kmoose
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Where do they start, in your mind?
So BB where does personal accountability, and community/family rank in your mind. Not a factor at all?
Personal accountability is not a political policy. As the article made clear, most of the people protesting were born into a "lord of the flies" type environment. It blows my mind that people have the gall to suggest that the problem with a young man raised in an environment like that is that he just is not sufficiently responsible.
The fact is that blacks in rust belt cities have been hit harder than anyone by macroeconomic and political forces over the past 50 years. The article talks about this: the inner harbor, for example, has been transformed from an engine for the growth of a black middle class to a tourist playground.
I don't think there are any easy solutions, and I certainly agree that the Black community has to be a part of the solution here, it can't all come from government. But it is 100% a cop-out for people to act like the only problem is that people are making bad choices at an individual and family level.
So BB where does personal accountability, and community/family rank in your mind. Not a factor at all?
My position is that it's awfully tough to get ahead in a capitalist society when you don't have access to capital.
So for 34 years ('34-'68) they did not have access to mortgages in the inner city. But for the last almost 50 years ('68-'15), they have.
People need to stop blaming the war on drugs.
The war on drugs has hit the black community particularly hard, but that is only because black gangs turned to dealing drugs as a way of generating quick and easy money. They defended their drug turf with increasingly violent means, using weapons largely financed by the drug profits.
So people demanded that the government react, and react strongly. And that included people of color living in the affected areas.
The drug sentences were disproportionate for blacks, compared to whites, largely based on aggravating factors such as gang affiliation, trafficking vs. possession, and repeat offenses. These things have certainly played a part in the modern day problems that exist in poor black communities.
But I do think that the lack of cohesive family units is a bigger factor.
The politicians didn't shutter the businesses that provided a blue collar, middle class existence for blacks in the neighborhood, so what caused the jobs to leave? The City has a fiduciary responsibility to invest tax monies in the economic vehicles that have the greatest chance to succeed. Now, we all know that cities don't always get it right, but you cannot expect cities to invest in high risk low yield projects, just because "they always muck it up, anyway". So the investment in the inner harbor isn't necessarily a racist policy. One would have to look at the proposals that the city bought into, at the time that they invested in them. Plus, urban renewals are often a combination of public and private funds. So it could very well be that the inner harbor was dictated by the private investors? I do think it is a good idea for there to be a concerted effort to attract investment in the neglected neighborhoods just adjacent to the inner harbor area. Then, once those neighborhoods are improved, move on to the adjoining areas again. People are much more likely to invest in a neighborhood that directly borders a popular area. If people are going to have to transit through "the hood" to go from their neighborhood to the nice area, then they are not as likely to invest.
Personal accountability is not a political policy. As the article made clear, most of the people protesting were born into a "lord of the flies" type environment. It blows my mind that people have the gall to suggest that the problem with a young man raised in an environment like that is that he just is not sufficiently responsible.
It's a factor of the current situation, but in the "how they got there" it ranks below this:
From 1934-1968 the federal government refused to back mortgages and lending in black communities via the FHA, HOLC, FHLBB, and other programs in a process known as redlining.
Here's the Baltimore map from 1937. Note where the black people live:
![]()
My position is that it's awfully tough to get ahead in a capitalist society when you don't have access to capital.
Whereas not only did they back mortgages for white people, they subsidized 91% of the freeway costs thus creating artificially cheap development opportunities in the suburbs. So the white people and their tax base moved out of the cities and the inner cities crumbled. Note that the FHA refused to back mixed-race suburban developments because they thought it destabilized investments, it's sorta tough to move out of the ghetto when you...can't move out of the ghetto.
It's also worth bringing up that not only were market forces used to isolate blacks in the ghettos, it's a fact that the government often circled these communities with highways to act as a moat, so that you couldn't walk out of the neighborhood is if you tried. They also divided functioning neighborhoods (albeit poor) like this:
![]()
Sort tough to have a functioning community when the federal government plops a six-lane freeway right through it. The Columbus examples of this are in Franklinton and Milo-Grogan.
