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  1. #26

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    I would guess if any vices in a red light district were illegal even if only for one jurisdiction, despite thriving financially, the cops would gleefully shut it down. Look at how they all self righteously proclaim how they'll ignore the will of state voters and aggressively go after anyone selling medical marijuana in their local municipalities because, under city ordinance, they can't sell there. No matter what statewide voters approved, which is a crock. They love to cherry pick enforcement when it's a progressive activity they just don't like, regardless of what state voters approved.

  2. #27

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    Quote Originally Posted by lafayette View Post
    The prostitute reference was just the attitude most of the most vocal, Baptist preachers have against all those associated with any vice.
    ha! I was raised in a VERY strict Baptist home and could not wait until I was old enough to leave the Baptist church permanently. And I did just that. It was hell, they dictate every thing you can cannot do and condemn anyone that participates in their multitude of forbidden activities. And you are constantly being threatened with condemnation to hell for engaging in anything they disallow. And Baptists are not the only church or religion attempting to legislate morality, all fundamentalist religions attempt to control behavior.

  3. #28
    LodgeDodger Guest

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    Quote Originally Posted by Django View Post
    Lafayette, as I remember he was demonized quite a bit for his anti drug war stance and it really hurt him politically, maybe I was wrong. Maybe it didnt hurt him as much as I thought it did.

    This is from Wiki.
    On November 3, 1987, he was elected mayor. As mayor, he became known for his opposition to the "War on Drugs" and his stance in favor of drug decriminalization. Schmoke initiated programs in housing, education, public health and economic development. During his three terms in office Schmoke faced very serious challenges, including poor quality schools, drug addiction, and violent crime. Some of his controversial positions included advocating the decriminalization of drug use, and employing Nation of Islam security guards in a housing project. His achievements included improving the environment of low-income housing projects, a needle-exchange program for addicts, keeping the tax rate stable, and attracting the Ravens football team to Baltimore.[8] In 1992, President George H. W. Bush awarded him the national Literacy Award for his efforts to promote adult literacy, and in 1994 President Bill Clinton cited Baltimore's programs to improve public housing and enhance community economic development and named Baltimore one of six cities to receive Empowerment Zone designation.

    On a side note about Schmoke, in the TV series The Wire, the chief of police starts a red light district of his own in Baltimore called Hamsterdam. This character was based on Schmoke. The red light district didn't work so well on the series for obvious reasons if youve seen the show, GREAT show btw.

    .
    Hamsterdam was the first thing I thought of when I spotted this thread. Btw, Django, "The Wire" isn't just a great show, it's the BESTSHOWEVER!

  4. #29

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    Kryptonite, absolutely Baptists aren't the only ones to focus on condemnation and burning in hell. I only mentioned them because we're talking about Detroit's most vocal Bible belters, and there seem to be a lot of Baptists in that group.

  5. #30

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    Quote Originally Posted by lafayette View Post
    Kryptonite, absolutely Baptists aren't the only ones to focus on condemnation and burning in hell. I only mentioned them because we're talking about Detroit's most vocal Bible belters, and there seem to be a lot of Baptists in that group.
    Oh I understand your point for sure. I'm just getting a jab in at my former church. But to be fair to Baptists I will fully agree that other churches and religions try to pull the same BS. Otherwise we could turn into a place like Iran.

  6. #31

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    Yes, and maybe even more accurately, we could turn into burqha-central: Afghanistan. Iran may have its major cultural faults, not to mention other faults, but compared to Afghanistan a surprisingly large part of its population is urban, somewhat "modern" in a western sense and educated. Afghanistan, where the culture is primarily agrarian and [[most imporant) tribal, is where the worst of the fundamentalist religious dogma is the most repressive to the most people, especially women, compared to Iran.

  7. #32

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    Quote Originally Posted by lafayette View Post
    Yes, and maybe even more accurately, we could turn into burqha-central: Afghanistan. Iran may have its major cultural faults, not to mention other faults, but compared to Afghanistan a surprisingly large part of its population is urban, somewhat "modern" in a western sense and educated. Afghanistan, where the culture is primarily agrarian and [[most imporant) tribal, is where the worst of the fundamentalist religious dogma is the most repressive to the most people, especially women, compared to Iran.
    Don't forget, it wasn't uncommon for women to wear miniskirts in Tehran in the 1960s. But U.S. efforts to prop up brutal strongmen and depose populists meant that, increasingly, Iranians sought help from the only people who wouldn't break their promises: the clerics. As usual, the political fight is given a religious face.

  8. #33

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    Rightee-o, detroitnerd. So many people think Iran is exclusively a tribal backwater. Not so.

  9. #34

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    Quote Originally Posted by lafayette View Post
    Rightee-o, detroitnerd. So many people think Iran is exclusively a tribal backwater. Not so.
    The Iranian students when I was in college were known for expensive fashions, men and women. I have seen a brief news program on how fashionable women were even in Kabul, Afghanistan. It's the freak fundamentalists in Iran that began exporting the dress codes and behavior codes, etc. to other Islamic countries. Middle Eastern countries were much more open and progressive until the 1980's.

