Donations Being Solicited to Pay Water Bills of Detroit’s Blacks

Daily Slave
July 28, 2014

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Many Blacks in America have been turned into domesticated animals relying upon free stuff from the White man.

A new website called the Detroit Water Project has been launched soliciting donations to help pay the water bill for Detroit residents.  It is true that this website isn’t just for Blacks, but considering that over 80% of Detroit’s population is Black most of the people who can’t pay their water bill are also Black.  So generally speaking most of the money raised by this effort will go to subsidize Blacks.

Seriously though, how much more does the White man need to give these savages?  Blacks were given control over one of America’s greatest cities that was built by people of White European descent and now the city is in ruins and a large amount of these Blacks can’t even pay their water bill.

No matter how much money White people foolishly donate to this effort, the NAACP will probably still cry “racism” because not enough White people helped pay their bills.

From Washington Post:

The Detroit Water Project, a platform to help donors pay the delinquent water bills of people in Detroit, started with a Twitter conversation.

Tiffani Bell and Kristy Tillman have never met in person, but they’ve enjoyed a social media friendship that began with their mutual love for technology. Last week, their back-and-forth about the Detroit water crisis quickly evolved into a discussion about how to help pay people’s overdue water bills.

Emily Badger reported last week that half of the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department customers have not been paying their bills — equal to about 91,000 delinquent accounts. As of April 30, those past due owed an average of $540.01.

Last week, the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department was poised to cut off water for those with delinquent accounts. Perhaps due to protests and even international pressure, the water company announced Monday that it’s delaying the water turn-off until the end of July so residents in the hard-hit city can prove that they don’t have enough money to pay their bill.

“Both of us wanted to help people,” Bell said in an interview this week. “We were both willing to pay a bill for someone. But how were we supposed to do that?”

Bell, in Oakland, Calif., and Tillman, in Boston, started to build a platform to help Detroit residents pay their water bills.