece.

The pit bull story from later on in the article is one of those things that you can read but not un-read, even though you wish you could.


24 posted on 01/01/2009 8:45:47 AM PST by denydenydeny ("Banish Merry Christmas. Get ready for Mad Max.."-Daniel Henninger)
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To: SeekAndFind

No, he wasn’t murdered - which is against the odds for Detroit - I do know that. I never really learned the actual cause of death, but it is my guess that it was a heart attack brought on by the fact that he was kind of living on borrowed time and in need of a liver transplant. He was going to “live” whatever time he had. By the time his body was returned to Nashville for the funeral, he was the deadest-looking dead person I’ve ever seen. But, hell, what he would have said is, “As long as I’m dead, why try to look like I’m not?”


25 posted on 01/01/2009 8:47:51 AM PST by Emmett McCarthy
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To: Don Corleone

I’m praying that 4 years(or less)is as long as we have to suffer that fool.I predict Obama’s popularity will tank down to Bush’s level in less than a year.There’s a lot of dirt on him that could ultimately lead to his removal from office too.


26 posted on 01/01/2009 8:47:53 AM PST by Farmer Dean (168 grains of instant conflict resolution)
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To: SeekAndFind

Just Wow! What an amazing article.


27 posted on 01/01/2009 8:48:22 AM PST by Slehn
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To: SeekAndFind
"Which makes me wonder -- how long before Detroit becomes a total wasteland with NO ONE actually thinbking of living there ?"

How long before our entire nation goes that route? Having spent many years working in Africa, I've noted many disturbing similarities emerging here in the U.S.:
1. Bloated incompetent bureaucracies
2. Municipal governments corrupt and venal in the extreme
3. Punitive taxation
4. Complete and utter disregard for the Protestant work ethic
5. Belief systems rooted in superstition
6. Educational systems in total collapse

I could go on, but suffice it to say as I walked the streets of places like Brazzaville, Lagos, Monrovia...I often wondered what it would take to pull our nation down to such a level. Now I know. A sociopolitical "perfect storm," and it's looming on the horizon.
28 posted on 01/01/2009 8:49:31 AM PST by PowderMonkey (Will Work for Ammo)
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To: ladyjane

“You really think the problem is the teachers?”

I believe the teachers statement was within the quote taken from 2banana. My comment was on the text books.

However, I would very quickly add that many teachers and teachers unions play a major part in the dumbing down of our schools, and turning schools into liberal indoctrination centers. The government, of course, benefits from and thus encourages this, and does everything it can to support teachers unions. Society, generally, plays an even bigger role in that it buys liberalism as a way of life. Detroit is merely the distilled version of everything that is wrong with liberalism. Big government benefits from decay and thus fosters it where ever it goes. Teachers unions are a tool of big government. Many teachers enjoy being part of that tool. Most, probably, don’t, but they are caught between a rock and a hard place in the middle of it all.

How’s that?


29 posted on 01/01/2009 8:51:57 AM PST by wgflyer (Liberalism is to society what HIV is to the immune system.)
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To: SeekAndFind

If ALL the productive people finally leave then the criminal class will be reduced to stealing each other’s government checks and benefits.How long could that possibly last?


30 posted on 01/01/2009 8:52:00 AM PST by Farmer Dean (168 grains of instant conflict resolution)
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To: SeekAndFind

I’ll never make another crack about Buffalo


31 posted on 01/01/2009 8:52:37 AM PST by paul51 (11 September 2001 - Never forget (July 4, 2009 see you there))
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To: qwertypie
only the weather prevents the populace from returning to their loincloth roots.

It gets my vote for quote of the day.

32 posted on 01/01/2009 8:52:39 AM PST by NoControllingLegalAuthority
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To: SeekAndFind

In the novel “WarDay,” the main characters visit New York City, which has been evacuated after mistargeted missiles destoyed two boroughs and contaminated the rest of the city. They are assigned a government minder who is supposed to show them the ongoing efforts to salvage basic materials like copper wire and such. One of the characters wonders if the Romans also had smart, young professionals whose job was to oversee the demise of their cities.

I thought about that moment as I read this.


33 posted on 01/01/2009 8:53:56 AM PST by Mr. Silverback (I want a hippopotamus for Christmas. Only a hippopotamus will do!)
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To: screaminsunshine
Michigan is rapidly becoming the Zimbabwe of America and Detroit is it's Harare, nothing left to do but change the name.
34 posted on 01/01/2009 8:54:30 AM PST by Old North State
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To: SeekAndFind

This article sounds like a travel brochure for tourists traveling to Mogadishu, Somalia.


35 posted on 01/01/2009 8:54:43 AM PST by NoControllingLegalAuthority
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To: Starboard

“Those text books may actually have some educational value, being devoid of all the social engineering crapola that is fed to kids these days.”

Exactly. What’s left of them, anyway.


36 posted on 01/01/2009 8:55:56 AM PST by wgflyer (Liberalism is to society what HIV is to the immune system.)
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To: Steely Tom
Detroit = Rhodesia except nobody tried to fight and save it from the Commies
37 posted on 01/01/2009 8:55:59 AM PST by ASOC (This space could be employed, if I could only get a bailout...)
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To: Don Corleone

Four years of this stuff coming up!


38 posted on 01/01/2009 8:56:59 AM PST by AEMILIUS PAULUS (It is a shame that when these people give a riot)
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To: wgflyer

Cut to the chase the “Bell Curve” is true.


39 posted on 01/01/2009 8:59:54 AM PST by AEMILIUS PAULUS (It is a shame that when these people give a riot)
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To: SeekAndFind

Lengthy, but good read. No solutions offered, but great description of the dying city.


40 posted on 01/01/2009 9:00:10 AM PST by VanShuyten ("Ah! but it was something to have at least a choice of nightmares.")
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