Author Topic: Democrats thrive on 'dead zones'  (Read 1069 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Confederate Kahanist

  • Gold Star JTF Member
  • *********
  • Posts: 10771
Democrats thrive on 'dead zones'
« on: December 01, 2009, 06:57:18 PM »
http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=117538

FROM JEROME CORSI'S RED ALERT
Democrats thrive on 'dead zones'
Voters dependent upon federal social welfare to survive
Posted: November 30, 2009
1:17 pm Eastern

© 2009 WorldNetDaily


Detroit, Mich.

Editor's Note: The following report is excerpted from Jerome Corsi's Red Alert, the premium online newsletter published by the current No. 1 best-selling author, WND staff writer and columnist. Red Alert subscriptions are $99 a year or $9.95 per month for credit card users. Annual subscribers will receive a free autographed copy of "The Late Great USA," a book about the careful deceptions of a powerful elite who want to undermine our nation's sovereignty.

America's inner cities have become "dead zones" of predominately Democratic-voting African-American ghettos of poverty, Jerome Corsi's Red Alert reports.

"It's a reality that has become politically incorrect to discuss in an era where President Obama occupies the White House and the Democratic Party controls Congress," Corsi wrote.

(Story continues below)

       
   

Detroit, an inner-city 'dead zone'

The Times Online noted a grim reality in Detroit in which piles of unburied bodies tell the story of a "city in despair."

"The abandoned corpses, in white body bags with number tags tied to each toe, lie one above the other on steel racks inside a giant freezer
in Detroit's central mortuary, like discarded shoes in the back of a wardrobe," Tim Reid wrote in the article.

"Some have lain here for years, but in the recent months the number of unclaimed bodies has reached a record high. For in this city that once symbolized the American dream many cannot even afford to bury their dead."

Gone from Detroit is the employment power of the Big Three automakers – GM, Ford and Chrysler – while the murder rate is soaring, the school system is in receivership, and the city treasury is $300 million short of the funds needed to provide even the most basic city services, such as garbage collection.

"Thousands of houses are abandoned, roofs ripped off, windows smashed," Reid wrote. "Block after block of shipping districts lie boarded up."

Despite President Obama's rapidly sinking poll numbers, more than 90 percent of African-Americans still support his presidency.

Still, the Bureau of Labor Statistics data show that while the nation's unemployment for October 2009 averaged 10.2 percent, unemployment among whites was 9.5 percent, with unemployment among African-Americans nearly twice as high, at 17.1 percent.

Detroit's unemployment rate is 28 percent, higher even than during the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Michigan votes Democratic

Still, Michigan's Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm is a Democrat, as are the state's two U.S. senators, Debbie Stabenow and Carl Levin.

"Yet, cities like Detroit inevitably vote Democratic largely because the cities have become dependent upon federal social-welfare programs to survive," Corsi wrote. "Poverty voters continue to identify their interests with Democrats like President Obama who remain openly committed to a socialist redistribution of income in the United States."

He continued, "It should be obvious government social-welfare programs do not work."

After the trillions of dollars spent since 1964 to fight poverty, Corsi said it is evident that money alone does not solve poverty.

"Those promoting free trade in a world economy typically argue that we all live in a 'global village,' whether we like it or not," he wrote.

Globalism is sold on the premise that free trade and a world economy will generate economic prosperity.

"Yet, if poverty is a structural problem resulting not just from a history of racial discrimination but generations of growing family dysfunction, a global economy may only intensify urban poverty, especially as exporting high-paying jobs while importing an underclass generates a race to the bottom in U.S. wages and employment horizons," Corsi noted.

African-American and Hispanic inner-city poverty

Statistics generated by the U.S. government have shown since the Johnson administration that poverty in America is disproportionately an African-American problem of inner cities, Red Alert reported.

The data also show that Hispanics are now joining African-Americans to disproportionately suffer poverty in the U.S. cities throughout the nation where immigrants, both legal and illegal, have settled to live.

"Undoubtedly," Corsi wrote, "racial discrimination historically has played a major role in explaining why African-Americans and Hispanics suffer disproportionately poverty in America. Still, today racial discrimination in the employment setting is against the law and, in many instances, criminal behavior."

He said the question is whether U.S. poverty policy can ameliorate the chronic inner-city poverty experienced since the 1920s by African-Americans, and more recently by Hispanics.

Losing ground

In 1984, political scientist Charles Murray published "Losing Ground," a book sharply critical of Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty that argued the U.S. should scrap all social-welfare programs.

Murray's argument was that social-welfare programs by their very nature created a "poverty culture," especially in African-American families, where the welfare state was actually encouraging the breakup of families by implementing qualifying rules detrimental to family development as conditions for receiving welfare.

Murray took the opposite approach, arguing that all federal entitlement "transfer programs" to the poor should be terminated for working-aged people immediately, including Medicare, food stamps, unemployment insurance, workers' compensation, subsidized housing, disability insurance, as well as a myriad of others.

Murray argued this not from a lack of sympathy with the poor, but from an intellectual conviction that the only way to solve poverty was to leave the poor with no recourse except for the job market, family members and friends, as well as charity and whatever aid for the poor or unemployed the states decided to provide.

Corsi wrote that it is time to consider abandoning altogether entitlement programs the Obama administration is determined to expand, before cities like Detroit become the harbinger for what all U.S. inner cities may look like in the next generation.

Red Alert's author, whose books "The Obama Nation" and "Unfit for Command" have topped the New York Times best-sellers list, received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in political science in 1972. For nearly 25 years, beginning in 1981, he worked with banks throughout the U.S. and around the world to develop financial services marketing companies to assist banks in establishing broker/dealers and insurance subsidiaries to provide financial planning products and services to their retail customers. In this career, Corsi developed three different third-party financial services marketing firms that reached gross sales levels of $1 billion in annuities and equal volume in mutual funds. In 1999, he began developing Internet-based financial marketing firms, also adapted to work in conjunction with banks.

In his 25-year financial services career, Corsi has been a noted financial services speaker and writer, publishing three books and numerous articles in professional financial services journals and magazines.

For financial guidance during difficult times, read Jerome Corsi's Red Alert, the premium, online intelligence news source by the WND staff writer, columnist and author of the New York Times No. 1 best-seller, "The Obama Nation."

For full immediate access to Jerome Corsi's Red Alert, subscribe now.

Subscribe to Jerome Corsi's new weekly economic newsletter, Red Alert, for one year and, for a limited time get "The Late Great USA" free. (This offer applies only to annual subscriptions for $99.)
Chad M ~ Your rebel against white guilt