Poor Detroit

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby RocketMan » Sun Jul 28, 2013 12:27 pm

Why the right hates Detroit

Andrew O'Hehir wrote:Is it pure coincidence that these two landmark cities, known around the world as fountainheads of the most vibrant and creative aspects of American culture, have become our two direst examples of urban failure and collapse? If so, it’s an awfully strange one. I’m tempted to propose a conspiracy theory: As centers of African-American cultural and political power and engines of a worldwide multiracial pop culture that was egalitarian, hedonistic and anti-authoritarian, these cities posed a psychic threat to the most reactionary and racist strains in American life. I mean the strain represented by Tom Buchanan in “The Great Gatsby” (imagine what he’d have to say about New Orleans jazz) or by the slightly more coded racism of Sean Hannity today. As payback for the worldwide revolution symbolized by hot jazz, Smokey Robinson dancin’ to keep from cryin’ and Eminem trading verses with Rihanna, New Orleans and Detroit had to be punished. Specifically, they had to be isolated, impoverished and almost literally destroyed, so they could be held up as examples of what happens when black people are allowed to govern themselves.
-I don't like hoodlums.
-That's just a word, Marlowe. We have that kind of world. Two wars gave it to us and we are going to keep it.
User avatar
RocketMan
 
Posts: 2813
Joined: Mon Mar 10, 2008 7:02 am
Location: By the rivers dark
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Aug 03, 2013 9:00 pm

08.02.13 - 10:18 AM
Massive Toxic Black Cloud, Brought To You by the Koch Bros, Blows Over Detroit
by Abby Zimet
Image

MInd-boggling video of a billowing, high-carbon, high-sulfur cloud from the mountain of petroleum coke - waste from Canadian tar sands shipped from Alberta to Detroit, and the dirtiest potential energy source ever - illegally stored by the Koch Brothers along the Detroit River. Produced by Marathon Refinery but owned by Koch Carbon, the pet-coke piles have for months been producing "fugitive dust" - ie: thick black crud - that blankets the homes of outraged residents and lawmakers; analysis shows the dust contains elevated levels of lead, sulfur, zinc and the likely carcinogenic vanadium. Environmental officials say the Koch Brothers broke the law by not getting a permit for their toxic dump, and they can't guarantee there won't be another "dust event," but not to worry: The Kochs reportedly plan to move the mess to some other poor beleaguered place. We await the day we can exercise our right, not just to free expression and clean air, but to the end of Koch power.

"Is that the petcoke?! Is that the petcoke?! But can we breathe it? Oh my god." - appalled spectator recording the cloud.


Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby justdrew » Sat Aug 03, 2013 10:46 pm

the owners and operators of that company should immediately be arrested and tried for poisoning a few hundred thousand people.
By 1964 there were 1.5 million mobile phone users in the US
User avatar
justdrew
 
Posts: 11966
Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 7:57 pm
Location: unknown
Blog: View Blog (11)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Aug 05, 2013 10:36 am

Image

:rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

Fox News Doesn’t Get Detroit Fisting Joke, Becomes Butt Of Many Jokes

When the fine people of Detroit woke up on Thursday morning, they saw something peculiar. Sitting in front of their beloved giant sculpture of the late boxer Joe Louis’ fist was a giant can of Crisco.

The Crisco can was created by Detroit artist Jerry Vile. The artist called the giant Crisco can “gesture of sympathy” and a “magical Vessel of Hope” to help “ease the pain of Detroit’s bankruptcy.”


The giant can sat in front of the fist for five hours while the news crew at Fox News attempted to figure out what a Giant Crisco Can and a Giant Fist have in common. Other news agencies quickly pointed out that the “event” was an “elaborate and dirty joke.”

Fox News, rather than understanding the joke, posted a picture of the Fist on its Facebook page along with the following note:

“Local artist Jerry Vile has created something he calls “Vessel of Hope”. He hopes it may in someway ease the pain of having the Detroit bankruptcy shoved into our faces. Can anyone explain what this means???”

