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The Slaughter of Cities: Urban Renewal As Ethnic Cleansing Hardcover – 2004

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 668 pages
  • Publisher: St Augustine Pr Inc (2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1587317753
  • ISBN-13: 978-1587317750
  • Product Dimensions: 2.2 x 6.8 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #635,930 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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55 of 59 people found the following review helpful By hrh on January 2, 2006
Format: Hardcover
I just finished reading "The Slaughter of Cities", and I found it a useful complement to such books as "Suburban Nation" and "The Death and Life of Great American Cities" - each give some treatment of how a rather small number of people with a somewhat sincere vision gutted the moderate-sized to large cities of the US, but whereas in the latter two books Plater-Zyberk and Jacobs, respectively, argue that planners had a wrong-headed planning vision that did not create livable environments, Jones shows that, in the case of ethnic enclaves, there is reason to believe that, in practice, the driving forces behind these communities' demise were

1. Unfavorable tax and zoning treatments of the row-house, the staple of these communities,

2. An almost blind faith in an integrationist ideology that lead the Ford Foundation and the American Friends Service Committee, inter alia, to "integrate" neighborhoods by any means necessary (and "integration" typically meant white flight), and

3. the ethnic prejudices of the "WASP" establishment, which lead the ethnically homogenous municipal and federal housing agencies to be predisposed to break up enclaves filled with people from poor Catholic neighborhoods.

One can be found in most treatments of twentieth century urban renewal, two I've seen discussed only partly, but three I have never heard discussed - and Jones presents a variety of evidence from primary sources to show that this was, at very least, a contributing factor to the demise of ethnic enclaves in Boston, Philidelphia, Chicago and Detroit.

But, in order for those points to stand out, you almost need to be taking notes.
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82 of 94 people found the following review helpful By A Customer on February 8, 2004
Format: Hardcover
The destruction of Detroit, Philadelphia, the south side of Chicago, and all the major cities of the Northeast was all planned. In the early part of the 20th century the WASP plutocrats saw that the Catholic urban ethnics would soon take over the major cities because they were having large families, so they used urban planning funded with government and foundation money to drive the Catholics out of the cities after World War II. E. Michael Jones has put the whole sorry tale together in his new book, and the words of the elite urban planners, themselves, are used to convict them. If you thought that the rapid suburbanization of this country after World War II was a natural occurrence, then read this book. You will also learn how the "car culture" and the interstate highway system fits into the scheme. My Great-Grandfather rode the streetcar to work in Detroit. He spent pennies a day on transportation. Now we are all spread out and dependent on cars costing thousands a year to get us to work on long commutes via the clogged freeways.
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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful By Joe Keenan on September 9, 2010
Format: Hardcover
If you did, this is the book for you. I returned to this book after reading Michael Patrick MacDonalds' memoirs, All Souls: A Family Story from Southie and Easter Rising: A Memoir of Roots and Rebellion , two very good works on their own terms (they are memoirs not autobiography so they lack the vigor associated with the more formal form), but not without serious shortcomings. MacDonald in his writings seems to lack a context in which to understand the forces that shaped his childhood, that killed his brothers and crippled his sister.

This book supplies the context.

In short, the Brahmans of Boston, who made their money making drug addicts out of the Chinese via the opium trade, used the same tactics/techniques (coupled with divide and conquer strategy via busing) on the poor Irish of South Boston whom they have long despised. The reasons are the same...the unconstrained desire for money enabled by a disdain for the exploited peoples. The story is the same in Philadephia, Detroit and Chicago, urban renewal as ethnic cleansing, in short culture war against ethnic Catholics (who were getting too powerful for the ruling class), that those that lived beside the ethnic Catholics (Protestants of all denominations, Jews) would also have to suffer was of course of no consequence. Slaughter of the Cities should be read by not only every writer trying to make sense of the demise of working class neighborhood in America, but by every working person in Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit and Chicago.
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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful By J. Michael on December 12, 2012
Format: Hardcover
This is one of the most important and enlightening works of history I have ever read. Why are our cities the way there are today, i.e. utterly failed polities, with glittering downtown business areas of skyscrapers and sports arenas surrounded by dangerous and poor black and brown ghettoes utterly dependent on government jobs and government handouts for survival, with a few leftover White enclaves eking out a sort of parlous existence in their midst? Everyone knows it wasn't always like that. People who were alive in the 50s and 60s and even 70s lived in different kinds of cities, safe places that functioned, places where people wanted to live and had proud roots, places whose demographics resembled that of America. But suddenly neighborhoods started to "change" (to use the preferred euphemism of the refugees) and almost the entire population of many American cities simply fled. Even among those displaced, it has always been assumed that this was a organic process; i.e. different people simply wanted to move in, and we didn't want to live with them, so we left. However, E. Michael Jones clearly shows here, in this incredible work of scholarship, that the White inhabitants of American cities were deliberately ethnically cleansed.

By the 1940s, American cities- at least in the major Northeastern and Midwest cities like Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland, et al., had experienced a demographic revolution, in which the native American Protestant Anglo-Saxon people had become outnumbered by predominantly "White ethnics", i.e. Irish, Italian and Polish for the most part who, although separated by sometimes contentious ethnic differences, were in the process of becoming a powerful and cohesive group due to intermarriage and their shared Catholic faith.
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