you've never met me, and I'm not black. Nice try though.purklize said:
Honestly I think you're the first black guy I've met who was in denial about the existence of anti-white racism. You remind me of all the clowns who thought those who wanted Kilpatrick out of office were racist.
If you look here at "most common industries," manufacturing doesn't appear on the list:Not so true, both areas were/are manufacturing based. Detroit still headquarters Compuware, for now, and Comerica just recently left for Texas. I believe these cities are much more similar than many outsiders assume. Furthermore, the political BS fed to these cities is as identical as the outcomes will be
I had thought you said before on the forums that you were black. Either way, that just means that I have now not met a single black guy who didn't admit that anti-white racism exists and is a problem.you've never met me, and I'm not black. Nice try though.
As for weed being more legal in AA than Detroit... You get caught smoking outside on the street in Ann arbor you get a $25 ticket. In Detroit the cops laugh and tell you to put it out and go about their business. I smoke herb openly on the streets of Detroit frequently. Which seems more legal, getting a citation with your name on it or being told to put it out?
Our economy in Detroit was also much more diverse prior to losing half of it's population in the 90's. Chicago's population is currently seeing the same mass exodus three decades later. This is not just a coincidence
http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Detroit.aspx (from the year 2000)The vibrant growing economy is shifting from sole reliance on the automotive industry to a diversified high-tech and commercial base.
[SIZE=-1][SIZE=-1]At one time America's most productive city, and having been built itself around manufacturing, Detroit necessarily felt the collapse of manufacturing more intensely than any other city; its consequences there have been more extreme.[/SIZE]
Yep, you are right for sure on this, capital is completely liquid and can move instantly across the globe, while workers cannot do this, hence the end result tends to be fantastic for capital (and therefore investors) while simultaneously catastrophic for workers. It's a sad story in the worst way.I guess I am referring to the historical perspective that the bedrock of manufacturing within the Great Lakes (WWI & WWII eras) is what built the world renowned cities of Detroit & Chicago, in both infrastructure and populations. It was a coming together of industry and government that made this possible. It is also the separation of such that proved to be so harmful to the people whom cannot just pickup and move on like the politicians and businessmen have Same story, different town ...
Rare D MI - I wasn't in Ann Arbor back then, I moved here 4-5 years ago after college. I can only reflect on the situation since I arrived. I haven't seen anyone get ticketed, or heard of cops showing up for mj-related calls. I reeked up a five story apartment building with a tremendous stench for weeks without realizing it (my sense of smell sucks) and the cops never showed up.I have spent a lot of time in Ann arbor in the last 12 years. How old are you purklize? I'm wondering if you remember the city at all pre 2006 prop C, which a friend of mine helped write and pushed for it's passing as the VP of university of Michigan SSDP.
http://ireadculture.com/2012/08/news/bythenumbers/by-the-numbers-29/Number of people arrested in 2009 in Detroit for alleged possession and/or use of small amounts of cannabis: 1,521 (Source: 36th District Court records).