Also please note that when you isolate poverty you make it worse. We learned that the hard way with failed public housing projects designed with ass-backwards modernist designs, check out some articles on Pruitt-Igoe. So we double-fucked school systems by removing the tax base and leaving them the poor kids. The government's response to the disastrous effects of suburbanism which were first-evident, known as Urban Renewal (which is an actual policy and not an overarching term for reinvestment into cities like many people want to scoff) was a disaster. It was mitigation attempt 1.0, and it sucked.
And oh yeah, when the racist housing policies ended in 1968, we started the War on Drugs in 1971. And let's not try to pretend that this isn't fucked up:
![]()
At this point I think the destruction of the black family is a chicken-and-the-egg situation. We absolutely crushed black communities before their families ever fell apart. I cringe when I see people speak about personal responsibility and end the discussion there. There is soooooo much more to it to explain how these neighborhoods got to that point.
As I've said on the thread, I don't understand why we don't have a funded outreach campaign with guys like Lebron saying "my number if 23, wait until you're that old to have kids" or shit like that. I am fully on board with realizing it's a huge problem, but my position is that it's the effect of the greater injustice.
It's a factor of the current situation, but in the "how they got there" it ranks below this:
OK, so you agree it's a factor. So where does personal accountability stop/start, and historical disadvantage stop/start?
BTW, I agree this explains lot, but I don't give folks a pass for doing bad when they know it's bad.
From 1934-1968 the federal government refused to back mortgages and lending in black communities via the FHA, HOLC, FHLBB, and other programs in a process known as redlining.
Has this improved since 1968?
Here's the Baltimore map from 1937. Note where the black people live:
![]()
My position is that it's awfully tough to get ahead in a capitalist society when you don't have access to capital.
Whereas not only did they back mortgages for white people, they subsidized 91% of the freeway costs thus creating artificially cheap development opportunities in the suburbs. So the white people and their tax base moved out of the cities and the inner cities crumbled. Note that the FHA refused to back mixed-race suburban developments because they thought it destabilized investments, it's sorta tough to move out of the ghetto when you...can't move out of the ghetto.
It's also worth bringing up that not only were market forces used to isolate blacks in the ghettos, it's a fact that the government often circled these communities with highways to act as a moat, so that you couldn't walk out of the neighborhood is if you tried. They also divided functioning neighborhoods (albeit poor) like this:
I'm sure $$ had a lot to do with it (easier to build through poor neighborhoods), but not necessarily race. I grew up poor and twice had highways pop up through my hood.
![]()
Sort tough to have a functioning community when the federal government plops a six-lane freeway right through it.
Ours stayed functional
Also please note that when you isolate poverty you make it worse. We learned that the hard way with failed public housing projects designed with ass-backwards modernist designs, check out some articles on Pruitt-Igoe. So we double-fucked school systems by removing the tax base and leaving them the poor kids. The government's response to the disastrous effects of suburbanism which were first-evident, known as Urban Renewal (which is an actual policy and not an overarching term for reinvestment into cities like many people want to scoff) was a disaster. It was mitigation attempt 1.0, and it sucked.
I grew up down the street from the projects in south central indy. My grandparents raised 10 kids there. My parents, and several others struggled and sacrificed to keep me out of public schools that were horrible. They also worked hard to be able to move out of that neighborhood. Are my parents bad people because they wanted to escape to the burbs and put me in a private school because their parents neighborhood went to hell (both white and black violence). I'm sure you'll say no, but doesn't it perpetuate the removal of tax base?
And oh yeah, when the racist housing policies ended in 1968, we started the War on Drugs in 1971. And let's not try to pretend that this isn't fucked up:
Are these numbers just USERS, or ones in jail due to selling, violence, etc.. Not being a smart @ss, honest question. It's two very different things.
![]()
At this point I think the destruction of the black family is a chicken-and-the-egg situation.
