tv [untitled] September 20, 2011 9:31pm-10:01pm EDT
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libya's new leadership praising the progress that's already been made despite this questions remain whether nato air campaign come fly with u.n. mandate last friday in a unanimous resolution from the u.n. recognize the national transitional council as the country's official representatives. next to report on that the gradual death of a place that was once the heart of america's car industry. just. construction. but in his own park we're about to see some improvement on. the way i remember general motors going bankrupt i remember the feeling. not being surprised
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at all. for us it was you know a day like any other day. and they're going to work. it was on the day like shocking news it was more like the inevitable death of a very old member of the family. i felt like ok now. we can move on to have a job it will be easy how do we achieve it has reached a deal is what we're going to acquire a certain sense of. needs to do it's almost bigger than life it is too rock of gibraltar it can't go bankrupt. it was almost like hearing that. you're a child in your parents that depend upon for your existence is on life support.
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there's no showers fridays holding to thirty degrees thirty fourth detroit's curse . it was kind of a sad day. we were just all disbelieve it and all that it actually happened. when you have when you're supposed to have some of the smartest guys in charge of things and they say bankruptcy is the way to go i guess and eat all you have is the hope that they know what they're talking about that you emerge from that become a better company. they're the type of company that's always said all will just make what the people want. but obviously that's not what they were doing. the bankruptcy of g.m. was kind of you know it it's not really a popular thing to say around detroit but. i was actually pretty excited because i thought for once. maybe this big company had a chance to change. general motors was.
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still saying to you. this was this is like. where i played i remember you know playing with my little trucks and this and this for trailing i remember seeing you know in the afternoon the school kids coming and going and then at a different time in the afternoon watching the factory workers walk to work many
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people just walked you know here in america now everybody drives people drive to the end of their driveway to pick up their mail. but then it was a different kind of a community. it was a great neighborhood really. most of the people who lived here worked for general motors the buick factory was just just a few bar boxed that way so it was a working class neighborhood it was in a poor neighborhood most of the people who worked in the autumn of the factories did really well. nobody realized how fragile that economy was because it was always their general motors was actually born here in flint grew up here but people people worked in the factories especially in the after that one nine hundred forty s. made very good wages. more than
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a college graduate would make. this is a tiny little kitchen. this house like thousands of others . was abandoned and when people leave they don't take their houses with them and they also don't pay taxes anymore on the property and so my office. is responsible for tax collection and when people abandon their property and stop paying taxes we take that to court and we get a judgment and take ownership of the property so this house now is owned by the land bank we get those properties and we try to make a decision about what to do with them with with all these thousands of abandoned houses. that brings back a lot of memories that heard that bell ring. really on time.
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because the sounds that i remember. i remember the church bell ringing and then i remember the factory whistle ringing you know the factory whistle saying it's time for the shift to start course you don't hear that anymore. and think. hey how you doing. i'm doing all right i. think so you know this is the house i lived in when i was a little boy oh yeah. well you. know. this was a city of about one hundred ninety thousand people and we had eighty thousand
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going to have. now i mean the problem we have is that the legacy of general motors is what i'm left with i deal with empty houses where g.m. workers used to live with empty buildings where general motors used to have factories with wide open space that used to be a. factory and it's now empty you know piece of abandoned property that we now own there's an office building that was once a general motors office building that the milan bank known so in many ways were left i'm left dealing with the cleanup of this mess.
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all these are all by i i own all they're all sherry's. each one has a different role i guess in our lives that you see here we have a dump truck that we use in our business to lumber different things trees and stone involved. things over here we have the box man which if we want to move things around get it what you put things inside plus we hook the mud truck which is the black truck up over there to go to the mud bogs and we haul at the black truck here to the trailer we move our equipment around that the skids here that sets over there and they ask invader the one next to the black truck over there is the white blazer and what we do with that is go to the sand dunes a plane to say and one for the mud one for the sad. cares for got to find its flour out here in a farm keep the roads open and stuff right when i drive to work in the wintertime
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which also has a plow on it white when i drive in the summer time it gets better gas mileage has six owner in it and this is my wife's car. general motors have been number one forever there have been the ones to beat forever you want to talk about a sad day sad days when toyota announced that they their sales are more than what g.m. is you know that's probably a dated fix will be more than the bankruptcy today.
