JBeukema
Rookie
- Banned
- #1
Has anyone seen it? It follows Detroit's history and puts things into context as it follows the major trends of the city's development, from its deeply racist roots, to its long history of segregation and racial tension, to its total dependence on the Big Three (complete with racially-divided suburbs designed and constructed by the Big 3), to the mass exodus first of the workers, then of Whites as a whole (read: taxpayers), to the purposeful design of the city that was meant to ensure everyone required multiple vehicles in order to keep the Big Three going, to the total collapse of the system following a series of racial conflicts, WWII, and the oil shocks.
It shows where the city is now, including the current trends in urban agriculture and the steady collapse of the remnants of the old days as nature takes over one again. Can Detroit be saved? After watching this film, it seems impossible for the artificial system to be restored- and questionable as to whether that would even be a good thing. If Detroit survives, chances are good it won't be Motor City any more. Perhaps, however, it can become something new, something more sustainable, something better than what it was.
It shows where the city is now, including the current trends in urban agriculture and the steady collapse of the remnants of the old days as nature takes over one again. Can Detroit be saved? After watching this film, it seems impossible for the artificial system to be restored- and questionable as to whether that would even be a good thing. If Detroit survives, chances are good it won't be Motor City any more. Perhaps, however, it can become something new, something more sustainable, something better than what it was.