JMan
998
Reasons for Detroit's downfall is more complicated.....
As former resident of the Detroit metro area, I can tell you that inability to compete is only a portion (perhaps even a small portion) of the reasons for decline. Detroit went from a great big city (1.8M in 1950's) to giving up a lot as population migrated out into the suburbs (metro Detroit). It has to be noted that the metro Detroit today is still a massive 5.4million people big but only 0.5M people in the city. The complex race tensions, business decisions are well documented elsewhere. Obviously a city that was once set up for three to four times the current set up is in ruins. So two important points:
1. Metro Detroit is hurting but nowhere near as bad as the City of Detroit itself and
2. Not all of the reasons are connected to our ability to compete.
That said, I am happy to see that Ford/GM/Chrysler (particularly Ford) producing much better cars in the last 3 years and showing that it is not technical capability that is lacking.
J.
Chilling photography
By: elanoftroy : March 3rd, 2011-20:28
from the Denver Post: Captured: The Ruins of Detroit Up and down Detroit’s streets, buildings stand abandoned and in ruin. French photographers Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre set out to document the decline of an American city. Their book "The Ruins of D...
Mnay of these...
By: BDLJ : March 6th, 2011-14:20
...are in areas that the locals advise you not to stop your car. Being stupid Aussies, a colleague and I went looking around for some of these sites particularly downtown. Buildings that would be the envy of so many cities....just abandoned.
The most difficult thing to...
By: BDLJ : March 9th, 2011-05:19
...get your head around, Andrew, is that these magnificent buildings, so many of which would converted to multi-million dollar apartments here at home, are just sitting there rotting. The circumstance of their rise and fall are difficult to mesh with my (...