My $500 house in Detroit -- and the neighbors who helped me rebuild it | Drew Philp

55,916 views ・ 2018-04-25

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In 2009, I bought a house in Detroit for 500 dollars.
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It had no windows, no plumbing, no electricity
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and it was filled with trash.
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The first floor held nearly 10,000 pounds of garbage,
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and that included the better part of a Dodge Caravan,
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cut into chunks with a reciprocating saw.
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(Laughter)
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I lived nearly two years without heat,
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woke up out of a dead sleep multiple times to gunshots,
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was attacked by a pack of wild dogs
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and ripped my kitchen cabinets from an abandoned school
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as they were actively tearing that school down.
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This, of course, is the Detroit that your hear about.
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Make no mistake, it's real.
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But there's another Detroit, too.
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Another Detroit that's more hopeful,
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more innovative,
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and may just provide some of the answers
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to cities struggling to reinvent themselves everywhere.
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These answers, however, do not necessarily adhere to conventional wisdom
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about good development.
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I think Detroit's real strength boils down to two words:
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radical neighborliness.
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And I wasn't able to see it myself until I lived there.
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About a decade ago,
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I moved to Detroit with no friends, no job and no money,
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at a time when it seemed like everyone else was moving out.
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Between 2000 and 2010,
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25 percent of the city's population left.
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This included about half of the elementary-aged children.
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This was after six decades of decline.
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A city built for almost two million was down to less than 800,000.
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What you usually don't hear is that people didn't go very far.
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The population of the Detroit metro area itself
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has largely remained steady since the '70s.
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Most people who left Detroit just went to the suburbs,
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while the 139 square miles of the city deteriorated,
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leaving some estimates as high as 40 square miles of abandoned land --
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about the size of San Francisco.
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Aside from platitudes such as the vague and agentless "deindustrialization,"
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Detroit's exodus can be summed up with two structures:
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freeways and walls.
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The freeways,
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coupled with massive governmental subsidies
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for the suburbs via infrastructure and home loans,
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allowed people to leave the city at will,
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taking with it tax base, jobs and education dollars.
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The walls made sure only certain people could leave.
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In multiple places,
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brick and concrete walls separate city and suburbs,
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white and black,
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running directly across municipal streets
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and through neighborhoods.
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They're mere physical manifestations of racist housing practices
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such as redlining,
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[Denying services to people of color]
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restrictive covenants
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and outright terror.
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In 1971, the Ku Klux Klan bombed 10 school buses
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rather than have them transport integrated students.
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All these have made Detroit the most racially segregated metro area
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in the United States.
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I grew up in a small town in Michigan,
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the son of a relatively blue-collar family.
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And after university, I wanted to do something --
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probably naïvely --
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to help.
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I didn't want to be one of the almost 50 percent of college graduates
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leaving the state at the time,
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and I thought I might use my fancy college education at home
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for something positive.
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I'd been reading this great American philosopher named Grace Lee Boggs
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who happened to live in Detroit,
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and she said something I can't forget.
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"The most radical thing that I ever did was to stay put."
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I thought buying a house might indelibly tie me to the city
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while acting as a physical protest to these walls and freeways.
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Because grants and loans weren't available to everyone,
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I decided I was going to do this without them
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and that I would wage my personal fight
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against the city that had loomed over my childhood with power tools.
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I eventually found an abandoned house in a neighborhood called Poletown.
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It looked like the apocalypse had descended.
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The neighborhood was prairie land.
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A huge, open expanse of waist-high grass
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cluttered only by a handful of crippled, abandoned structures
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and a few brave holdouts with well-kept homes.
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Just a 15-minute bike ride from the baseball stadium downtown,
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the neighborhood was positively rural.
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What houses were left looked like cardboard boxes left in the rain;
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two-story monstrosities with wide-open shells
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and melted porches.
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One of the most striking things I remember were the rosebushes,
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forgotten and running wild over tumbled-down fences,
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no longer cared for by anyone.
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This was my house on the day I boarded it up
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to protect it from the elements and further decay.
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I eventually purchased it from the county in a live auction.
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I'd assumed the neighborhood was dead.
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That I was some kind of pioneer.
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Well, I couldn't have been more wrong.
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I was in no way a pioneer,
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and would come to understand how offensive that is.
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One of the first things I learned was to add my voice to the chorus,
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not overwrite what was already happening.
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(Voice breaking) Because the neighborhood hadn't died.
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It had just transformed in a way that was difficult to see
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if you didn't live there.
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Poletown was home to an incredibly resourceful,
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incredibly intelligent and incredibly resilient community.
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It was there I first experienced the power of radical neighborliness.
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During the year I worked on my house before moving in,
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I lived in a microcommunity inside Poletown,
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founded by a wild and virtuous farmer named Paul Weertz.
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Paul was a teacher in a Detroit public school
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for pregnant and parenting mothers,
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and his idea was to teach the young women to raise their children
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by first raising plants and animals.
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While the national average graduation rate for pregnant teens is about 40 percent,
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at Catherine Ferguson Academy it was often above 90,
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in part due to Paul's ingenuity.
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Paul brought much of this innovation to his block in Poletown,
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which he'd stewarded for more than 30 years,
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purchasing houses when they were abandoned,
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convincing his friends to move in and neighbors to stay
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and helping those who wanted to buy their own and fix them up.
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In a neighborhood where many blocks now only hold one or two houses,
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all the homes on Paul's block stand.
