Land Grab

Guest Post by Hardscrabble Farmer

http://www.landgrabfilm.com/

The other night I stumbled across a small documentary, and having heard nothing about the back story in the media (for reasons that will become evident) I was riveted by the multiple layers of what was a much larger story than it claimed to be.

In short, a wealthy, local businessman, tired of waiting for an economic turnaround in his corrupt and bankrupt city, decides to spend his own money in order to bring about a large scale urban agriculture project to the blighted streets of East Detroit. You would think that it would be an easy choice to side with him, understanding that his motivations were almost entirely selfless, and that the cost of the project was his alone to bear and that the end result would benefit people living in abject poverty and blight.

He neither sought, nor received public funding of any kind. He agreed to pay off the tax liens on scores of abandoned properties, most of which were burned out building or vacant lots filled with trash. He would- if the project was successful- bring an opportunity for fresh food to a neighborhood that has been classified as a ‘food desert’ due to the complete lack of grocery stores or farmer’s markets, and to provide employment in one of the single worst urban economies in the US.

The problem? He was not Black in a city that sees everything through a prism of Race.

The film slowly and methodically lays bare the divisions and fault lines present throughout our body politic; Race, class, bureaucracy, criminality and corruption. It shows the underlying hostility of the various opponents of the project through interviews, allowing them to communicate their seething hatred of anything and everything that represents their perceived enemies, regardless of the value brought to the table.

It also sheds light on the Quixotic altruism of decent human beings, and their inability to see those who do not possess such values as fundamentally different. This almost pathological kindness is exposed, not as a strength, but as a flaw. Were it not for an equal measure of grit and determination, the entire narrative could have gone in a completely different direction.

Unlike most documentaries of this type it is almost impossible to see the final outcome through the twists and turns of the director’s vision, and this is reflected by the people in the community trying to come to grips with change- any change- to a situation they feel is inescapable. As in all things, change is the only constant and the conclusion shows this, not only on the effects of the project’s inevitable outcome to the City of Detroit, but in the hearts of the people who made the journey through to the end.

Our entire system is built upon a series of perfidious illusions, and illogical policies, all of which are designed to keep us enslaved in some way or another to the system itself. The improvements required and the solutions to our deepest problems do not, and have never come from the top down, but from the soil upon which the population lives and makes it’s stand. The final shot and of the film with it’s poignant chyron underscores this point profoundly, and leaves the viewer almost breathless.

For those who still believe in the power of the individual to overcome all odds in order to make things right, you could not find a more moving and inspiring film.

LAND GRAB // Trailer from Atlas Industries on Vimeo.

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28 Comments
unit472
unit472
November 19, 2018 1:28 pm

Negroes create nothing but squalor. That is why there are ‘food deserts’. Only desperate immigrants will open a business in negro communities and even they aren’t crazy enough to put $10/lbs meats on a shelf where a hoodrat can pick up an armful of steaks and bolt for the door. Nope, its going to only be snack food on the shelves and liquor behind the counter where the owner can control his inventory.

When I lived in Richmond the local grocery chain, Ukrops, since bought out, backed a black ‘businessman’s efforts to open grocery stores in black neighborhoods. He named his stores ‘Community Pride’. You could see this man all over town because he drove a yellow Rolls Royce convertible. Of course he went bankrupt but it wasn’t his fault. It was the grocery wholesalers who put him out of business because they liked to be paid for their goods. He sued them for ‘racism’ and got a local jury to award him millions.

Sadly for him, the wholesalers appealed and got the verdict overturned. The negro businessman lost his Rolls, his white wife and his home was foreclosed on too. He now runs a janitorial service.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  unit472
November 19, 2018 2:41 pm

Niggers know how to do one thing: bitch about how they don’t get enough given to them. Anything that is ‘nice’, ‘honest’ – they fuck it up. Steal sunglasses, steal steaks at the grocery store, steal rides from public transit, steal gas, steal from the liquor store.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Dutchman
November 20, 2018 6:45 am

Maybe you’ll get lucky and they’ll steel your smart phone.

Wautavious J Washington
Wautavious J Washington
  Anonymous
November 20, 2018 10:13 am

Who gibs you dat steel smart phone? Dat Bama Phone be plastic and broke already.

Robert (QSLV)
Robert (QSLV)
November 19, 2018 1:29 pm

The free shit army won’t farm. I grew some nice tomatoes and Ghost Peppers this season. The deer started in on the tomatoes and I sprayed the plants with tobacco juice. Success.

Robert (QSLV)

Monday, uggh!
Monday, uggh!
November 19, 2018 1:31 pm

Thank you very much for sharing this. I watched the trailer. Isn’t it amazing that some people would rather continue living in decay?

Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
November 19, 2018 1:38 pm

I did not see tha documentary, but am (once removed) familiar with Hantz farms. I was associated with his main project manager on another matter. It was my opinion then and now that Hantz goal was acquiring large, contiguous plots of land in the speculation that future development would be potentially profitable. Using them as tree or fruit/vegetable producers while waiting for the conditions in Detroit (outside the bubble in Midtown, which is another interesting story of private investment and speculation, and municipal administration) to improve such that financial interest in the hustings increases.