    All the more reason to tell the megachurch preachers in Detroit to F-off and leave the strip clubs alone. And I for one have not even been inside one but to me they have a right to exist in a free society.

  10. #35

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    Would be nice to see another state face the oldest profession as one that's here to stay! Help control STD's, generate tax money. Puritan attitudes in many hypocrites, stand in the way. More Jeffersonian thinkers are needed in this country! Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
    As far as reefer, a miracle plant of many uses that should be exploited.
    Just as mentioned by many, there is more than enough areas to convert to adult playgrounds out there.

  11. #36

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    Agreed, tjlorton.

  12. #37

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    Quote Originally Posted by neighbor View Post
    The whole Pugh v. Winans thing got me thinking. Why doesn't Detroit just build a red light district.
    I was thinking the same thing last night.

    I was thinking that if a handful of strip club owners got together, they could all move the the same block or corner in downtown, perhaps in conjunction with some change in zoning that made it harder to open the businesses in the rest of the city. At the same time, a few "bookstores" and/or "toystores" could round it out to make a real district.

    This is where I decided it would fit best:

    http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&sour...,0.004823&z=18

    A half block or so in every direction from the corner of Brush and Macomb. It is just out of the way enough from the more corporate and family areas of downtown, but still in the thick of it [[4 blocks from the stadia, 2 blocks from the Greektown casino).

    The only issue I see with the location is that the People Mover goes right over it, the signage and windows in the area would need to be cognizant of the fact that families ride the DPM. But, that might be a blessing in disguise, it will have to be classy enough not not mar downtown, but will still be very visible.

    A second location would be the corner of Brush and Lafayette, where Bouzoukis is now. I figured that was too close to the county building and Campus Martius, but now I'm starting to think it is isn't such a bad spot.

  13. #38

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    I think cass corridor would be a great red light district??? any other suggestions out there?

  14. #39

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    Quote Originally Posted by jsmyers View Post
    This is where I decided it would fit best:

    http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&sour...,0.004823&z=18

    A half block or so in every direction from the corner of Brush and Macomb. It is just out of the way enough from the more corporate and family areas of downtown, but still in the thick of it [[4 blocks from the stadia, 2 blocks from the Greektown casino).

    The only issue I see with the location is that the People Mover goes right over it, the signage and windows in the area would need to be cognizant of the fact that families ride the DPM. But, that might be a blessing in disguise, it will have to be classy enough not not mar downtown, but will still be very visible.
    Wow, this is a truly great spot for a Red Light district. Right in front of the Police Station, mind you, and the People Mover doesn't stop there, so no worries about weirdos on the train [[like that is ever NOT the case anyway...) Also it's a very underdeveloped block on a narrow, urban street, with an elevated rail line running through it. That all adds up to a lot of character for the district. I am thinking of the neon-lighted, cloistered streets in Blade Runner... except real and in Detroit.

  15. #40

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    Quote Originally Posted by LodgeDodger View Post
    Hamsterdam was the first thing I thought of when I spotted this thread. Btw, Django, "The Wire" isn't just a great show, it's the BESTSHOWEVER!
    We are in agreement. The Wire was one of the great shows ever

    Best seasons
    1) Season 1 [[Season 4 should be no.1 but s1 is no. 1)
    2) Season 4 [[Four names: Mike, Namond, Dookie and Randy)
    3) Season 3 [[Hamsterdam)
    4) Season 2 [[The Docks)
    5) Season 5 [[Because it was the end of things)

  16. #41

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    Quote Originally Posted by Gsgeorge View Post
    Wow, this is a truly great spot for a Red Light district. Right in front of the Police Station, mind you,
    I forgot about the police. That factored into my thinking too. I was originally thinking the corner of Beubien and Clinton, but I realized that having inmates looking out at a row of strip clubs 24/7 might not be the best help for rehabilitation.

  17. #42

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    Quote Originally Posted by jsmyers View Post
    I was thinking the same thing last night.

    I was thinking that if a handful of strip club owners got together, they could all move the the same block or corner in downtown, perhaps in conjunction with some change in zoning that made it harder to open the businesses in the rest of the city. At the same time, a few "bookstores" and/or "toystores" could round it out to make a real district.

    This is where I decided it would fit best:

    http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&sour...,0.004823&z=18

    A half block or so in every direction from the corner of Brush and Macomb. It is just out of the way enough from the more corporate and family areas of downtown, but still in the thick of it [[4 blocks from the stadia, 2 blocks from the Greektown casino).

    The only issue I see with the location is that the People Mover goes right over it, the signage and windows in the area would need to be cognizant of the fact that families ride the DPM. But, that might be a blessing in disguise, it will have to be classy enough not not mar downtown, but will still be very visible.

