“Leaving Oxford for Wales was like leaving Yale for Ypsilanti”

According to a reader by the name of Dan Lautenbach, the above quote appears in the new issue of the Atlantic, in an article about the archbishop of Canterbury.

I’m in the process of drafting a letter to Paul Elie, the author of the piece, asking what the big idea is.

As I don’t believe there’s an Ypsilanti in England, I’m guessing that he means us, and I’m wondering if he just needed a town with a funny-sounding Y-name, or if perhaps it was more personal. Did he, perhaps, know of someone who left Yale of Ypsilanti, who complained of our backwater, hillbilly ways?

Is Ypsilanti really the antithesis of Yale?

I think this calls for an investigation… and, quite possibly, an ivy league ass kicking.

Posted in Observations, Ypsilanti | Tagged , | 14 Comments

Richard Florida and the reshaping of America

In the new March issue of the Atlantic, Richard Florida ponders how our current financial crisis may reshape America. Regardless of what you might think of Florida and his academic research, it’s a question worth considering. Given what we know about demographics and trends, which regions of the United States are most likely to weather the storm successfully, and which are likely to dry up and blow away?

OK, let’s cut right to the chase and see what Florida makes of Detroit’s chances. Here’s a clip:

…The Rust Belt in particular looks likely to shed vast numbers of jobs, and some of its cities and towns, from Cleveland to St. Louis to Buffalo to Detroit, will have a hard time recovering. Since 1950, the manufacturing sector has shrunk from 32 percent of nonfarm employment to just 10 percent. This decline is the result of long-term trends—increasing foreign competition and, especially, the relentless replacement of people with machines—that look unlikely to abate. But the job losses themselves have proceeded not steadily, but rather in sharp bursts, as recessions have killed off older plants and resulted in mass layoffs that are never fully reversed during subsequent upswings.

In November, nationwide unemployment in manufacturing and production occupations was already 9.4 percent. Compare that with the professional occupations, where it was just a little over 3 percent. According to an analysis done by Michael Mandel, the chief economist at BusinessWeek, jobs in the “tangible” sector—that is, production, construction, extraction, and transport—declined by nearly 1.8 million between December 2007 and November 2008, while those in the intangible sector—what I call the “creative class” of scientists, engineers, managers, and professionals—increased by more than 500,000. Both sorts of jobs are regionally concentrated. Paul Krugman has noted that the worst of the crisis, so far at least, can be seen in a “Slump Belt,” heavy with manufacturing centers, running from the industrial Midwest down into the Carolinas. Large swaths of the Northeast, with its professional and creative centers, have been better insulated.

Perhaps no major city in the U.S. today looks more beleaguered than Detroit, where in October the average home price was $18,513, and some 45,000 properties were in some form of foreclosure. A recent listing of tax foreclosures in Wayne County, which encompasses Detroit, ran to 137 pages in the Detroit Free Press. The city’s public school system, facing a budget deficit of $408 million, was taken over by the state in December; dozens of schools have been closed since 2005 because of declining enrollment. Just 10 percent of Detroit’s adult residents are college graduates, and in December the city’s jobless rate was 21 percent.

To say the least, Detroit is not well positioned to absorb fresh blows. The city has of course been declining for a long time. But if the area’s auto headquarters, parts manufacturers, and remaining auto-manufacturing jobs should vanish, it’s hard to imagine anything replacing them.

When work disappears, city populations don’t always decline as fast as you might expect. Detroit, astonishingly, is still the 11th-largest city in the U.S. “If you no longer can sell your property, how can you move elsewhere?” said Robin Boyle, an urban-planning professor at Wayne State University, in a December Associated Press article. But then he answered his own question: “Some people just switch out the lights and leave—property values have gone so low, walking away is no longer such a difficult option.”

Perhaps Detroit has reached a tipping point, and will become a ghost town. I’d certainly expect it to shrink faster in the next few years than it has in the past few. But more than likely, many people will stay—those with no means and few obvious prospects elsewhere, those with close family ties nearby, some number of young professionals and creative types looking to take advantage of the city’s low housing prices. Still, as its population density dips further, the city’s struggle to provide services and prevent blight across an ever-emptier landscape will only intensify…

Not a very rosy picture, huh?

On the bright side, though, he didn’t use the phrase “cannibal holocaust.”

And, no offense to Mr. Florida, but predicting that things are going to get worse in Detroit as the population continues to fall, and as the auto industry does its death rattle, doesn’t require a great deal of insight… I also think it’s worth pointing out that Florida, in his analysis, hasn’t taken into account that Michigan has the water. Nor has he considered what might become of the coastal communities as sea levels rise and storms become more severe in the wake of global warming. But, with all that said, I still think he’s right. Things are accelerating, and it doesn’t look good for either Detroit or Michigan in the short term.

Posted in Economics, Michigan | Tagged , , , , | 9 Comments

I still love Ultraman

I don’t feel like blogging tonight, so, instead, I’ve decided to force you to watch a clip from one of my favorite childhood television shows, Ultraman.