Agree on the chicken/egg thing. So is I say, yes, lets go all in with tax dollars to help this..... when does government aid and rationalization stop, and accountability begin? 10 years, 50 years, 100 years?
We absolutely crushed black communities before their families ever fell apart. I cringe when I see people speak about personal responsibility and end the discussion there.
I don't end the discussion their, but at some point, every thing is a choice. Doesn't matter what color you are. There is no magic wand or silver bullet to erase the last XX years. While it may be easier for some to follow the law, it's still the law. There is no degree to which the law is followed.
There is soooooo much more to it to explain how these neighborhoods got to that point.
As I've said on the thread, I don't understand why we don't have a funded outreach campaign with guys like Lebron saying "my number if 23, wait until you're that old to have kids" or shit like that.
I wish more successful folks would do more in clear view. So many bad role models, not enough good.
I am fully on board with realizing it's a huge problem, but my position is that it's the effect of the greater injustice.
It wouldn't. What good is a degree if there are no jobs to be had? The Middle Class has all but disappeared in the US because of the death of manufacturing. While technology jobs have helped bridge the gap, they have not been a satisfactory replacement. You only need so many cable/satellite installers. If a guy has an Electronics Engineering Degree, it isn't going to do him any good if there are only so many new cable/satellite installations to go around. But I'm sure these people will be able to find some camaraderie in their Occupy camp(s).
The Republicans are making proposals as well. The problem is that people vilify the GOP proposals as "corporate welfare", and accuse the GOP of trying to help the rich get richer. Strong companies build jobs. What is not a problem of either Party, but of both, is that government has to stop rewarding political donations with cash subsidies for businesses like Solyndra.
It's not, and it's a ridiculous stance. But I think that most who have voiced it were not really serious about it, and were just letting off some steam.
I absolutely agree with this. Obama has been in office for 7 years now. How come we aren't seeing results from this program? There *is* a program, isn't there? Wasn't one of his campaign promises to start to fix the infrastructure issues in the country?
That may be true of many, but we also know that many spend it on frivolous stuff like marijuana and meth.
Hey goirish41 what's your take on the 3 MONORITY police officers charged in this case?
Since you made this a race debate!
A kapo or prisoner functionary (German: Funktionshäftling, see section Etymology) was a prisoner in a Nazi concentration camp who was assigned by the SS guards to supervise forced labor or carry out administrative tasks in the camp. Also called "prisoner self-administration", the prisoner functionary system minimized costs by allowing camps to function with fewer SS personnel. The system was designed to turn victim against victim, as the prisoner functionaries were pitted against their fellow prisoners in order to maintain the favor of their SS guards.
define many. It is probably less than you think.
... the problem will not go away until it is addressed honestly, and great effort is put in to enacting a meaningful solution.
Hey goirish41 what's your take on the 3 MONORITY police officers charged in this case?
Since you made this a race debate!
I take it you mean minority. It happens everywhere. In the pre-Civil War South, back through Roman times (Gladiators), to the Ancient Greeks. Those groups with power can turn those without against themselves every time!
In the long run, Ms. Mosby may be undermining the cause of justice rather than promoting it. She has created an expectation of guilt and conviction. If that does not happen, many will blame the system as unfair or unjust, when it may have been Ms. Mosby's own lack of competence and/or arrogance in bringing charges so quickly.
And she has created a new expectation in the city: that police officers who arrest without what she considers to be probable cause (a subjective standard) are subject not just to civil action (the current norm) but criminal action. Mere mistakes, or judgments exercised under duress, can land them in the pokey.
If I were a Baltimore police officer, I'd be looking for another job immediately. And as a Baltimore citizen, I may start looking for someplace else to live. When the police cannot depend upon the state's attorney to be as thorough, competent, non-political and fair with them as she is supposed to be with all citizens, none of us will be safe.
Page Croyder spent 21 years in the Baltimore state's attorneys office, most recently as a deputy state's attorney.
