Michigan roads are seriously bad this year:
https://www.reddit.com/r/Detroit/comments/7z5sqf/potholes_on_mound_road/
It's not uncommon to see places like this throughout the metro-area. There are roads that we don't go down because they're essentially impassable.
@craigmaloney man that subreddit seems kinda bleak right now
@cwebber I still see hope in there. It's a Metro-Detroit thing. 😁
@craigmaloney I would like to know more, at some point, about your perspective on Detroit and the surrounding area, especially signs of hope. About a decade "Detroit is crumbling" got a lot of press, but it's clear the city is still running. I've heard from some folks that there's a lot of interesting stuff happening in Detroit right now, but those comments were mostly vague. Would be good to hear a local's take!
Then again you keep telling me to visit... ;)
@cwebber Well, I wouldn't want to sway you from heading over here to see things first-hand.
Detroit is in some ways the canary in the coalmine for large cities. We've had a lot of folks leave the area and a lot of corruption over the years. We also have a large amount of super-rich folks in the suburbs and a lot of poverty in the city. But things seem to be an an up-tick in recent years. We've had some competent leadership that realizes that you can't just ride out the problems in the city.
@cwebber Detroit has unique challenges. We have amazing architecture that is crumbling, buildings that hearken back to a bygone era that now sport the scars and paint of disaffected youth, and neighborhoods where showing the slightest bit of affluence makes you a target. And we have multi-million corporations pouring money into the city as fast as they can to build it up. It's a strange dichotomy for folks who aren't as familiar with it.But we have a rich history and an awesome legacy.