Why G-20 was in Pittsburgh

September 25th, 2009 3:43 pm · 3 comments

Because Pittsburgh was a lot like Detroit is?

Incidentally, as Phillips note, take a look at Time Magazine’s project on the death - and maybe, eventual rebirth - of Detroit:

This summer the editors at Time Inc. did something a little out of the ordinary for us or, frankly, for anybody: we bought a house in Detroit. As houses go, it’s nice enough — three stories, five bedrooms, 3½ baths with a yard and a basement. We paid $99,000, about $80,000 above the average price of a house in the city limits.

Why would we ever do such a thing? Because we believe that Detroit right now is a great American story. No city has had more influence on the country’s economic and social evolution. Detroit was the birthplace of both the industrial age and the nation’s middle class, and the city’s rise and fall — and struggle to rise again — are a window into the challenges facing all of modern America. From urban planning to the crisis of manufacturing, from the lingering role of race and class in our society to the struggle for better health care and education, it’s all happening at its most extreme in the Motor City.

As goes Detriot, so goes America? That ought to frighten you just a little bit. But then we might have said the same thing about Pittsburgh circa 1985, too.

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  3 comments  Tags: Economy · Pennsylvania

There are currently 3 comments on this blog post
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oh geez
9/25/09
4:18 PM
is this the sort of event that gets decided on somewhere without the cities bidding on it (like the olympics)? Can't imagine too many places say..."looking forward to hosting this event".
Heaven knows...who would want to deal with all the protesters, violence, police protection. Maybe the ones who really make out are the glass replacement companies.
TS14G#1
9/26/09
2:52 PM
I would have to disagree with the point that Detroit was the birthplace of the Industrial Age. I know they made alot of cars and motors there. But in order to manufacture those items, you need Iron, Steel, and Glass. These are only three items of hundreds, that were made in Pittsburgh on a large scale. As far as I know they did not manufacture any automobiles in Pittsburgh, but almost EVERYTHING else was at one time manufactured there. The success of Detroit during the great industrial revolution was tied to the fact that manufacturing was already booming in Pittsburgh.
Therefore, I believe it was only appropriate that the G-20 was held in the Grandaddy of all Industrial Cities: Pittsburgh.
Bustina di tè
9/29/09
12:35 PM
The steam engine, rail and stationary, gave birth to the industrial revolution.
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