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on the president of u.a.w. local six fifty two which stands for the united auto workers union and what i do is i'm in charge of the ministration of the hall of our membership and deal with any problems and become before the membership. might ring and i'm good i guess we're in the business of some cadillacs. i think they got them in stock years ago you didn't have to worry about market share because you know it was just a given that people bought because that's what their dad drove or you know you this is what you buy and then slowly you know by not paying attention to use other things on the market and you don't have the loyalties that used to have you know people just buying because that's what you bought you know somehow i get to be uncool to drive a domestic vehicle i
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try to be a negative person and try to look at what we need to do right i think there put some people in place where they're going to write some wrongs and i think they're going to be all straight up maybe fly right i mean and i think they owe it to the people they all that to himself it's too good of a company to see that disappear from the landscape of the of the nation. g.m. donated this building to c.c.'s to use. it's kind of turned into this. at the center of design in detroit with the college that i it's and. just down the hall is the clay studio the computer labs everything
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is kind of right in these halls where so many infamous and. iconic designs were presented right in this very room. i guess what makes me different from many of my other colleagues and students is that i was focused mainly on sustainable transportation and solutions for. the environmental problems that we have today. coming from car design in a more sustainable way and looking for solutions to the problems it's just it's just crazy that now we're in the space where so many those problems were helped to create. i think general motors at one time represented kind of the pinnacle of the industrial era. how company could become so dominant in the market just through sheer brute force. general motors simply
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became too large for their own good it's so many brands that they couldn't even keep up with they just basically became a dinosaur. i guess it's just almost fitting that the solutions are going to come from the same place the generator the problems and hopefully you know myself and the people at the school can do our best to find those solutions. the fischer body plant where pretty much all cars were built from g.m. before they had their own design all the design work and all the body work was done by fisher. to me it just represents the glory days of detroit and it's just so strange to see. to see the
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site and. interest environment around it is just so peculiar. detroit used to be a very diverse city people lived downtown people walked people took the tram in a sense it was one of the most european cities in its design densely populated easy to get about and it had a very very good public transportation system grand central for growth station. was simply the hub of that the epicenter of of the trains and the trams that ran all around the city. so when the automobile. basically came
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to be general motors saw. the trolleys and the public transportation as competition for their new product and in order to eliminate it basically bought up that industry and saw to that it was not going to be around so the people in detroit were basically forced into the automobile. we're drawn to the chopping block in general motors people familiar with the situation tell us the next round of layoffs could come of this month g.m. said it would be ten dollars an hour and seventy three thousand salaried positions
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is what he wants to use. the early sixty's sixty two three four five six those are what i call the innocent years you know people begin to make good money things begin to turn around here for african-americans and we as kids begin to experience a better life than our parents did. you had people migrating up here from the south and with very little education get hired in right away at the plant you know people were coming up here by the bus loads you know and it really built the middle class in southeast michigan soul now that you see that lifeline is not gone but it has
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changed drastically i want to be successful spirit i want to be successful naturally i want to be thoughtful financially i want to be fast or mentally come on some out of the way what good is what helps me to help people. in making wise decisions on stewardship i have a discipline in finances specifically the area of a county. like brett it was more cost. was already god has me here for such a time as this it is no coincidence that greeley greece temple has a pastor who happens to be an accountant. who is it is.
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always the risk. we have a financial plan of the financial times where we have got to put some principles in place and good sales to care. because we. know where the economy grow. regardless of what the economy has got steel us ok. and miss so i'm trying to be as long as about three weeks you know me and looking for an apartment on farming out of place five hundred miles i know i can afford it is that i will come to you for help with live with my first month's rent and i bet if it's possible i imagine behind a car but they know in the day and by you look across three years on motivating people in this day in time. is more difficult than it was in my father's pastorate when people were laid off during those decades of you
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knew how when you would be returning to work so my father's days of motivating was i think a little easier than my day they come to me as they miss it what am i going to do and i can't say well in six months brains will be better i don't know so we have to exercise a greater faith in god. we're right. but we thank you for this day and for this time it seems in these two you brought together in love and unity we pray that as we move toward the natural.
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communities all across this country don't know it. but there are one decision away from being the next flint michigan. i think the cities in america that are willing to rebuild themselves and not simply pretend that we are the city that we used to be ironically are the cities that are going to be best positioned for growth in the future. now it's a city that is built for twice the number of people that we actually have so we think the kind of successful city that flint can be is going to is going to require
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that it become cleaner smaller. more sustainable. but also not every you know ever again. become dependent on one company. we've got thousands of abandoned houses we've got more houses than we have people so rather than simply selling those properties off to speculators that's the whole idea is that we get the property into the hands owen bank turned it turn to the neighborhood you know and there were areas where. is one was we had gardens this spring i'm going to go more to southern food because i went to the farmer's market this year and the first day the i had crowd of p. black eyed peas purple hoes and they sold out a media in there really i did not have enough so i know that we have young children i had ten children here teens for fourteen twenty one teach them how to grow how to
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become a business person and how to understand how food grows and may be interested in agriculture and to me it's the social connections that the neighborhood becomes a tidy unit that you build a community around it really i mean i know just from seeing the neighbors come out . when i've been out here a lot of times neighbors would come on talking this go on up it's like a center for the neighborhood. the.
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very first verses of the bible to all human beings are created but sentimental came in god's image and it doesn't say just jews or non jews. sixty to seventy percent of what i did as a combat soldier territories listen to us deterrence doing what we call making our presence felt to go out should some bozo they hear a knock on some doors run to the other corner invade another house religion and nationalism not just judaism have been a part of the problem they've been part of what leads to. bloodshed
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if you want to bomb gaza and kill. a thousand four hundred people in a month and you want to expect that this will have no effect until a feat you have to be either extremely naive or extremely stupid. we don't you know it's as if i'm on. a religious jew calling another door unlocked and out of the way they wrote that it. is easy to. blame.
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the international monetary fund says both europe and the u.s. are headed for a double dip recession unless they get their act together on debt and to radically increase growth. ahead of the palestinian push for full statehood at the u.n. the israeli forces prepare for a possible on rest but as our team finds out that some of the trouble is homegrown . growing fears of violence as israeli settlers take the no into the own hands and march towards palestinian villages join me in a few moments and open the mall. and speaking at the u.n. general assembly president obama backs libya's new leadership praising the progress that's already been made despite this questions remain whether nato air campaign complied with the u.n. resolution.
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