The team at Queerty were the first to make fun of Fox News, writing, “Let us start by saying this fist was not aimed at your face in the first place. You were facing the wrong direction when you took the photo…”

Hours after the photo was posted, Fox News officials finally realized that they had become the butt of jokes in Detroit. Pun totally intended.

By 2 pm, city officials in Detroit removed the giant can of Crisco, leaving the fist alone and probably feeling a bit violated. The city’s officials called the can of Crisco “abandoned property.”

With that being said, keep in mind that somewhere in a Detroit warehouse, officials are currently attempting to figure out what they can do with a giant Crisco can.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Aug 06, 2013 11:34 am

The Detroit Bail-In Template: Fleecing Pensioners to Save the Banks
Tuesday, 06 August 2013 09:04
By Ellen Brown, Web of Debt | News Analysis

The Detroit bankruptcy is looking suspiciously like the bail-in template originated by the G20’s Financial Stability Board in 2011, which exploded on the scene in Cyprus in 2013 and is now becoming the model globally. In Cyprus, the depositors were “bailed in” (stripped of a major portion of their deposits) to re-capitalize the banks. In Detroit, it is the municipal workers who are being bailed in, stripped of a major portion of their pensions to save the banks.
Bank of America Corp. and UBS AG have been given priority over other bankruptcy claimants, meaning chiefly the pensioners, for payments due on interest rate swaps they entered into with the city. Interest rate swaps – the exchange of interest rate payments between counterparties – are sold by Wall Street banks as a form of insurance, something municipal governments “should” do to protect their loans from an unanticipated increase in rates. Unlike ordinary insurance, however, swaps are actually just bets; and if the municipality loses the bet, it can owe the house, and owe big. The swap casino is almost entirely unregulated, and it is a rigged game that the house virtually always wins. Interest rate swaps are based on the LIBOR rate, which has now been proven to be manipulated by the rate-setting banks; and they were a major contributor to Detroit’s bankruptcy.
Derivative claims are considered “secured” because the players must post collateral to play. They get not just priority but “super-priority” in bankruptcy, meaning they go first before all others, a deal pushed through by Wall Street in the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 2005. Meanwhile, the municipal workers, whose pensions are theoretically protected under the Michigan Constitution, are classified as “unsecured” claimants who will get the scraps after the secured creditors put in their claims. The banking casino, it seems, trumps even the state constitution. The banks win and the workers lose once again.
Systemically Dangerous Institutions Are Moved to the Head of the Line
The argument for the super-priority of derivative claims is that nonpayment on these bets represents a “systemic risk” to the financial scheme. Derivative bets are cross-collateralized and are so inextricably entwined in a $600-plus trillion house of cards that the whole financial scheme could go down if the betting scheme were to collapse. Instead of banning or regulating this very risky casino, Congress has been persuaded by the masterminds of Wall Street that it needs to be preserved at all costs.
The same tortured logic has been used to justify the fact that the federal government deigned to bail out Wall Street but not Detroit. Supposedly, the mega-banks pose a systemic risk and Detroit doesn’t. On July 29th, former Obama administration economist Jared Bernstein pursued this line of reasoning on his blog, writing:
[T]he correct motivation for federal bailouts — meaning some combination of managing a bankruptcy, paying off creditors (though often with a haircut), or providing liquidity in cases where that’s the issue as opposed to insolvency – is systemic risk. The failure of large, major banks, two out of the big three auto companies, the secondary market for housing – all of these pose unacceptably large risks to global financial markets, and thus the global economy, to a major industry, including its upstream and downstream suppliers, and to the national housing sector.
Because a) there’s not much of a case that Detroit is systemically connected in those ways, and b) Chapter 9 of the bankruptcy code appears to provide an adequate way for it to deal with its insolvency, I don’t think anything like a large scale bailout is forthcoming.
Holding Main Street Hostage
Detroit’s bankruptcy poses no systemic risk to Wall Street and global financial markets. Fine. But it does pose a systemic risk to Main Street, local governments, and the contractual rights of pensioners. Credit rating agency Moody’s stated in a recent report that if Detroit manages to cut its pension obligations, other struggling cities could follow suit. The Detroit bankruptcy is establishing a template for wiping out government pensions everywhere. Chicago or New York could be next.
There is also the systemic risk posed to the municipal bond system. Bryce Hoffman, writing in The Detroit News on July 30th, warned:
Detroit’s bankruptcy threatens to change the rules of the municipal bond game and already is making it more expensive for the state’s other struggling towns and school districts to borrow money and fund big infrastructure projects.
In fact, one bond analyst told The Detroit News that he has spoken to major institutional investors who have already decided to stop, for now, buying any Michigan bonds.
The real concern of bond investors, says Hoffman, is not the default of Detroit but the precedent the city is setting. General obligation municipal bonds have always been viewed as a virtually risk-free investment. They are unsecured, but bondholders have considered themselves protected because the bonds are backed by the “unlimited taxing authority” of the government that issued them. Detroit, however, has shown that the city’s taxing authority is far from unlimited. It already has the highest property taxes of any major city in the country, and it is bumping up against a ceiling imposed by the state constitution. If Detroit is able to cut its bond debt in half or more by defaulting, other distressed cities are liable to look very closely at following suit. Hoffman writes:
The bond market is warning that this will make Michigan a pariah state and raise borrowing costs — not just for Detroit and other troubled municipalities, but also for paragons of fiscal virtue such as Oakland and Livingston counties.
However, writes Hoffman:
Gov. Rick Snyder dismisses that threat and says the bond market is just trying to turn Detroit away from a radical solution that could become a model for other struggling cities across America.
A Safer, Saner, More Equitable Model
Interestingly, Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero, Snyder’s Democratic opponent in the last gubernatorial race, proposed a solution that could have avoided either robbing the pensioners or scaring off the bondholders: a state-owned bank. If the state or the city had its own bank, it would not need to borrow from Wall Street, worry about interest rate swaps, or be beholden to the bond vigilantes. It could borrow from its own bank, which would leverage the local government’s capital into credit, back that credit with the deposits created by the government’s own revenues, and return the interest to the government as a dividend, following the ground-breaking model of the state-owned Bank of North Dakota.
There are other steps that need to be taken, and soon, to prevent a cascade of municipal bankruptcies. The super-priority of derivatives in bankruptcy needs to be repealed, and the protections of Glass Steagall need to be restored. While we are waiting on a very dilatory Congress, however, state and local governments might consider protecting themselves and their revenues by setting up their own banks.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Aug 24, 2013 8:43 am