    A second location would be the corner of Brush and Lafayette, where Bouzoukis is now. I figured that was too close to the county building and Campus Martius, but now I'm starting to think it is isn't such a bad spot.
    A red light district in that location, 100 yards from Historic Second Baptist Church on Monroe Street, would be a bad idea. A red light district in and near the CBD would be a bad idea. Bouzouki on Lafayette is enough. Someone mentioned having a red light district on Chene Street near I-94. That would be a more plausible location, but still not the greatest. The CBD shouldn't even be considered since the goal of the CBD has been to bring in more residents to live there. No one is going to want to live in the CBD if there is a red light district close by.Any talk of a red light district should focus on an area that was once industrial but is now abandoned or mostly abandoned. Areas like: John R between State Fair and 8 Mile [[I think there is already a strip club along that stretch); Russell between Grand Blvd. and Warren; Clark between Michigan and Toledo; and Bellevue/Barfait between Lafayette and Gratiot.

  18. #43

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    Yes, there's no need to worry about walking distance proximity to anything. The majority of strip club customers in Detroit are suburbanites and, therefore, have cars. They'll drive to the district.

  19. #44

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    I second the Cass Corridor. It is conveniently placed between Downtown, and Wayne State/ Midtown. Lots of space, vacant land, easy access to Woodward, and the highways.

  20. #45

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    Quote Originally Posted by royce View Post
    A red light district in that location, 100 yards from Historic Second Baptist Church on Monroe Street, would be a bad idea. A red light district in and near the CBD would be a bad idea. Bouzouki on Lafayette is enough. Someone mentioned having a red light district on Chene Street near I-94. That would be a more plausible location, but still not the greatest. The CBD shouldn't even be considered since the goal of the CBD has been to bring in more residents to live there. No one is going to want to live in the CBD if there is a red light district close by.Any talk of a red light district should focus on an area that was once industrial but is now abandoned or mostly abandoned. Areas like: John R between State Fair and 8 Mile [[I think there is already a strip club along that stretch); Russell between Grand Blvd. and Warren; Clark between Michigan and Toledo; and Bellevue/Barfait between Lafayette and Gratiot.
    I disagree. I think Macomb Street would be a great location. One, it is Downtown, meaning everyone will know how to get there. Two, located right next to the police station. You're ideas are in desolate areas, and something like a red light district won't exactly revive those areas. It would just make them more dangerous. Having it Downtown wouldn't really affect the safety of the rest of Downtown.

    I do, however, like your suggestion of using abadoned industrial areas. But I think Milwaukee Street area, from the Lodge [[or woodward) to 75 would be great. This way it would be served by rail [[starting 2013), where unfortunately your ideas wouldn't, at least for a little.

  21. #46
    Route29 Guest

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    I disagree that there should be a red light district downtown.
    First, while downtown is no Manhattan, it already has significant economic activity and density. Downtown only comprises 1 square mile of a 130-some square mile city that is 1/3 vacant. It is those other areas that are a drain on the city's resources and have infrastructure and structures that are not being utilized.
    Everyone may know how to get downtown[[actually, they don't), but that is a good reason NOT to have a Red Light district there. Downtown is somewhat family friendly by Detroit standards, with the stadiums and if you count midtown, the Museums. The Red Light district downtown would scare off a lot of families. Not to mention, downtown does have a few thousand residents, many of them elderly, who won't like the Red Light District. NIMBY.
    I like the Chene Street suggestion. There would be very few NIMBYs if only because there are so few backyards left there. Chene street is almost entirely vacant, except for a gas station or two. It is still right off the freeway and close enough to downtown. Not necessarily Chene street - but any vacant commercial strip with few nearby residences. There are enough areas like that. Now THAT would be rightsizing Detroit.
    Personally I think a Red Light District could turn Detroit around. Make it the biggest in the world. For Christ sake, it's not like Detroit has a reputation for morals and piety and it really never has. It is a gritty rust belt city with a badass reputation - and it could capitalize on that.

  22. #47

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    Actually Chene already is the unofficial red light district. Would love it to become the official though.

    This kind of connects with the fire thread on Detroit Connections.

  23. #48

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    The guys over @ 97.FM were suggesting of putting the Detroit Red-Light District somewhere on the riverfront east of the Recen where all of the property that was once slated for the Detroit Casino District. The other place would the piece of been south of Highland Pack and west of Hamtramck. Again, this is coming from Terry Foster and Mike V.

  24. #49

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    Rivertown has potential. I think the impetus behind a red light district should be to put it somewhere that has no potential otherwise.

  25. #50

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    Quote Originally Posted by DetroitTitan View Post
    I second the Cass Corridor. It is conveniently placed between Downtown, and Wayne State/ Midtown. Lots of space, vacant land, easy access to Woodward, and the highways.

    We've been there and done that. As I showed in another thread, the city set up the Corridor as the red light district in the early '60s. It worked like a charm, although it wasn't much fun growing up in the midst of it. [[Well, I take that back -- it was lots of fun, actually. But I don't think I'd want to raise my kids there.)

    That's why any red light district set up by the city would have to be free of honest, hardworking residents. Since there are empty swaths of land througout Detroit, such an area shouldn't be too hard to find.

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