WhatFinger

The de-industrialization of Detroit

Moral Decline of America – Detroit’s Water Cutoffs ‘Blamed on Bankruptcy’


By Guest Column Shawn Helton -- 21st Century Wire——--July 1, 2014

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It has been nearly a year since Detroit declared bankruptcy, now thousands of residents have had their water cutoff since March and 150,000 more are facing the same fate...

A brief history of monetary ruin

Detroit Michigan is known as the 'Motor City' and was once proudly hailed as one of the most innovative cities in America for all of its automotive manufacturing prowess, but those days have long-since ended, marking a great decline in production and job creation--but what exactly happened. Detroit's transformation from the 4th largest city in the United States with nearly 1.8 million people to the 18th most populous city with just over 700,000 residents didn't happen overnight - it took decades. Corrupt politicians like Kwame Kilpatrick, and a host of other city officials slowly sapped the city of its resources, leading to Detroit's financial coffin. Kilpatrick, the former mayor of Detroit from (2002-2008), extorted the city out of $2 billion in contracts while he was acting as the special administrator of the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD), illegally awarding the management of wastewater to outside parties without concern for the health and safety of those located in the municipality. Additionally, critics have charged that Kilpatrick's restructuring of the city's pension debt in 2005, fast tracked the city to ruin with a Wall Street loan of $1.44 bilion that will take an estimated 22 years to payoff.

As of this past March, water services have been abruptly cutoff in the city of Detroit for many residents, as the municipality has tried to recoup financial losses incurred following their Chapter 9 filing, while also blaming unpaid water bills. In the process those without water have soared to an alarming rate of 3,000 people per week, effecting mostly those in lower income communities who haven't been able to pay their water accounts on time according to reports. It's hard not to think that the contract corruption, as well as the Wall Street lending that occurred under Kilpatrick didn't also factor into the current situation with DWSD, when you consider the financial deficit and strain the city was burdened with. Fresh water from the Great Lakes supplies Detroit and its governance could be a major concern in the future.

The UN, Detroit residents & human rights

When looking at transnational corporations and harmful trade deals such as NAFTA the picture becomes clearer, couple that with crony political scams--can the residents really be at fault for the monetary woes of Detroit? We don't think so. This doesn't necessarily excuse people not paying their bills, however, when you consider the history of job losses directly attributed to an engineered financial fallout, its hard to reconcile the DWSD's decision in this situation as there are other accounts of them exorbitantly raising the cost of city water. The United Nation's High Commissioner for Human Rights office described Detroit's massive water shutoffs as a 'human rights' concern, as Catarina de Albuquerque stated: "Disconnections due to non-payment are only permissible if it can be shown that the resident is able to pay but is not paying. In other words, when there is genuine inability to pay, human rights simply forbids disconnections." Their is no doubt that what's unfolding in Detroit is a humanitarian crisis, as many have been without access to water at their residence for several weeks and in some cases longer. There are also reports that activists have requested the UN's involvement, while their actions appear to be appropriate in terms of drawing attention to the health concerns in Detroit, you have to wonder why the city itself has been incapable of figuring out this crisis themselves without the international body taking the lead. You also have to wonder if the UN has its own self-interest getting involved in a crisis like this. What will be expected of Detroit in the future for receiving help from the intergovernmental organization?

The de-industrialization of Detroit

Much of Detroit now looks as though it's a post-apocalyptic scene out of Cormac McCarthy's The Road and has been ravaged by inner-city crime, it is also a city that has been pillaged by predatory lending practices in the ramp up to the 2008 collapse and the auto-bailout which ultimately was the undoing for the cash-strapped city. America has lost much of its manufacturing jobs since so-called free trade agreements like NAFTA, GATT and CAFTA made their way into the corporate lexicon of US industry. These agreements opened the door to ship manufacturing jobs overseas, directly benefiting the globalist controlled corporations with less overhead by tapping into the 'slave labor' in other countries like China, vastly reducing American factory production of which Detroit has become a casualty of. In 2011, it was reported that the United States has lost over 60% of its factory based jobs. The $80 billion dollar bailout of the auto industry, helped Detroit's failing automakers like GM and Chrysler from near bankruptcy to gigantic profits but this failed to solve the city's rising unemployment, slashing its budget stateside in favor of its operations overseas. When you factor in the corporate welfare and unions into the mix you see that the consolidation of wealth anchored to socialism, directly benefited banks and auto business owners while leaving Detroit empty.

Subprime predators

Between 2004 and 2006, 75% of Detroit's mortgages were subprime loans. In 2012, Detroit homes lost over 30% of their value, as 100,000 homes were foreclosed on. Mike Shane of the activist group Moratorium Now!, had this to say in regards to paying back Wall Street debt, "We're almost like economic refugees." A leading anti-foreclosure lawyer Jerry Goldberg has discussed the situation in Detroit and the dangers of certain lending practices, "There was predatory lending against people, which precipitated the financial crisis." 'Land of the Dead'--The interior of Michigan Central Station in present day disrepair, it was once an iconic building in the 'Motor City' originally built in 1913. The Moroun family has slowly begun renovating the former picturesque structure (Photo: Islandbreath.blogspot.com) More...

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Guest Column——

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