*

Is life without government-state possible? Of course. It's rather natural.

On Detroit, or: Cities don’t go bankrupt, city governments do. 26 July 2013, 12pm / revised 10pm

If you have been reading news headlines over the past couple weeks, then I think it might be important to keep in mind that the city of Detroit has not been razed or destroyed in the past few days. The city of Detroit is not over; the city of Detroit has not failed; and the city of Detroit is not gone. It’s still right there, where it has been all these years; see, look, here it is:



Here’s what has happened, over the past several days, and all that has happened: One institution, out of the millions of things going on in Detroit — specifically the single most confining and abusive and irresponsible institution within the city — the government which latched on to the city of Detroit and has tried to rule and exploit it for decades — has announced that it no longer intends to pay off the people and the institutions and the banks who paid it loans in advance of future tax revenues. That one institution, which claims, arrogantly and fraudulently, to speak for the whole city of Detroit, and which intends to force the whole city of Detroit to pay for its mistakes — the same city government which has bulldozed Detroit neighborhoods and tried to sell out the city to the auto cartel and to corporate developers at every opportunity — the same city government whose attitude towards the people of the city has over the years ranged from one of constant low-level antagonism and hectoring, to one of repression and open warfare against them — the same city government which is now run by an appointed "Emergency Manager" from the state government, installed in a last-ditch effort to loot the city without the normal political restraints, for the sake of institutional bondholders, before things came to this pass — that one institution within the city of Detroit has announced that it wants to default on debts that most of the city never were asked about and never agreed to take on. And this may mess up that institution’s budgeting process for some time to come. What’s happened is something notable, but it is also something far less important than it’s being treating as, and something with far more political fascination than human significance.