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It's an incredible testament to the power of community,
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to staying in one place
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and to taking ownership of one's own surroundings --
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of simply doing it yourself.
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It's the kind of place where black doctors live next to white hipsters
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next to immigrant mothers from Hungary
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or talented writers from the jungles of Belize,
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showing me Detroit wasn't just black and white,
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and diversity could flourish when it's encouraged.
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Each year, neighbors assemble to bale hay for the farm animals on the block,
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teaching me just how much a small group of people can get done
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when they work together,
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and the magnetism of fantastical yet practical ideas.
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Radical neighborliness is every house behind Paul's block burning down,
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and instead of letting it fill up with trash and despair,
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Paul and the surrounding community creating a giant circular garden
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ringed with dozens of fruit trees, beehives and garden plots
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for anyone that wants one,
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helping me see that our challenges can often be assets.
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It's where residents are experimenting with renewable energy and urban farming
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and offering their skills and discoveries to others,
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illustrating we don't necessarily have to beg the government
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to provide solutions.
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We can start ourselves.
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It's where, for months,
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one of my neighbors left her front door unlocked
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in one of the most violent and dangerous cities in America
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so I could have a shower whenever I needed to go to work,
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as I didn't yet have one.
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It was when it came time to raise the beam on my own house
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that holds the structure aloft --
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a beam that I cut out of an abandoned recycling factory down the street
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when not a single wall was left standing --
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a dozen residents of Poletown showed up to help lift it, Amish style.
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Radical neighborliness is a zygote that grows into a worldview
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that ends up in homes and communities rebuilt in ways that respect humanity
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and the environment.
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It's realizing we have the power to create the world anew together
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and to do it ourselves when our governments refuse.
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This is the Detroit that you don't hear much about.
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The Detroit between the ruin porn on one hand
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and the hipster coffee shops
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and billionaires saving the city on the other.
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There's a third way to rebuild,
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and it declines to make the same mistakes of the past.
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While building my house,
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I found something I didn't know I was looking for --
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what a lot of millennials
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and people who are moving back to cities are looking for.
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Radical neighborliness is just another word for true community,
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the kind bound by memory and history,
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mutual trust and familiarity built over years and irreplaceable.
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And now, as you may have heard,
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Detroit is having a renaissance
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and pulling itself up from the ashes of despair,
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and the children and grandchildren of those who fled are returning,
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which is true.
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What isn't true is that this renaissance is reaching most Detroiters,
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or even more than a small fraction of them
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that don't live in the central areas of the city.
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These are the kind of people that have been in Detroit for generations
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and are mostly black.
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In 2016 alone,
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just last year,
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(Voice breaking) one in six houses in Detroit
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had their water shut off.
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Excuse me.
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The United Nations has called this a violation of human rights.
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And since 2005, one in three houses --
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think about this, please --
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one in every three houses has been foreclosed in the city,
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representing a population about the size of Buffalo, New York.
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(Sniffles)
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One in three houses foreclosed is not a crisis of personal responsibility;
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it is systemic.
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Many Detroiters, myself included,
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are worried segregation is now returning to the city itself
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on the coattails of this renaissance.
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Ten years ago,
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it was not possible to go anywhere in Detroit
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and be in a crowd completely made of white people.
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Now, troublingly, that is possible.
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This is the price that we're paying for conventional economic resurgence.
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We're creating two Detroits, two classes of citizens,
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cracking the community apart.
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For all the money and subsidies,
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for all the streetlights installed,
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the dollars for new stadiums and slick advertisements
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and positive buzz,
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we're shutting off water to tens of thousands of people
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living right on the Great Lakes,
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the world's largest source of it.
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Separate has always meant unequal.
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This is a grave mistake for all of us.
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When economic development comes at the cost of community,
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it's not just those who have lost their homes
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or access to water who are harmed,
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but it breaks little pieces of our own humanity as well.
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None of us can truly be free,
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none of us can truly be comfortable,
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until our neighbors are, too.
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For those of us coming in,
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it means we must make sure we aren't inadvertently contributing
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to the destruction of community again,
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and to follow the lead
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of those who have been working on these problems for years.
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In Detroit, that means average citizens deputizing themselves
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to create water stations and deliveries for those who have lost access to it.
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Or clergy and teachers engaging in civil disobedience
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to block water shutoff trucks.
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It's organizations buying back foreclosed homes for their inhabitants
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or fighting misinformation on forced sales through social media
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and volunteer-run hotlines.
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For me, it means helping others to raise the beams
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on their own formerly abandoned houses,
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or helping to educate those with privilege,
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now increasingly moving into cities,
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how we might come in and support
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rather than stress existing communities.
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It's chipping in when a small group of neighbors decides
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to buy back a foreclosed home
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and return the deeds to the occupants.
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And for you, for all of us,
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it means finding a role to play in our own communities.
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It means living your life as a reflection of the world that you want to live in.
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It means trusting those who know the problems best --
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the people who live them --
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with solutions.
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I know a third way is possible because I have lived it.
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I live it right now
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in a neighborhood called Poletown
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in one of the most maligned cities in the world.
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If we can do it in Detroit,
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you can do it wherever you're from, too.
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What I've learned over the last decade,
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building my house,
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wasn't so much about wiring or plumbing or carpentry --
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although I did learn these things --
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is that true change, real change,
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starts first with community,
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with a radical sense of what it means to be a neighbor.
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It turned at least one abandoned house into a home.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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