I never believed (still don’t) that antz cared much about urban ag, which makes o sense anyhow. I always figured that the ag angle was good marketing, and might provide some sort of tax benefit. I do not object to that, if it is his angle. I don’t object to urban ag either, I just think it is never going to pay. If someone wants to throw their money away on it, go right ahead.

Hantz probably did not figure 2 things: First is that Detroit is run by incompetent corruptocrats. You can deal with the corrupt, if they deliver what they get paid to deliver. You can deal with the incompetent, it jus takes longer. But the corrupt incompetent are nigh on impossible. TOo stupid to deliver what they were bribed to deliver.

Second, I tink (do not know) that there might be some really big money picking up free/cheap land in Detroit. Hantz is rich, but he ain’t Bezos or Gates rich. If really big money is moving in Motown, they will work damned hard to keep any home-grown competition from emerging.

It is a fascinating story. Watch Detroit closely. It is where a lot of the rest of the country-no longer really a nation- is headed.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Brian Reilly
November 19, 2018 3:17 pm

You should watch it because you missed a couple of central points; one being that Hantz actually lives in that neighborhood and has his whole life. Not outside the city, not in a tony suburb, but right there next to all those abandoned homes in East Detroit. And he didn’t pick up any large contiguous properties, but rather assembled a patchwork of small parcels, very few adjacent to one another. His investment wound up returning a 400% increase in property values for his neighbors who did nothing but fight him, and yet they reaped the rewards of his effort as part of a revitalized community. He even bought off the tax debt of several of the older property owners and signed the deeds back over to them. If anything he is some kind of altruistic savant who can’t help but make money because he s such a straight shooter. I can’t recall ever seeing anything like that before, at least not at his level.

Robert (QSLV)
Robert (QSLV)
  hardscrabble farmer
November 19, 2018 3:24 pm

Maybe they wouldn’t fight him if he grew poppies. Take a big chunk out of transport costs.

Robert (QSLV)

meg
meg
  hardscrabble farmer
November 19, 2018 4:58 pm

Website is expired…

http://www.landgrabfilm.com/

I think this story is a decent one.

https://www.mlive.com/news/detroit/index.ssf/2016/07/land_grab_documentary_looks_at.html

Interesting HSF…

Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
  hardscrabble farmer
November 19, 2018 5:25 pm

I will watch it when I find the link to it. Hantz may be some deluded altruist (I would not know) and there is no law against that, but real deluded altruists who have money are thin on the ground. Another point is that locking down a bunch of urban gardens in large contiguous tracts that real big boys want can give one effective veto power or high profits beyond the scale of the size of the Hantz plot. Take a look at the Detroit Land Bank for a start. Very interesting, maybe sinister, and a LOT bigger than Hantz.

And no, I don’t give a damn about the residents of Detroit who have put up with chicanery, theft, and incompetence from the people they elect. The one lady was not notified that her adjacent lot was for sale? And she BELIEVED the incompetent who assured her she would be notified? Sucker. You can bet that Hantz is relentless about chasing a title until he has paid for it and has it in hand.

All Hantz (or anyone else left around Detroit) needs to turn the corner fast is an 8.0 quake in LA or SF.

Grog
Grog
November 19, 2018 1:47 pm

Let them eat cake.

TC
TC
November 19, 2018 3:45 pm

“Pathological kindness” seems to be the common exploit of the enemies of white people.

Old Toad of Green Acres
Old Toad of Green Acres
November 19, 2018 4:06 pm

Reminds me of South Africa and Rhodesia. Also the Twilight Zone episode, “The Old Man in the Cave”, 1963.
Good luck to him. Prayers would be better.

Unfunny
Unfunny
November 19, 2018 5:04 pm

So much division and distrust have been sown by the captive media. That plus federalized education, and genetic predilections, have yielded the whirlwind.

A bridge symbolizes a crossing of sorts, from one side to another. How fitting thereupon to have written: “DANGER! Reality ahead.” Because there’s no escaping reality in the end; one way or another.

A good quote in the trailer when the guy says:

“I would embrace that idea if only I could hallucinate”.

lol

EDIT: In other words, not hallucinating is a great start toward a better reality; or at least better than a reality delivered via hallucinations.

wdg
wdg
November 19, 2018 7:02 pm

All I can say is it isn’t going to work. The gulf between African man and European man, spanning 100,000 years of evolution, is like a Colorado River canyon that is too wide to be bridged. Africa is totally incompatible with Western Civilization. In fact it is even worse than that. People from then third world in European nations function like weapons of mass destruction. Watch the interview of Camp of Saints author Jean Raspail below.

meg
meg
  wdg
November 19, 2018 9:18 pm

Is chilling that the author mentions that his book was written before laws were in effect which might make it “actionable.”

yahsure
yahsure
November 19, 2018 8:58 pm

Give all the non-gang members guns. Either clean out the bad folks or live with the way it is.

