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December 17, 2009 AOLs job site reports the following: Nearly one out of two workers in Detroit are unemployed, according to a report by The Detroit News. Its a figure far higher than the governments official figure, which is still close to a staggering 30 percent. But the newspaper says that rate doesnt take everything into account. For every person who is still looking and collecting unemployment, there are scores of others who have had benefits run out, accepted a part-time position, taken early retirement or a job outside of their regular field. This is higher than the unemployment during the Great Depression. In 1931, the official unemployment rate was 24.9%. It took a world war to bring it down to 4.7%. |
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A look into Infowars.com exclusive footage documenting the collapse of Detroit, a case in the deindustrialization of America. Several key cities in the "Rust Belt"– once the backbone of U.S. industry– are now scheduled to be bulldozed and shrunk, destroying abandoned homes and re-wilding large portions of these industrial urban areas. "Isnt the only hope for the planet that the industrialized civilization collapse? Isnt it our responsibility to bring that about? Maurice Strong, 1992. Deindustrialization in the United States is key to the UNITED NATIONS/CLUB OF ROME run sustainablility agenda. On March 20, 1969, Dr. Richard Day, the National Medical Director of the Rockefeller-sponsored Planned Parenthood told a meeting that American industry will be sabotaged and shown to be uncompetitive. The stated plan was that different parts of the world would be assigned different roles of industry and commerce in a unified global system. The continued preeminence of the United States and the relative independence and self-sufficiency of the United States would have to be changed in order to create a new structure, you first have to tear down the old, and American industry was one example of that. Each part of the world will have a specialty and thus become inter-dependent, he said. The US will remain a center for agriculture, high tech, communications, and education but heavy industry would be transported out. |