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Saturday 1 December 2012

Info Post
Democracy in America...
Out of 815,825 votes cast in Wayne County, Michigan (home of Detroit) in the 2012 Presidential election, 595,846 went to Barack Obama.

Detroit, a 90 percent black metropolis, is what Mayor David Bing calls "one of the hardest jobs in America":
“(My job is) to make the hard decision so this city would have a future, but it’s probably the second most difficult job in this country behind the president,” he said.

“We are in an environment, I think, of entitlement, we’ve got a lot of people who are city workers, who for years and years, 20, 30 years, think they are entitled to a job and all that comes with it,” Bing said.
He added: “Nobody wants to go backwards, but in order for us to move this city forward we’re going to have to take a step or two backwards — and then, I think, all of us have to participate in the pain that’ s upon us right now.”
 A 90 percent black city... completely reliant on federal and state grants to pay the bills. With an unemployment rate of 18.1 (from a high of 27 percent in 2009), why would Detroit continue to go Democrat year after year? Oh... that's right.

We live in a racial democracy, where black skin guarantees victory from an almost entirely black electorate. But... what happens to a city where almost all commerce comes courtesy of the taxpayer, via the welfare and EBT/Food stamps?

What will happen to Detroit, where the middle class in a 90 percent black city is those few black employees still on the payroll of the city government (since so few black entrepreneurs have stepped forward to create new business - or sustain businesses - with the absence of white people)?

We now know [State Senator Proposes Dissolving City Of Detroit, CBS Detroit, 11-28-12]:
It would no doubt be controversial, but the idea of dissolving the fiscally struggling city of Detroit and absorbing it into Wayne County is being tossed around in Lansing.
WWJ Lansing Bureau Chief Tim Skubick reports some state Republicans are talking about giving the city the option to vote itself into bankruptcy. And mid-Michigan Senator Rick Jones said all options should be considered — including dissolving the city.
“If we have to, that is one idea we have to look at. We really have to look at everything that is on the table,” Jones said. “Again, if this goes to federal bankruptcy, every employee down there will suffer, the city will suffer and the vultures will come in and take the jewels of Detroit and they will be gone.”
Local consultant Tom Watkins has proposed this in the past, but the idea has never played well among Detroiters.
In a live interview on WWJ Newsradio 950 Wednesday morning, Gov. Rick Snyder said he wouldn’t count anything out.
“Detroit needs to solve their problems, but they need support and we’ve been very supportive partners, I believe, in terms of offering different ideas and thoughts. And I just encourage them to work harder about working better together,” Snyder said.
Talking to Talk Radio 1270 host Charlie Langton, Detroit’s ex-communications chief Karen Dumas said she would not support such a plan.
“No, I don’t think that dissolution is the solution for the city of Detroit; I don’t,” said Dumas. “I think people … with every step we get more and more fearful … and maybe at some point that’s going to make everybody wake up and realize that we need to stop playing politics and come up with a solution for progress.   “I don’t know at what point that’s going to happen. “
Detroit Political Consultant Skip Mongo said the answer to Detroit’s fiscal crisis will come with fresh faces in City Council chambers and the Mayor’s office.
“We move forward and we start looking for new leadership, and we don’t make the mistake that we made before — we certainty don’t look around and outsource the mayor’s office,” Mongo said.
Mongo, who believes Detroit Mayor Dave Bing was a poor choice to begin, said Bing doesn’t a chance if he opts to run for re-election.
“Anything short of a tidal wave and Mayor Bing getting out with his boots on, or doin’ a [New Jersey Gov.] Chris Christie, no — he can’t win,” Mongo said. ”I don’t think Mayor Bing could beat me and I’ve never run for anything in my life. Honestly, no. He should leave.”
Meantime, the Bing administration continues to battle with council members over a deal to handle the city’s reform plan.
Bing said the council’s rejection last week of a contract with law firm Miller Canfield means the city missed a deadline to draw down $10 million Detroit needs to stay afloat and endangers a $20 million release in December.  Bing called it a huge setback for the financial recovery of Detroit, adding that unpaid furlough days are on the way for city workers if this isn’t worked out. 
Here's the ultimate question: Detroit still has a population of just over 750,000 people. How can this population - 90 percent black mind you - not have the financial wherewithal to have the means to produce enough income capable of being taxed to provide that necessary $10 million to keep the city afloat?

Worse -- why can't black people maintain neighborhoods that can provide sufficient revenue through property taxes?

Bloomberg.com reported that President Obama would have carried the state of Michigan without Detroit; but can Detroit - a city that is 90 percent black - be carried without the financial help of the state of Michigan? Without the continued infusion of cash from the federal government?

No.

What does this say about the state of black America?

In the absence of whiteness, the privilege of civilization is too great a burden to maintain.

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