There is no threnody of grief to be had here, no punishment for hubris or failures or sins, no final unraveling to reveal, no long-coming tragedy of decline or death for the city, if "the city" is supposed to mean anything at all other than "the government." That government has taken over and inserted itself into so many parts of the city of Detroit that this may make things rough. Perhaps it will even make things rougher than they already were — although the reasons that are usually given for thinking that always seem to me to depend on some assumptions about the role of government in Detroit which I think are probably false. (If it is hard for the city government to allocate more money to the Detroit police department, is that going to make life worse in the city? It probably depends on what end of the stick you find yourself on.)

But the important thing is this. Detroit is not the crisis of a handful of elected, appointed and installed government officials. Detroit is not its most abusive institutions; it’s not a political project; it’s not a single institution at all, no matter how dominating its intent or arrogant its claims. It’s something much bigger, much better, and much more important than that. Detroit is the Ujamaa Food Coop and the Masonic Temple, UAW Local 174 and the Reuther Library. Detroit is the Tigers, Friday fish-fries and Paczki Day, the Red Wings and the Pistons, the Movement Electronic Music Festival and John King Books, the giant tire on I-94, the Eastern Market and the Afro-American Music Festival. the People’s Pierogi Collective and Joe Louis’s arm.

Here is a photo of the cast bronze statue of Joe Louis's arm and fist Jefferson & Woodward, downtown Detroit
Image

Detroit is fresh kielbasa and "original" Coney Islands (whichever one you think deserves the title); barbecue pork, and felafel and fries with a fruit smoothie; blind pigs and warehouse raves, Arabic signs[1] and pointing to the knuckle of your thumb to show where you’re from. Detroit is 19 year olds making the pilgrimmage to Windsor for booze[2] and to Royal Oak for coffee. Detroit is the home of Rosa Parks and of Grace Lee Boggs. Detroit is the Michigan Citizen and the Metro Times. Detroit is the Rouge plant and Fifth Estate. And Detroit is the long history of displacement, homecoming, work, music, food, culture, strife, love and building that the city grows up out of. Detroit is bigger, stronger, more resilient and much more important than the government’s budget.

Detroit did not cause this crisis. The city government and the state government and the bankers they deal with, who dominate and exploit Detroit, did that. And though Detroit will be forced to pay much of the bill, Detroit is not threatened by this crisis and will not be ended or killed, because Detroit never depended on the city government or the state government or the institutions they deal with for what it is or what it has done. To grow, and to survive, and to thrive, Detroit depends on its people, on the collision and the seeping-together of its many cultures and subcultures and neighborhoods and scenes, on those people’s work and their industry and their craft and their experiments and their interconnection and solidarity and mutual aid. The city of Detroit is its people, not its politics, and it will live on in those people over, above, beyond, and in spite of, the ongoing efforts of local governments and state-appointed "emergency" governments and corporate-political "managers" to somehow bail out and save government’s place within Detroit. Everyone would be better off if the "austerity" government, along with all other local governments, just took this as an opportunity to pack it in and leave the city entirely alone — rather than attempt to somehow auction off, bail out, and save the essential command-posts for its political takeover of people’s space and public life. But even without that, the city continues, and lives, no matter how much the politics falls apart.

Image

Also.

GT 2012-12-08: Have you seen what they do with that stuff?
GT 2009-01-14: Repudiation now

[1] These are of course mostly in and around Dearborn. But Dearborn is of course part of Detroit. Detroit is its communities, not its municipal administrations or the lines that they draw on maps. ↩
[2] Yeah, that’s in Canada. It’s the part of Detroit that happens to be across the Canadian border. Detroit is all its communities, not its municipal governments. Or its national ones. ↩

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image



http://radgeek.com/gt/2013/07/26/on-detroit/


The collapse of the government/state is not the end of the world.

*
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
User avatar
vanlose kid
 
Posts: 3182
Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 7:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby LolaB » Sat Aug 24, 2013 9:24 am

It's mainstream media, for what it's worth, but the picture caught my attention. That's one large eared cat...

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/08/24/big-cat-has-detroit-neighborhood-on-edge/2694721/

DETROIT -- Ambling down the block a couple of weeks ago with his 1-year-old daughter perched on his shoulders, Antwaun Asberry sensed something was behind him.

