Nearly 25 years ago, I reported on the changing demographics of Cicero, a working-class suburb just west of Chicago. For years, the town, which was made up mostly of Italian and Eastern European American families, worked hard at keeping Black people from settling there. In 1951, when a Black family moved in, a mob entered their apartment, tore it up, and pushed a piano out a window. Police watched and did nothing. The governor had to call out the National Guard. By 2000, the nearby factories, which were the economic foundation of the community, had begun to close. White families moved out and left behind a distressed, struggling town to its new residents—Latinos, who now made up three-quarters of the population. It felt wrong. It felt like the white families got to enjoy the prosperity of the place, and then left it to these newcomers to figure out how to repair aging infrastructure and make up for the lost tax revenues.
After reading Benjamin Herold’s Disillusioned, I now realize I was witnessing something much larger: the steady unraveling of America’s suburbs. Herold, an education journalist, set out to understand […]
The bad news is that this trend as been occurring because the capitalist class has moved all of the manufacturing jobs first to Japan, then to Korea, and finally to China. The taxpayer was left to figure out how to compensate for the loss of the tax base while the politicians (rented by the rich) lavished the wealthy with tax breaks and tax cuts while the rest of us wage slaves had to watch in impotent rage.
The good news is that we can start to re-imagine cities as walk-able living spaces which will have a lower cost of upkeep than the typical 1/4 acre per lot suburb.