While we’re on the subject, I should also mention that the best Christmas present I ever got was from Linette about fourteen years ago, when we lived in Atlanta. She found a guy who had all the episodes of the 1966 Ultraman on videotape and paid him to make me a bootleg. How cool is that?

Posted in Art and Culture, Mark's Life, Pop Culture | Tagged , , , , | 7 Comments

Boarding up the windows of the Thompson Block

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I’ve been meaning to publicly thank landlord Stewart Beal for boarding up the broken windows of Ypsilanti’s historic Thompson Block for some time now. I know that Dave Strenski and others in the community have been asking him for him to do this for some time, even going so far as to send him pictures of things that have been done elsewhere, and I appreciate his listening to the community… I should add that I don’t know that Stewart had the windows boarded up in response to the public pressure. He could very well have planned to board up the windows of the former Civil War barracks on his own. Regardless, however, I think he deserves thanks from the community. Now, let’s just hope that he can get the bank financing he needs to complete the rehabilitation he began when he first gained possession of the property. And, now, let’s see if we can get Dennis Dahlman to clean up the former train depot he owns across the street. If we really are going to get that train stop we’ve been talking about, we’d better start seriously preparing for it.

It’s also worth pointing out that this thing with Beal didn’t happen in isolation. There’s a lot of positive development activity taking place as of late. Since the beginning of this winter, Beezy’s was opened on Washington Street, the SPARK East facility was opened on Michigan Avenue, and, I’m told, the long awaited Mongolian barbeque slated for the old Kresge building is about to open its doors. That’s three formerly vacant, highly prominent storefronts that are once again in play, and that’s a huge accomplishment in this economy. Congratulations to all the owners, developers and entrepreneurs who made it happen. Hopefully, it’s just the start.

Posted in Ypsilanti | Tagged , , , , , | 24 Comments

9/11 Truth activist Beverly Eckert killed in commuter plane crash

Among those killed last night in the crash of flight 3407, was Beverly Eckert, a well known figure in the 9/11 Truth movement. Eckert, who had lost her husband of 34 years, Sean, in the World Trade Center attacks on September 11, was a vocal critic of the Bush administration’s investigation into the events of that day. Eckert, as you might remember, was one of the few family members of those killed not to accept the huge financial settlement offered by the government in the wake of the tragedy, opting instead to work through the courts. Here is her statement, as published in December 2003, in USA Today:

I’ve chosen to go to court rather than accept a payoff from the 9/11 victims compensation fund. Instead, I want to know what went so wrong with our intelligence and security systems that a band of religious fanatics was able to turn four U.S passenger jets into an enemy force, attack our cities and kill 3,000 civilians with terrifying ease. I want to know why two 110-story skyscrapers collapsed in less than two hours and why escape and rescue options were so limited.

I am suing because unlike other investigative avenues, including congressional hearings and the 9/11 commission, my lawsuit requires all testimony be given under oath and fully uses powers to compel evidence.

The victims fund was not created in a spirit of compassion. Rather, it was a tacit acknowledgement by Congress that it tampered with our civil justice system in an unprecedented way. Lawmakers capped the liability of the airlines at the behest of lobbyists who descended on Washington while the Sept. 11 fires still smoldered.

And this liability cap protects not just the airlines, but also World Trade Center builders, safety engineers and other defendants.

The caps on liability have consequences for those who want to sue to shed light on the mistakes of 9/11. It means the playing field is tilted steeply in favor of those who need to be held accountable. With the financial consequences other than insurance proceeds removed, there is no incentive for those whose negligence contributed to the death toll to acknowledge their failings or implement reforms. They can afford to deny culpability and play a waiting game.

By suing, I’ve forfeited the “$1.8 million average award” for a death claim I could have collected under the fund. Nor do I have any illusions about winning money in my suit. What I do know is I owe it to my husband, whose death I believe could have been avoided, to see that all of those responsible are held accountable. If we don’t get answers to what went wrong, there will be a next time. And instead of 3,000 dead, it will be 10,000. What will Congress do then?

So I say to Congress, big business and everyone who conspired to divert attention from government and private-sector failures: My husband’s life was priceless, and I will not let his death be meaningless. My silence cannot be bought.

Still very much active in the movement to determine what really happened and hold those responsible accountable, she had apparently met with President Obama just last week.

Unfortunately, there will be some who believe that this terrible crash, which claimed the lives of not just Eckert, but 49 others, is somehow connected to her 9/11-related work. There are already threads popping up on the internet suggesting as much. I suppose it could be true, but I think it’s highly unlikely. I feel, however, that the government does deserve some blame – not for the crash itself, but for the fact that people are attributing sinister motives when none likely existed. [Given all we know at this point, it seems fairly certain that the crash was ice and weather related.] If there weren’t still so many unanswered questions about what really happened on that day in 2001, I doubt that people would still have these lingering doubts. If the government were more forthcoming with information, the conspiracy theories out there, like the ones now surrounding Eckert’s death, would likely fade away.

Posted in Other | Tagged , , , | 192 Comments

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