Thursday, January 25, 2007

White Atlanta suburbs push for secession

Associated Press:

A potentially explosive dispute in the City Too Busy to Hate is taking shape over a proposal to break Fulton County in two and split off Atlanta's predominantly white, affluent suburbs to the north from some of the metropolitan area's poorest, black neighborhoods.

Legislation that would allow the suburbs to form their own county, to be called Milton County, was introduced by members of the Georgia Legislature's Republican majority earlier this month.

Supporters say it is a quest for more responsive government in a county with a population greater than that of six states. Opponents say the measure is racially motivated and will pit white against black, rich against poor.

"If it gets to the floor, there will be blood on the walls," warned state Sen. Vincent Fort, an Atlanta Democrat and member of the Legislative Black Caucus who bitterly opposes the plan. Fort added: "As much as you would like to think it's not racial, it's difficult to draw any other conclusion."

The legislation calls for amending the Georgia Constitution to allow the return of Milton County, which succumbed to financial troubles during the Depression and was folded into Fulton County in 1932.

The former Milton County is now mostly white and Republican and one of the most affluent areas in the nation. Atlanta and its southern suburbs are mostly black, are controlled by Democrats and have neighborhoods with some of the highest poverty rates in America. (Buckhead, a fashionable Atlanta neighborhood of clubs, restaurants and mansions, would remain in Fulton County.)

"The only way to fix Fulton County is to dismantle Fulton County," said state Rep. Jan Jones, the plan's chief sponsor. "It's too large, and certainly too dysfunctional, to truly be considered local government."

Jones, a former marketing executive who lives in the Fulton suburb of Alpharetta, cited the county's troubled library and public transit systems and a jail that was taken over by a federal judge because it was filthy and unsafe. He denied the move is racially motivated.

Don Petree, the 62-year-old owner of Don's Hairstyling in Roswell, another northern Fulton suburb, said many of his customers "feel like they're not being taken care of like they should be with the tax dollars they're spending. I think there's some truth to that."

Milton County would have a population of about 300,000, instantly making it Georgia's fifth-largest county.

Election Ad Aggravates a Racial Divide in Atlanta

3 Comments:

At 11:13 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Blood on the walls..." interesting. Is that a threat of some kind? Is Senator Fort proposing violence if the whites (who finance him, his "constituents, the addicts, criminals, etc..., "social programs" and other bullshit) leave so they no longer have to finance failure and social pathology? I say the Confederates of Milton County, CSA raise the stars and bars and let loose a rebel yell. You have supporters all over the country, even us Yankees.

 
At 1:54 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Another downside to multiracial societies: high taxes and government spending.

 
At 11:01 PM, Blogger The Friendly Informer said...

I have to admit...

Although the idea is based on racism it seems as though separating the races may be what would make everyone
happy.

I don't think a lot of blacks really want to interact and live with whites anyway.

 

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