It's a factor of the current situation, but in the "how they got there" it ranks below this:
From 1934-1968 the federal government refused to back mortgages and lending in black communities via the FHA, HOLC, FHLBB, and other programs in a process known as redlining.
Here's the Baltimore map from 1937. Note where the black people live:
![]()
My position is that it's awfully tough to get ahead in a capitalist society when you don't have access to capital.
Whereas not only did they back mortgages for white people, they subsidized 91% of the freeway costs thus creating artificially cheap development opportunities in the suburbs. So the white people and their tax base moved out of the cities and the inner cities crumbled. Note that the FHA refused to back mixed-race suburban developments because they thought it destabilized investments, it's sorta tough to move out of the ghetto when you...can't move out of the ghetto.
It's also worth bringing up that not only were market forces used to isolate blacks in the ghettos, it's a fact that the government often circled these communities with highways to act as a moat, so that you couldn't walk out of the neighborhood is if you tried. They also divided functioning neighborhoods (albeit poor) like this:
![]()
Sort tough to have a functioning community when the federal government plops a six-lane freeway right through it. The Columbus examples of this are in Franklinton and Milo-Grogan.
Also please note that when you isolate poverty you make it worse. We learned that the hard way with failed public housing projects designed with ass-backwards modernist designs, check out some articles on Pruitt-Igoe. So we double-fucked school systems by removing the tax base and leaving them the poor kids. The government's response to the disastrous effects of suburbanism which were first-evident, known as Urban Renewal (which is an actual policy and not an overarching term for reinvestment into cities like many people want to scoff) was a disaster. It was mitigation attempt 1.0, and it sucked.
And oh yeah, when the racist housing policies ended in 1968, we started the War on Drugs in 1971. And let's not try to pretend that this isn't fucked up:
![]()
At this point I think the destruction of the black family is a chicken-and-the-egg situation. We absolutely crushed black communities before their families ever fell apart. I cringe when I see people speak about personal responsibility and end the discussion there. There is soooooo much more to it to explain how these neighborhoods got to that point.
As I've said on the thread, I don't understand why we don't have a funded outreach campaign with guys like Lebron saying "my number if 23, wait until you're that old to have kids" or shit like that. I am fully on board with realizing it's a huge problem, but my position is that it's the effect of the greater injustice.
'The Wire'
I moved them off the corners.
Goddamnit, don't be coy with me, Major.
I can see that.
What I want to know is how the fuck you managed to move them and where the fuck they are now.
Deputy I don't know quite how to put this, but we I mean, I I began by identifying those areas of my district where drug trafficking was least harmful I proceeded to push all street-level dealing towards those areas.
Now at first dealing with the juveniles on them corners, had little success.
But ultimately by rounding up all the mid-level dealers in my district and making an offer they couldn't refuse - I was able to - You made them an offer? Yes, sir.
Either they move their people to one of three designated areas where drug enforcement was not a district priority or they face the wrath of every able-bodied soul in my district.
Major, I don't understand.
The only time we can hold a drug corner is when we assign officers to stand there.
Your slides don't suggest any concerted deployment on any corners.
How were you able to Jesus christ, you nit, don't you see what he's done.
He's legalized drugs! Actually, I elected to ignore them.
You lost your fucking mind.
He's lost his fucking mind.
The Wire 310 Episode Script | SS
Morale of the story, cops on every corner?
Funny stuuff here. Watch 'The Wire' take 2 aspirins annd get back to me.
So you are really going to compare the current social environment of black people in the United States today with that of the pre Civil War South and the Roman empire that fell around 600 AD?
Jews working in the SS??? During the control of one of the most infamous tyrants ever?? During a war??
Last time I checked, we have a black or at least partially black man as the President of the United States... But this is such a racist and hate filled country.
Give me a f'ing break man....
So what's the solution? It sure sounds like, according to some, if we just exterminate all of the white people then things will be downright Utopian?