DAYTON, Ohio — Politics has a way of landing on our doorsteps whether we want it or not. This past summer, here in my city, we couldn’t avoid confronting some of the country’s toughest challenges. A group affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan held a rally at the courthouse. A flurry of tornadoes leveled neighborhoods. And a gunman opened fire on a crowded street, killing nine and wounding dozens. The president’s tweets are no longer just a joke when white supremacists show up in your town. Climate change doesn’t seem like a distant threat when you walk past houses reduced to rubble by extreme weather. Random gun violence stops being an abstract discussion when you go to funerals for mass-shooting victims. Dayton and other cities in the Midwest have long been the canary in the coal mine for matters that affect the entire country. In the 2000s, we witnessed a wave of predatory lending and home foreclosures years before the rest of the country. Dayton was among the first communities to see opioids trickle in, resulting in hundreds of deaths, leaving thousands of families to pick up the pieces. I’ve been saying it was a rough summer in Dayton, but… Read full this story
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