Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Why Isn't Sen. Kirk's “Chicago Will Become Detroit” Threat National News?
11 Mar 2015
🖨️ Print Article

by BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

 

Chicago could become Detroit, an Illinois Senator threatened on March 2, if Chicago fails to re-elect Rahm Emanuel. Staring down this threat tells us a lot about how the game is, and ought to be played.

Why Isn't Sen. Kirk's “Chicago Will Become Detroit” Threat National News?

by BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

On March 2, Illinois Senator Mark Kirk plainly threatened the people of Chicago. If Rahm Emanuel was not re-elected mayor, he declared, banksters and bond market investors concerned about the city's mountain of debt would see that Chicago went the way of Detroit.

Given that Chicago is the nation's 3rd largest city, and finances itself pretty much like every other big US city, a threat like this has potential implications for scores of other cities and ought to be national news. But it wasn't It made a local Chicago headline and dropped down the memory hole, out of sight. Why? The senator's threat wasn't national news because the plain facts beneath it, might have made Chicagoans and people in your city as well even more disturbed.

A great deal of Chicago's debt is pension debt. Pensions are deferred wages which employees agreed to allow the city or state to deposit into prudently invested pension funds so they would be available for payout years later upon their retirement. But public officials in Chicago, in Illinois and in cities, counties and whole states across the US broke these agreements, frequently violated the law and didn't make these payments, sometimes for decades. Now that the payouts are due, they need to blame it on “greedy teachers” or anything that will keep them from taxing the rich, which is the only place that kind of money can be had.

In Chicago, and very likely in your town too they doubled down on their dishonesty by investing hundreds of billions in pensions and other funds as well in exotic investment devices, credit default swaps, derivatives, real estate and stock market schemes which their investment advisors and ratings agencies assured them were sound and lucrative, but turned out to be black holes.

City workers and the public got screwed, but everybody else made out like, well... bandits. And the bandits are good friends of Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel, of Illinois Senator Mark Kirk, of the mayors of Atlanta, Philly, Sacramento, the governors of California and New York and everyplace in between. Kwame Kilpatrick didn't snort Detroit's pension funds up his nose, he gave them to the same folks Rahm gives Chicago's to. Wall Street gave Kwame Kilpatrick a medal for that, and Rahm's friends who do business with the city have put millions in his campaign coffers. Thanks to them, Chicago to some extent is already Detroit.

Getting out of the city's debt trap will require some real creativity, but there are answers. The state of North Dakota, with maybe 30% of Chicago's population, has its own bank, where state funds are exclusively deposited. There's no good reason why Chicago can't do the same, and have its own funds in its own bank, available for investment in the region's own economic future. A city-owned bank could invest those funds in job-creating green technologies that might put large numbers of young Chicagoans, now out of the labor force altogether, to work. It could do what private banks refuse to do and invest in refitting and construction of affordable housing, and transit, and job-creating municipal broadband, like the city of Chattanooga has already successfully deployed.

Senator Kirk's threat isn't national news because staring it down lays bare the predatory habits of our politicians and their funders, and might even lead us to real solutions. But the next step, at least in Chicago, is to fire Rahm Emanuel on April 7.

For Black Agenda Radio, I'm Bruce Dixon. Find us on the web at www.blackagendareport.com

Bruce Dixon is a Chicagoan living in exile in suburban Atlanta. He's managing editor at Black Agenda Report, a mamber of the state committee of the GA Green Party and a partner in a technology firm. He can be reached at bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com



Your browser does not support the audio element.

listen
http://traffic.libsyn.com/blackagendareport/20150310_banksters_threaten.mp3

More Stories


  • x
    Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor , Elias Amare
    Eritrea in the Empire’s Crosshairs: Propaganda and Regime Change Operations
    01 Oct 2025
    Western NGOs and media recently launched coordinated attacks on Eritrea, a longstanding US target for regime change.
  • Bruce A. Dixon , BAR managing editor
    Not Your Daddy's COINTELPRO: Obama Brands Assata Shakur "Most Wanted Terrorist"
    01 Oct 2025
    In 2013 Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder declared Assata Shakur a Most Wanted Terrorist, placing a $2 million bounty on her head. The late Bruce Dixon, Black Agenda Report Managing…
  • Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
    The Paris Climate Agreement is the Global Climate “Movement’s” Two State Solution
    01 Oct 2025
    The Paris Climate Agreement is akin to a two-state solution for a planet on the brink, a falsehood giving the ecocide perpetrators cover for their crimes.
  • Assata Shakur
    No One Can Stop The Rain
    01 Oct 2025
    Assata Shakur wrote the introduction and this poem for the 1990 book Hauling Up the Morning: writings & art by political prisoners and prisoners of war in the U.S.
  • Charo Mina Rojas
    Until Dignity Becomes Customary: the Determination of Francia Márquez Mina
    01 Oct 2025
    Colombian Vice President Francia Márquez Mina is strengthening diplomatic relations with African countries and their connections with Colombia's African descended communities.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us