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19 Jul, 11 tweets, 8 min read
SPECIAL REPORT: A segregation wall in Detroit still stands. The consequences continue today.

nbcnews.to/3kygSij

In partnership with @BridgeDet313.

(1/11) #NBCNewsThreads
@BridgeDet313 Built in 1941, the Birwood Wall, a 6-foot-high, 4-inch-thick divider that sits just below Detroit’s storied Eight Mile Road, separated a Black neighborhood to the east from a community on the west that was developed for whites only. (2/11)
@BridgeDet313 In a 6-month investigation, @NBCNews and @BridgeDet313 discovered that one of Detroit’s most prominent families built the wall.

The side of the wall residents called home would later affect the sale price of their houses and the wealth they would inherit. (3/11)
@BridgeDet313 Federal lenders in the 1930s relied on color-coded maps that deemed some neighborhoods safe investments, shading them blue/green, while others were shaded red, meaning “hazardous.”

The gov't labeled the neighborhood “hazardous” in part because Black families lived there. (4/11)
@BridgeDet313 The practice, known as redlining, forced people living in red zones to borrow money at higher interest rates or resort to predatory lenders.

Federal policies encouraged builders to physically separate new developments from redlined areas.

nbcnews.to/3kygSij

(5/11)
@BridgeDet313 A 1939 federal housing map shows red ink across the Eight Mile-Wyoming neighborhood, where the wall was built.

This meant residents couldn’t access federal financing — and neither could developers of the new neighborhood to the west.

At least not until they built a wall. (6/11)
@BridgeDet313 “It’s ancient history, dear,” a grandson of the wall's developer said when reached by @NBCNews: “Why are you digging around in something that is maybe nothing at all?”

Reporters soon confirmed his grandfather’s ties to the wall.

“As you can imagine, I’m shocked,” he said (7/11)
@BridgeDet313 A recent report named Detroit the most segregated city in the nation.

The cost goes beyond economic impact, says Jacob Faber, a sociology professor at NYU.

“The consequences of that are immeasurable.”

nbcnews.to/3kygSij

(8/11)
@BridgeDet313 The wall’s existence serves as an enduring reminder of the reasons this country remains so starkly divided — why a nation that’s more racially and ethnically diverse than almost any other is packed with segregated neighborhoods.

nbcnews.to/3kygSij

(9/11)
@BridgeDet313 80 years later, the wall itself, now brightly painted in parts with colorful murals, no longer separates Black from white.

The discriminatory policies that made the wall possible have been outlawed.

Nearly all of the area’s white residents left for suburbs decades ago. (10/11)
@BridgeDet313 Today the wall still serves an educational role, says Teresa Moon, who moved to a house just east of the wall in 1959.

She makes a point to greet visitors.

“I want them to know not just the logistics of the wall … It’s important that people know about my community.” (11/11)

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More from @NBCNews

20 Jul
When England's Bukayo Saka took his penalty in the Euro 2020 final, what followed wasn't just another chapter of the country's tale of soccer heartbreak, but also a grim echo of what its Black stars have endured for decades. (1/4) #NBCNewsThreads nbcnews.to/2W5qyXz
After he missed the decisive kick, 19-year-old Saka's social media timeline was flooded racial abuse.

"I knew instantly the kind of hate I was about to receive," he said, adding, "There is no place for racism or hate of any kind in football or any area of society." (2/4)
Saka's defiant response is firmly rooted in soccer's past.

Emerging as society's leading voices demanding change, experts say that Saka and his England teammates continue another storied soccer tradition: using the game's unique position as a conduit for racial discussion. (3/4)
Read 4 tweets
17 Jul
Businesses owners have noticed a change in Surfside since the condo collapsed nearby. A typically bustling area, downtown has become quiet and business has slowed.

Reporting by @PhilMcCausland

#NBCNewsThread (1/9) nbcnews.to/3ijz8sV
@PhilMcCausland The slowdown comes after one of the most economically devastating periods for small businesses in the nation’s history. The pandemic brought many locally owned shops and restaurants to their knees or forced entrepreneurs to take on long-term loans to keep afloat. (2/9) Image
@PhilMcCausland After the Champlain Towers South collapse, authorities had to lock down a large perimeter to ensure that people didn’t get too close to the site. They also needed room to store emergency vehicles and construction equipment for the digging work that continues there. (3/9)
Read 9 tweets
15 Jul
DEVELOPING: At least 19 people have died and dozens are missing in Germany after heavy flooding swept away cars and caused some buildings to collapse. nbcnews.to/3if90zh
UPDATE: More than 20 people have died following heavy flooding in Western Europe, with dozens more missing and many stranded on rooftops. nbcnews.com/news/world/5-d…
Devastation caused by the flooding of the Ahr River in the Eifel village of Schuld, western Germany on Thursday.

At least 33 are dead and dozens are missing missing as floods sweep Germany, western Europe.

nbcnews.to/3if90zh

📷 Christoph Reichwein / AP
Read 7 tweets
11 Jul
After a flood of reports of judges using social media in partisan and inappropriate ways, experts say states should revisit their guidelines and give more clarity regarding social media misconduct.
By @erikhjortiz
#NBCNewsThreads (1/9) nbcnews.to/3i2UwCR
A local judge in upstate New York resigned in May after a state agency opened an investigation into Facebook posts that allegedly conveyed anti-LGBTQ and anti-Muslim bias and showed favoritism toward law enforcement. (2/9)
This case, along with others, highlights a judge who seemed to run afoul of ethics guidelines by using social media in ways that state oversight commissions said could taint the credibility of their offices, betray public confidence and call into question their impartiality (3/9)
Read 9 tweets
3 Jul
Newly released records show top Republicans in Arizona's largest county dodged calls from President Trump and his allies in the aftermath of the 2020 election. nbcnews.to/3jF1D6I
The records — including voicemails and text messages — shed light on efforts to mount a behind-the-scenes pressure campaign on Republican officials overseeing elections.
The most aggressive pressure came from Arizona Republican Party Chairwoman Kelli Ward, who tried to persuade Republicans on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors to question election results, even as the officials tried to instill confidence in the them.
Read 4 tweets
3 Jul
Newly released records show top Republicans in Arizona's largest county dodged calls from President Trump and his allies in the aftermath of the 2020 election.

nbcnews.to/3we2uhi
The records — including voicemails and text messages — shed light on efforts to mount a behind-the-scenes pressure campaign on Republican officials overseeing elections.
The most aggressive pressure came from Arizona Republican Party Chairwoman Kelli Ward, who tried to persuade Republicans on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors to question election results, even as the officials tried to instill confidence in the them.
Read 4 tweets

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