AmazingAZ
AmazingAZ
November 19, 2018 9:00 pm

Thanks, will check it out…

Grimbold
Grimbold
November 20, 2018 1:14 am

Mark spitznagell tried something similar with Diary goats in Detroit and got the same treatment..
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Spitznagel

starfcker
starfcker
November 20, 2018 2:32 am

My apologies, I didn’t watch the film at least not yet. But I know a little bit about this. I am probably the only bona fide urban farmer on this board. I am literally dead center in one of the largest urban areas of the country. Urban farming is a neat trick, if you can pull it off. It’s basically reliant on two things. Your ability to acquire land in a completely hostile and super-expensive environment, and the conditions for producing special crops at a very high yield per acre, which is necessary because of your added expenses. You’re not going to be able to grow pole beans or lettuce in an urban environment and do anything except hemorrhage money, yield per acre is way too low. I read articles all the time about people who going to farm indoors and grow salad greens, it’s a joke. I know there are many people out there who dream of this kind of endeavor, and how wonderful it would be. And it’ll never happen. It’s very very difficult to keep any sort of agricultural business running in the most optimal conditions unless you have a fairly mad skill set, foresight, work ethic, ability to ride through rough patches, etc. In an urban environment are many many factors that make it even tougher, and the big one is trespass. If you have a giant perimeter to defend, you better know how to do it. It’s hard enough here, I can’t imagine in Detroit. Victor Davis Hanson has written extensively about the problems he has with trespass, and the related damage at his Central Valley Farm. I know it’s not fair without watching the film and having no other knowledge of the Hantz situation, but I tend to agree with Brian Reilly that these sort of endeavors usually have a different endgame in mind than the one being presented. Trust me when I tell you, if you have a large property in an urban area there are people trying to figure out how to take it away from you all the time. ALL the time.

starfcker
starfcker
  starfcker
November 20, 2018 5:25 am

I did a little research. My conclusion? The project is bullshit. It’s a typical land banking scheme. They’re not growing food. They’re going to plant the entire acreage with hardwood trees, probably black walnut. That’s a 30 or 40 year crop. So they don’t pay taxes on the land while they amass it. Done all the time down here. And the guy’s not a businessman, he runs a financial services company

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  starfcker
November 20, 2018 7:31 am

Watch the movie, it’s not bullshit.

They fought him tooth and nail on every crop he put forth with the exception of hardwoods.

Tree farms are a thing where I live, a very solid crop in fact. And yes it takes longer to harvest but the payback is usually pretty fair and as you mentioned earlier, it’s not the kind of crop that people are going to steal at night.

And no one was paying taxes on the land he bought, at least now they’ve increased property values- which raises valuation and tax rates. And I don’t know what state you live in but farms pay property taxes where I live just like everyone else.

And anyone who earns tens of millions of dollars in any kind of business qualifies as a businessman in most people’s book.

starfcker
starfcker
  hardscrabble farmer
November 20, 2018 11:29 am

I live in a world where these schemes are every day. You save about half on your property taxes in Michigan if you get zoned AG. But the big deal is when you sell the property, the property is not automatically reassessed as it is in any other real estate transaction. I will watch the movie when I get a chance, but my cynicism tells me nothing a financial services guy does is altruistic.

martin
martin
November 20, 2018 7:08 am

Some guy (illegally?) uploaded 18 minutes of it from his cell phone here :

It could spark an interest to see the rest.
Its amazing to see that the complainers want to live in rubble and feel someone elses’s success harms them as they do nothing to improve life for themselves. Learned helplessness in action.

meg
meg
  martin
November 20, 2018 8:11 am

Thanks.

ubi
ubi
November 20, 2018 8:49 am

The Description tab on the Vimeo trailer says “Land Grab is streaming exclusively on Amazon.”

Dane
Dane
November 22, 2018 1:09 am

For those of you that don’t know ….Detroit was a first rate city at one time. It was the manufacturing city of the known free world, some even called it The Gateway to the West, or the Paris of America, as the French, Germans, Polish, Dutch, English and Irish all had a very large hand in the building of the infrastructure from the 1600’s on into the ‘Gimme Dats’ wars of the 1960’s. Detroit had very detailed, ornamental carvings on EVERY building, streets that were hand-laid with brick. remnants of Anglo-Saxon/Germanic culture EVERYWHERE. Even Boblo Island ( an early cultural attraction, turned amusement park on the Detroit River) had dance halls from the early 1900’s, in spirit of the European dance hauls of the 1800’s.

ALL BEFORE THE BLACKS WENT NUTS with the vaunted ‘White people are evil BS’!

White people said ‘No Mas’, and they quickly moved out past 8 mile road into the suburbs. They left behind everything that they, their parents and grandparents had built. Big sturdy school buildings, that housed weld shop, wood shops, mechanics shops, home econ kitchens, olympic pools , etc. ALL TO BE DESTROYED. By 1983, many of the Detroit schools had to begin installing metal detectors in the Jr and high schools. To look at ‘once was’, and the pictures now… makes a man cry.