Tophat Dan
New in Town
- Messages
- 25
- Location
- Southeastern Michigan, US
Crisis?
What am I doing during this time of seemingly worldwide financial turmoil?
Exactly what I was doing before it all happened. Trying to hang on. Poor economy is nothing new in Michigan, where I live. With the states main employers, the auto industry all slowly sliding into financial woe over the past five or so years, there is nothing unusual about how things are now. It's just that the rest of the U.S. has started to catch up with us.
Even the neighborhood I live in seems like a testament to the long gone days of relative prosperity. It was built hurriedly to house workers for the willow run assembly plant during WW2 and is known locally to this day as "bomber plant housing". Willow run is now a huge empty factory. During WW2, B-24 Liberator bombers were built there at a rate of one an hour at it's peak. The plant then transitioned to Ford, then to nobody about ten years ago. There is a special bypass from the freeway made especially for this plant that now rots. It is poorly maintained by the county and mostly only used by locals.
To call my neighborhood a slum is inaccurate. Crime is very low, what children are left play in the street and it is generally quiet. It is quiet mostly because every third house is empty, foreclosed on by banks long before this bailout business was even heard of.
A little while ago I went to a local shopping center that used to cater to the needs of this neighborhood. There was a largish supermarket, a hardware store, a UAW legal center and a few other businesses. Now all that remains in the 30 year old strip mall are the hardware store and a couple of dollar stores. The UAW legal center went from owning several shops worth of space to one tiny storefront crammed down in a corner. Not that I'm weeping for the United Auto Workers, they dug a lot of their own grave.
So what do I do? I keep working and doing what I can to improve my situation. Occasionally I torture myself by looking at cool vintage clothing, guns and other antiques that I will most likely not be able to afford until I am too old to appreciate them.
Please excuse me if I turn green with envy at some of the awesome stuff you folks display here.
I know things won't be the way they are forever. For forty or fifty years there were a lot of high paying unskilled or semi-skilled jobs and it wasn't that hard to find work. Now we have to change how we do things here. Things will get better when the state finds its new niche. When that will happen is anyone's guess.
Regards;
Dan Peterson
What am I doing during this time of seemingly worldwide financial turmoil?
Exactly what I was doing before it all happened. Trying to hang on. Poor economy is nothing new in Michigan, where I live. With the states main employers, the auto industry all slowly sliding into financial woe over the past five or so years, there is nothing unusual about how things are now. It's just that the rest of the U.S. has started to catch up with us.
Even the neighborhood I live in seems like a testament to the long gone days of relative prosperity. It was built hurriedly to house workers for the willow run assembly plant during WW2 and is known locally to this day as "bomber plant housing". Willow run is now a huge empty factory. During WW2, B-24 Liberator bombers were built there at a rate of one an hour at it's peak. The plant then transitioned to Ford, then to nobody about ten years ago. There is a special bypass from the freeway made especially for this plant that now rots. It is poorly maintained by the county and mostly only used by locals.
To call my neighborhood a slum is inaccurate. Crime is very low, what children are left play in the street and it is generally quiet. It is quiet mostly because every third house is empty, foreclosed on by banks long before this bailout business was even heard of.
A little while ago I went to a local shopping center that used to cater to the needs of this neighborhood. There was a largish supermarket, a hardware store, a UAW legal center and a few other businesses. Now all that remains in the 30 year old strip mall are the hardware store and a couple of dollar stores. The UAW legal center went from owning several shops worth of space to one tiny storefront crammed down in a corner. Not that I'm weeping for the United Auto Workers, they dug a lot of their own grave.
So what do I do? I keep working and doing what I can to improve my situation. Occasionally I torture myself by looking at cool vintage clothing, guns and other antiques that I will most likely not be able to afford until I am too old to appreciate them.
Please excuse me if I turn green with envy at some of the awesome stuff you folks display here.
I know things won't be the way they are forever. For forty or fifty years there were a lot of high paying unskilled or semi-skilled jobs and it wasn't that hard to find work. Now we have to change how we do things here. Things will get better when the state finds its new niche. When that will happen is anyone's guess.
Regards;
Dan Peterson