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In the richest country in the history of the world, it is not radical to demand that when people turn on their taps, the water they drink is safe and clean. It has been 5 years since the start of the Flint water crisis. This is absolutely unacceptable.
Bernie Sanders

The Flint water crisis is an ongoing disaster in which local and state authorities in Flint, Michigan, stopped the flow of clean municipal water to residents, replacing it with lead-contaminated water. To understand this crisis requires some background in American racism, the insane economics of the American Rust Belt, and human corruption and cruelty.[1]

Background[edit]

Flint, MI, is a classic 20th-century American industrial city whose economy relied almost exclusively on the auto industry. The city's dramatic socio-economic decline was documented in the 1989 Michael Moore movie Roger & Me. In 2011, the state of Michigan took over the city's finances due to huge budget deficits. (The state had done this in a number of depressed majority-minority cities.) As part of the plan to close the budget deficit, Flint was taken off of Detroit's water system and switched to using water from the Flint River, not known as one of the nation's cleanest. This eventually led to widespread lead contamination of Flint's drinking water and contributed to an outbreak of Legionnaire's disease.

Timeline[edit]

tl;dr: Flint prospers during the mid-20th century and is abandoned by General Motors in the 1980s. The city empties out except for those too poor to leave, who are mostly African American. Flint goes broke in the 2000s and the state passes a law allowing it to take over cities that are in financial crisis (all of which are mostly black). Mostly-white outsiders slash Flint's spending and look to save money by changing the water source from Detroit's excellent water to the Flint River, a polluted hell-stream. Predictably, the residents of Flint are poisoned, the state denies until they can't, and nothing is solved, no one significant is punished.

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