Dead Cities, Second Cities, and more

1. A Top Ten List to Avoid: Whew! It’s a list I’m mightily glad Charlotte is not on: “America’s Dead Cities,” from the website 24/7 Wall St. This paragraph did have me a bit worried: “Most of America’s Ten Dead Cities were once major manufacturing hubs and others were important ports or financial services [my emphasis] centers. The downfall of one city, New Orleans, began in the 1970s, but was accelerated by Hurricane Katrina.” Only two cities in the South or the Sun Belt make the list, one at No. 5 and one at No. 10. (That sentence is corrected from my earlier miscounting).

2. Second City News: Tuesday’s big news, in urban circles, was the surprise announcement from Chicago’s Mayor For Life Richard M. Daley that he isn’t running again, having served since 1989. Here’s the Chicago Tribune’s story from yesterday. The election is next February. “Daley’s decision sets off a major power scramble following more than 20 years of stifled political ambitions in city politics” the Tribune article notes. Here are some of today’s links. And here’s a conversation between the New York Times’ Gail Collins and David Brooks about what it takes to be a good mayor. Brooks basically gushes (“He is arguably the most accomplished mayor in America today.”)

Collins, with an aside about Pete Rose, says she gets nervous gushing about any public figure who is still alive. Here’s her take on Rahm Emanuel’s possible candidacy: “My reaction to the idea of Rahm Emanuel as mayor is pretty much the same as my attitude toward the abortive attempt to get Rudy Giuliani elected governor. I can’t say I can imagine it working out, but I definitely think you could sell tickets to watch.”

3. Urbanism and Libartarianism: Here’s an interesting website called “Market Urbanism: Urbanism for Capitalists/Capitalists for Urbanism.” In “Why does the Infrastructurist hate libertarians so much, ” Stephen Smith writes: “Among urban planners, libertarianism gets a pretty bad rap. Melissa Lafsky at the Infrastructurist goes so far as to call libertarianism “an enemy of infrastructure,” and dismisses entirely the idea that private industry can build infrastructure …” writes Stephen Smith. He says, “Here at Market Urbanism we’re used to these sorts of attacks from the left, and we work tirelessly to disassociate ourselves (well, mostly) from Reason’s brand of (sub)urbanist libertarianism.”

Smith fingers the Progressive Movement for the end of mass transit. I wouldn’t go that far, because General Motors certainly helped. But I’m reading Roberta Brandes Gratz’ “The Battle for Gotham,” in which Gratz, a friend of the late Jane Jacobs, writes about how Robert Moses’ style of punching freeways through the city and disregard for the small businesses and people he displaces led to the city’s 1970s and 1980s crime and disinvestment.