He turned around and spotted a tall creature that appeared to be a cat, only a lot bigger.

"His tail is longer than my arm," Asberry, a 6-foot-5 Detroiter with a lanky build, said of the cat. "I was like, what the (expletive) ... I don't know what it is. I just want it gone."

So do other residents in the northeast Detroit neighborhood, who said they're unnerved by this supersize cat roaming the streets in recent weeks.
User avatar
LolaB
 
Posts: 107
Joined: Tue Dec 13, 2005 12:20 am
Location: Topanga CA
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby elfismiles » Sun Aug 25, 2013 9:28 am

Thanks for the link to the video LolaB

Image

I was just about to post a link to this story when I saw you'd already done so.

Big Cat Has Detroit Area Residents On Alert
August 24, 2013 11:40 AM
http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2013/08/24/ ... -on-alert/


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ciY29m9ZaWw

LolaB » 24 Aug 2013 13:24 wrote:It's mainstream media, for what it's worth, but the picture caught my attention. That's one large eared cat...

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/08/24/big-cat-has-detroit-neighborhood-on-edge/2694721/
User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Aug 25, 2013 10:39 am

Here Is Every Foreign Country That Gets More Federal Aid Than Detroit

Detroit | 08/22/2013 2:40pm | 9
Bill Bradley | Next City

Credit: Andrew Janik

Thirty-two foreign countries receive more direct aid from the U.S. government than the city of Detroit. This is not to say that Iraq and Nigeria and Mexico don’t need foreign assistance or are undeserving of help from the United States. But when you look at the raw numbers, you start to wonder if some of that cash could be better served in Oakland and Baltimore instead of Karachi and Kabul.

The numbers here are for fiscal year 2014 budget and pulled from ForeignAssistance.gov, which provides data in an attempt to make the federal government more transparent. Foreign assistance is managed by the Department of State, USAID, the Millennium Challenge Corporation, the Department of Defense and the Department of Treasury. It includes everything from economic development to education to “peace and security.” Somehow, foreign assistance only accounts for 1 percent of federal spending.

Detroit, in case you weren’t paying attention, filed for bankruptcy on July 18. The city has $18 billion in long-term debt. It’s not getting a bailout, but it is getting $108.2 million in direct aid next year. Egypt, which may have some of its aid cut, is receiving $129.1 million for economic development alone.

American cities get help from the government in other forms, such as tax breaks, housing programs and federal grants for blight removal. So the $108.2 million in direct aid is not the sole form of help that Washington is shipping off to the Motor City.

But that shouldn’t stop Americans from asking: When will the government quit spending so much money overseas and start investing more in our own cities?

Oftentimes, the first thing people say when they see Detroit’s hulking ruins and blight is, “It looks like a third world country.” It’s not unsavory to imagine how more money injected into depopulated cities and struggling urban cores, from New Orleans to East New York, instead of struggling countries might benefit the economy and country as a whole.

And now, here’s Detroit versus the world in terms of fiscal aid from the U.S. government:
Image
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby MinM » Tue Aug 27, 2013 8:51 am

‘Big Cat’ Causing Stir In Detroit Is Shot Dead
August 27, 2013 8:30 AM
Image
DETROIT (WWJ) - An exotic-looking “big cat” is no longer roaming a northwest Detroit neighborhood.

Several residents called animal control officers after seeing the feline — by some reports described as nearly four feet tall — roaming the streets.

“It got out of its owner’s home about a month ago through a screened-in window. So, we have been out there day and night, trying to set traps out to get this cat,” Laura Wilhelm-Bruzek, with Paws for the Cause Feral Cat Rescue, told WWJ Newsradio 950.

Wilhelm-Bruzek said she spoke to reporters on Saturday who said the cat was killed.

“They gave me a picture of a cat that was deceased, that was shot by a neighbor. So, we already had a good suspicion that the cat was deceased,” she said.

Wilhelm-Bruzek said after word spread about the big cat sightings, she was contacted by people who claimed to be the animal’s owner.

“Yesterday, we finally were contacted by the people that thought this might be their cat. They had heard that I had pictures of the deceased cat and wanted to know if it was their cat,” she said.

