Unburied bodies tell the tale of Detroit

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  • BloodEclipse

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    In the trenches for liberty!
    From The Times
    November 21, 2009


    Unburied bodies tell the tale of Detroit — a city in despair



    Tim Reid in Detroit
    city-360_648553a.jpg






    div#related-article-links p a, div#related-article-links p a:visited {color:#06c;} 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.
    Some have lain here for years, but in recent months the number of unclaimed bodies has reached a record high. For in this city that once symbolised the American Dream many cannot even afford to bury their dead.
    “I have not seen this many unclaimed bodies in 13 years on the job,” said Albert Samuels, chief investigator at the mortuary. “It started happening when the economy went south last year. I have never seen this many people struggling to give people their last resting place.”
    Unburied bodies piling up in the city mortuary — it reached 70 earlier this year — is the latest and perhaps most appalling indignity to be heaped on the people of Detroit. The motor city that once boasted the highest median income and home ownership rate in the US is today in the midst of a long and agonising death spiral.
    After years of gross mismanagement by the city’s leaders and the big three car manufacturers of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler, who continued to make vehicles that Americans no longer wanted to buy, Detroit today has an unemployment rate of 28 per cent, higher even than the worst years of the Great Depression.
    The murder rate is soaring. The school system is in receivership. The city treasury is $300 million (£182m) short of the funds needed to provide the most basic services such as rubbish collection. In its postwar heyday, when Detroit helped the US to dominate the world’s car market, it had 1.85 million people. Today, just over 900,000 remain. It was once America’s fourth-largest city. Today, it ranks eleventh, and will continue to fall.
    Thousands of houses are abandoned, roofs ripped off, windows smashed. Block after block of shopping districts lie boarded up. Former manufacturing plants, such as the giant Fisher body plant that made Buicks and Cadillacs, but which was abandoned in 1991, are rotting.
    Even Detroit’s NFL football team, the Lions, are one of the worst in the country. Last season they lost all 16 games. This year they have lost eight, and won just a single gane.
    Michigan’s Central Station, designed by the same people who gave New York its Grand Central Station, was abandoned 20 years ago. One photographer who produced a series of images for Time magazine said that he often felt, as he moved around parts of Detroit, as though he was in a post-apocalyptic disaster.
    Then in June, the $21,000 annual county budget to bury Detroit’s unclaimed bodies ran out. Until then, if a family confirmed that they could not afford to lay a loved one to rest, Wayne County — in which Detroit sits — would, for $700, bury the body in a rough pine casket at a nearby cemetery, under a marker.
    Darrell Vickers had to identify his aunt at the mortuary in September but he could not afford to bury her as he was unemployed. When his grandmother recently died, Mr Vickers’s father paid for her cremation, but with a credit card at 21 per cent interest. He said at the time it was “devastating” to not be able to bury his aunt.
    What has alarmed medical examiners at the mortuary is that most of the dead died of natural causes. It is evidence, they believe, of people who could not afford medical insurance and medicines and whose families can now not afford to bury them.
    Yet in recent weeks there have been signs of hope for Mr Samuels that he can reduce the backlog of bodies. Local philanthropists have donated $8,000 to help to bury the dead. In the past month, Mr Samuels has been able to bury 11 people. The number of unburied is now down to 55.

    What has alarmed medical examiners at the mortuary is that most of the dead died of natural causes. It is evidence, they believe, of people who could not afford medical insurance and medicines and whose families can now not afford to bury them.

    Did I miss read this? They died of natural causes....
    6a00d83451775769e2011571d4fc3b970b-800wi
    .......they had to be people who could not afford medical insurance and medicines.
     

    5.56'aholic

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    <- tragic boating accident
    Didnt you get the memo? You only die if your poor in America. We can now prevent all natural causes of death :rolleyes: Just another case of a liberal who thinks they can insert whatever b.s. they want into an article in hopes to further their agenda.
     

    printcraft

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    Uranus
    My brother was just up there this week to pick up some equipment for
    the post office. Said the place looked like dog dirt, could not wait to get out of there.


    Maybe they could sell vast areas to Hollywood production companies who
    are looking to make the next big disaster movie, don't need to build
    elaborate sets, just nuke a couple of select neighborhoods. :yesway:
     

    hornadylnl

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    [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6jMfoobWY0]YouTube - John Lee Hooker - Motor City is Burning (1967)[/ame]

    Some things never change.
     

    hornadylnl

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    hornadylnl:

    Nice tune. I never heard that one before. John Lee Hooker put some good lyrics into that one. True then and true now.

    John Lee has a lot of good stuff. I just heard that song the other day on my Iphone. About all I have on it is blues and I've got several of Hooker's CD's.
     

    Cygnus

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    Maybe they could sell vast areas to Hollywood production companies who
    are looking to make the next big disaster movie, don't need to build
    elaborate sets, just nuke a couple of select neighborhoods. :yesway:


    Already happening. The transformers movies used the aandoned trained depot. Cliny Eastwoods last movie ( not the brand new one) was shot there and in the burbs.

    There's also sound stages in 2 burbs.

    Currently Red Dawn is being shot in the area.


    And yes there are a lot of crappy places. But I was at 2 of the casinos last night and My friend's wife forgot her keys in the ignition and left the back windows down. We came out 2 hours later and......nothing stolen.!
    Including kicker box and possibly some self-defense items.....
     

    ihateiraq

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    Upinya
    i was deployed w/ a guy from detroit. he pays homeless people w/ garbage to clean up his rental property. sounds like a sweet place to live to me.
     

    LEaSH

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    When frozen corpses piling up are low on the list of priorities, you know they should level the whole place and start over.
     

    Dryden

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    N.E. Indianapolis
    So, let's start a pool.
    Which city implodes first: Detroit, Chicago, NYC, DC, Philly, LA, or your pickem choice?

    My pick is Detroit. I really don't have time to list all the reasons. :cool:
     

    INMIline

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    Indiana/Michigan line
    What scares me being from that area. Is the former home of the Detroit Lions, The Pontiac Silverdome, cost 55 million to build and just sold the other day for $500,000
     
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    LEaSH

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    Yeah, the silverdome was a pretty good indication of things going to pot.

    They unloaded a gem that costs around $1.5 million a year to operate. So they (they civic rulers) claim a small victory. What a joke that whole state has become.

    I spent most of my youth about 45 minutes from there. I really dread visiting for the holidays.
     
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