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Just a few random opinions on all this:
I actually feel good about what has happened lately; I think, and hope, that the citizens of Detroit have finally started to get over their bizarre support for Kilpatrick, and demanded honesty and accountability--and the system worked, unlike with Bush and Cheney, who are still there! I have been very impressed with Prosecutor Kym Worthy, she has to be one of the best ever, and much of City Council, Kwame Kenyatta, a model of honesty as far as I can tell, Sheila Cockrel, and Ken Cockrel , Jr. I remember Ken Cockrel, Sr., a very intense and fiery Socialist who I used to love to listen to, although much of the jargon is of that era, not this. I hope this will really be a new era. It certainly showed a real rising-up of people, to solve a problem and get rid of this crook.
I happened to be listening to a few people in a new writing class I just started, a writing group, and they were talking about this perennial topic, how horrible Detroit has become and how great Chicago still is. There is no denying it, and it is still as if Detroit has no historical memory at all. Things should have been preserved, and a real spirit kept alive, for the past 30 years or so, as things really went downhill, and it may be too late now. Younger people don't even remember--because nobody told them--many of these great Detroit things, any sense of a "culture," great events, etc.
There happens to be a thread currently on DU General forum, on a fake, supposed "1970s Feminist" who is going to vote for McCain, a total fraud, but it started me thinking about the real 1970s feminism in Michigan, when things were really exciting, and it seemed it was going to get really great. I started remembering things from that time--it can make you cry, by comparison. Milliken was Governor then, and both William and Helen Milliken were leaders of the fight for the ERA, legalized abortion, and other women's rights here. Milliken's Lieutenant Governor was a great feminist, and a Democrat, Martha Griffiths, who took no crap from anybody as I remember. There was a decent working relationship between the State and Detroit, (Coleman Young), and Milliken refused to play Detroit against the rest of the State, or cut funds needed by it. I remember the head of the Michigan Dept. of Health then, Sister (Mary Agnes or Agnes Mary) Mansour, who gave State funds alloted to pay for abortions for poor women and would not cut them. After the Catholic Church ordered her to either stop being a nun or give up the Dept. of Health job, (since she would not deny people abortion rights), she thought about it for some days, and gave up the "sister" title, keeping the Health Dept. position. I remember absolutely no anti-abortion protests, threats, arch-con propagandists, or any other crap; it was all done very quietly, and like adults. She was always just fine at that position, as I recall.
I hope that I am actually perceiving what it feels like to me, anyway: that Detroiters have more of a real sense that Detroit needs Good Government, and cleaning up the corruption, with people actually caring and being outraged that this is going on, and destroying the whole city, which still does not even have basic City services. After being duped by Kilpatrick's silly "hip-hop Mayor" schtick, maybe some of the smart and good people on City Council and in other Departments, can lead to a new way. I hope this opportunity is not lost. Well, this whole post kind of jumped around; but it seems like an era of both possible good, and already known bad.
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