Wilhelm-Bruzek met up with the couple, traded pictures and determined they were in fact the cat’s owners.

“They were just hysterical, I mean, they’re heartbroken. They had to watch this unfold over the news and all the lies with people saying this cat is dangerous, you know, when those of us that know the breed know that it was not. I mean, the neighbors have pictures of them petting the cat,” she said.

Wilhelm-Bruzek said the feline was a Savannah, which is a hybrid domestic cat breed.

“It was simply ignorance. A Savannah cat is a cross between an African Serval and a domestic cat, and that is it. They’re larger cats, they’re very beautiful, they have a lot of stripes and spots, which I think was more intimidating to people than even the size of the cat, because the cat wasn’t overly huge, about 25 pounds and maybe when it was sitting was probably two feet tall. But they’re very sweet animals, they’re kind of like the dog of the cat world” she said.

Wilhelm-Bruzek said rumors that the cat is an exotic animal are partly true.

“They’re totally legal pets. As long as they’re cared for and socialized properly from a young age, they’re wonderful animals. They’re legal exotic pets,” she said.

Wilhelm-Bruzek said the situation is one that ultimately could have been prevented, and reminded pet owners to always make sure their animals are in secure closures.

http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2013/08/27/ ... shot-dead/

elfismiles » Sun Aug 25, 2013 8:28 am wrote:Thanks for the link to the video LolaB

Image

I was just about to post a link to this story when I saw you'd already done so.

Big Cat Has Detroit Area Residents On Alert
August 24, 2013 11:40 AM
http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2013/08/24/ ... -on-alert/


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ciY29m9ZaWw

LolaB » 24 Aug 2013 13:24 wrote:It's mainstream media, for what it's worth, but the picture caught my attention. That's one large eared cat...

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/08/24/big-cat-has-detroit-neighborhood-on-edge/2694721/

Earth-704509
User avatar
MinM
 
Posts: 3287
Joined: Wed Jun 04, 2008 2:16 pm
Location: Mont Saint-Michel
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby elfismiles » Tue Aug 27, 2013 4:00 pm

:sadcry:

MinM » 27 Aug 2013 12:51 wrote:
‘Big Cat’ Causing Stir In Detroit Is Shot Dead
August 27, 2013 8:30 AM
Image
<snip>
“They were just hysterical, I mean, they’re heartbroken. They had to watch this unfold over the news and all the lies with people saying this cat is dangerous, you know, when those of us that know the breed know that it was not. I mean, the neighbors have pictures of them petting the cat,” she said.

Wilhelm-Bruzek said the feline was a Savannah, which is a hybrid domestic cat breed.

“It was simply ignorance. A Savannah cat is a cross between an African Serval and a domestic cat, and that is it. They’re larger cats, they’re very beautiful, they have a lot of stripes and spots, which I think was more intimidating to people than even the size of the cat, because the cat wasn’t overly huge, about 25 pounds and maybe when it was sitting was probably two feet tall. But they’re very sweet animals, they’re kind of like the dog of the cat world” she said.
User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby conniption » Thu Sep 12, 2013 3:41 pm

Wonkette

September 4, 2013

Boston Mayor Will Show Detroit How Much He Loves It By Blowing It Sky High

by snipy


Image
can you feel the love?

Oh, Boston. Why don’t you do right like those other cities do? We gave you some tongue-kissing-level love yesterday when we found out you’d feed the poors. We scheduled a visit to your fair town that will be economy-stimulating because we drink a lot. (A LOT.) How do you repay our affections? YOU DO NOT. You spurn our love by your mayor Thomas Menino saying that he would like to visit Detroit so he could blow it up. Wait, what??

“I’d blow up [Detroit] and start all over. No, seriously, when it takes a police officer 90 minutes to answer a call, there’s something wrong with the system. Forty percent of the streetlights are out, most of the buildings are boarded up. Why? Inaction, that’s the problem — leadership.”


Yep. That’s the problem. Not a criminal under-funding of public necessities. Not white flight. Not entrenched poverty. If Boston mayor Tom Menino could just wander in and blow everything to smithereens that would fix everything because rubble is so easy to work with.

Are you thinking what we’re thinking? That maybe as mayor of a city that recently pretty tragically and awfully got itself blowed up you shouldn’t be yammering on about how blowing up a city would fix things? GOOD THINKING. The mayor of Detroit is of sound mind and also joins you in thinking “no, seriously, Boston mayor. What the hell is wrong with you?”

Detroit Mayor Dave Bing fired back on Tuesday by saying he was disappointed at Menino’s choice of words less than a year after the Boston Marathon bombings.

“It is extremely regrettable that Boston Mayor Thomas Menino used such an unfortunate choice of words to describe what he would do if he came to Detroit,” Bing explained, according to MLive. “I would think the mayor of a city that recently experienced a deadly bombing attack would be more sensitive and not use the phrase ‘blow up.’”


Yep. That. Is the mayor of Boston sorry? Sorta not really, but he is sorry you’re sorry:

Menino spokeswoman Dot Joyce says her boss “feels strongly about cities,” cares about Detroit’s problems and “would like to help in any way he can.”

Joyce says “the mayor is sorry that people have taken offense.”


Settle down, Detroit…Detroiters? Detroitonians? Detrotizens?? Anyway, settle down you people that live there. Thomas Menino just wants to hug you and pet you and squeeze you and blow you up and call you George. How can you spurn his hunka hunka burning exploding love?

[NYT/Raw Story]
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby OP ED » Fri Sep 13, 2013 12:04 am

justdrew » Sat Aug 03, 2013 9:46 pm wrote:the owners and operators of that company should immediately be arrested and tried for poisoning a few hundred thousand people.


like that's bloodly likely.

[this thread is a demonstration of at least one reason why OP ED is less sociable than most contributors to this forum]
Giustizia mosse il mio alto fattore:
fecemi la divina podestate,
la somma sapienza e 'l primo amore.

:: ::
S.H.C.R.
User avatar
OP ED
 
Posts: 4673
Joined: Sat Jan 05, 2008 10:04 pm
Location: Detroit
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Sep 27, 2013 12:55 pm

Don Graves named as point man on federal help for Detroit as summit convenes
12:35 PM, September 27, 2013 |


WASHINGTON — Don Graves, a deputy assistant secretary at the U.S. Treasury and executive director of President Barack Obama’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, will be the administration’s point man on the federal response to the financial crisis in Detroit.

The announcement was made today at the federal summit in Detroit, where three Cabinet officials and the director of the president’s National Economic Council, Gene Sperling, are outlining some $300 million in public and private support for the city, which filed for bankruptcy in June.

Sperling, an Ann Arbor native, has been leading the administration response to Detroit but is leaving Obama’s team at the end of the year after five years with the president.

By taking on the role, Graves will help shape the continuing federal response to Detroit’s crisis, even though a federal bailout of the city has been ruled out. In the months to come, federal agencies are expected to continue looking for programmatic funds and grants which could help the city and the White House’s chief technology officer is expected to visit Detroit to help improve financial reporting and other systems.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

Re: Poor Detroit

Postby Laodicean » Fri Oct 25, 2013 11:47 am



Street Fighting Man

In a new America where the promise of education, safety and shelter are in jeopardy, three Detroit men fight to build something lasting for themselves and future generations. Deris Solomon is a young father caring for his infant daughter and trying to get an education without succumbing to the siren call of the streets. Recently homeless, Luke Williams scrapes together enough cash to buy and rebuild a former crack house on a block threatened by arson. And James “Jack Rabbit” Jackson is a retired cop forced to police his own streets after the local precinct shuts down. As we witness each man’s fight to claim his piece of the American Dream, Street Fighting Man reveals that no one can do it alone.

Please connect with us:
Kickstarter: tinyurl.com/streetfightingman
Official Website: streetfightingmanthemovie.com
Facebook Page: facebook.com/documentarymovie
Twitter: twitter.com/StrtFightingMan
User avatar
Laodicean
 
Posts: 3494
Joined: Wed Jan 27, 2010 9:39 pm
Blog: View Blog (16)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests