When I was a kid, we’d go “downtown” (to the extent that there was a downtown here; Manhattan, we’re not) quite a bit . Back then our downtown thrived – this was before suburban shopping malls, and if you wanted to go shopping, you hopped a downtown bus. The sidewalks and stores were filled with people, and it was fun – riding the bus, seeing lots of people, and maybe getting a milk shake at the soda shop. Now, sadly, there’s not much of anything down there besides half-full (who says I’m not an optimist) office buildings, buses filled with bored-looking people passing through on their way to somewhere else, a few panhandlers, some homeless people (if you know where to look; they like to keep them out of sight), and urban tumbleweeds (aka, garbage) blowing down the lonely, empty streets.
A few times a year, we’d go down to see the Shriner’s circus or the Ice Follies (I remember seeing Peggy Fleming when I was eight or nine or something, right after she won a gold medal in the Olympics; I remember her looking absolutely beautiful) or whatever, and when my brother wasn’t busy defending democracy in Southeast Asia, he’d take me to see our semi-pro hockey team, the Blazers. These events were held at the War Memorial Auditorium, where a once proud original NBA team played and won an NBA championship, before moving on to Philadelphia. If you’ve seen the movie “Slapshot” with Paul Newman, then you’ve seen our War Memorial, ‘cuz that’s where a lot of the hockey scenes were shot.
On almost every corner, you’d see people around on the streets selling balloons (the balloons inside of balloons always intrigued me) or monkeys on sticks, or some other useless crap that kids just had to have only to pop, break, or abandon within 24 hours, plus popcorn, newspapers – your basic street vendor shit. These street vendors were typically – and forgive me if this is insensitive; I mean no disrespect – dwarfs or amputees, or otherwise handicapped physically or mentally (I remember one little person who had no legs, and got around on what looked like the side of a wooden crate with roller skate wheels attached to it. He wore fingerless leather gloves, and pushed himself around a lot faster than I’ll ever move). This is where the people who fell through the cracks landed, and that’s how they made whatever meager living they could eke out.
I don’t know if those folks are still around or not (don’t get downtown much these days; the lunchtime hot dog vendor business is pretty hot, I guess, for the folks who work down there, but by five o’clock everything’s deserted except for shadowy figures in hooded sweatshirts lurking around unlit, abandoned storefronts), but if they are, I’m sure times are tougher than ever for them. I don’t think the market for worthless crap is what it used to be – unless it’s painted white, beeps, and is called iCrap or something.
It would be nice if we lived in a society where those who fall through the cracks get some help (oh, I know, there are a lot of folks – public and private – out there trying, but the cracks are getting wider, and the help is getting harder to proivide). Health care (mental and physical) for everybody would be a good start. But, that’s been effectively quashed. Clinton couldn’t do it back in ’93 or whenever that was, and Obama isn’t able (or willing) to do it now. The insurance industry and our “representatives” in government have seen to that (with a lot of help from their brainless zombie army and their friends in the media; the story isn’t about whether public health care is good or bad – or what could make it better or worse – it’s that a bunch of ignorant buffoons are screaming out their gibberish, acting like petulant little children). The congress critters that aren’t on the insurance industry’s payroll are too spineless (with a couple of notable exceptions, of course) to stand up and do what’s right. They compromised their way out of true reform even before the process started.
Oh, something will pass. The insurance industry will make out great, and maybe that’ll lift the stock market. That won’t do much for the folks out there on the streets trying to make enough money to survive, of course. And when they get sick and die, well, maybe they’ll get a mention in the paper (but who reads papers these days?), maybe not. Many of them will wind up hanging in the anatomy cooler, unwittingly donating their bodies to science by virtue of the fact that they died unnoticed and unclaimed (bet you didn’t know that’s where most of the med school cadavers come from, did ya).
Granny will keep trying to find a few blankets to discharge indigent folks from the hospital with more than hospital gowns next winter. Others will go home (or back to the shelter) without their meds because they lack the medicare/medicaid required co-pay. And every day, another one or two of us “regular” people will join them out on the streets, for the crime of being uninsured (or claims denied and upaid; thank goodness health care isn’t rationed) and sick. Lose your health, your job, your house, your dignity, your life; it’s all OK, as long as insurance companies make a profit.
Hopefully it won’t be me. My life is pretty darn good, and that seems to be the yardstick by which my father-in-law measures things. Times are good for me, I’ve got plenty, so everybody else must, too. If not, they just aren’t working hard enough – after all, I made it through the war, and we came to this country with nothing – and we did it legally, too, goddamn it, not like these illegals that are everywhere, sucking up welfare and taking all the good jobs cleaning motel rooms and picking lettuce.
So, I got mine, and the hell with the rest of you. As long as it stays that way, and I don’t get laid off or sick or hit by a bus full of bored people passing through on their way to somewhere else.
Might wanna to stock up on balloons and monkeys on sticks, though, just in case.
Beautiful post, PJ. It’s a bad time for so many, but we do what we can for them.
Diva
That sounds an awful lot like growing up in Richmond, VA. We used to love to get on the bus out in our West End suburb and ride downtown on Saturdays. There were still department stores and businesses, the state capitol and some old hotels, movie theaters and a music store that had rekkids and listening booths in the basement. They carried at least on of almost everything and sold them at list price. We would check out discs and buy them at Woolworth s if they had them or mail order them from NYC at the original Sam Goody. There really was a Sam Goody. I saw him at a funeral once, dressed kind of like a dock worker.
Once the M-F 9-5 folks were gone and the weekend shoppers went home, it was mostly abandoned except for the folks who lived down there who, frankly, were mostly African-American and poor. I remember going to a Steel Mill concert one summer that was on the rooftop floor of a downtown parking garage. The structure is such that the City of Richmond is surrounded by 3 counties where most of the whites live and the tax base goes with it so while those 3 counties prosper so the city struggles to this day.
Most of my family still lives there so I have to visit. I am always amazed at how much great abandoned stuff is downtown there that many cities have redeveloped and made vital. The only reason is race. A few years ago the paperbag mayor of Richmond Doug Wilder was going to save money by cutting back the city’s public transportation system that linked those suburban counties. They can’t even build a new downtown ballpark down by the James River, something that has brought new life to many urban areas, because people don’t want to go down ‘there’. Wonder why?
I guess it means gentrification hasn’t run over folks as it has in some places but it is heartbreaking.
When I moved to Red Hook, 20 years ago, it had a population of under 11,000, 7 % of whom were white. During the day there was noise and traffic but at 5 PM most people left and the streets were quiet and all the neighbors knew each other. There were no stores save a few of bodegas.
We fought many fights to get more affordable housing and lost them all because the business guys, led by a developer who owned much to much property, argued that people ( we didn’t count) would interfere with the conduct of their businesses. What they meant was that they would have difficulty continuing to do the illegal and polluting stuff they were doing.
Red Hook gentrified anyway and instead of affordable housing we have ridiculously expensive housing. I could not afford to move to Red Hook, today. The white population has greatly increased and while I still know the folks on my block, I no longer know anyone else. Many bodegas have become other things. There are art galleries, a supermarket and stores designed for tourists. Instead of becoming quiet and laid back, we have people all the time and lots of cars. I can’t say I like the changes.
But, that worthless crap that will be destroyed and/or discarded in a day, is still sold to and coveted by kids. My little granddaughter is staying with me this week and she keeps asking for junk, food or toy.
Damned, dirty, socialized medicine.
Damned, socialist physicist. Probably an atheist, too.
Heard about Puppies Behind Bars on Fresh Air today.
You can listen to the show here (about 41 minutes long).
Worth a listen, especially if you like doggies, and want a break from hearing about Death Panels and Obama being born in Kenya.
I wonder why it is you don’t see progressives at these town hall meetings? I know I can’t make it because I have this “job” thing that keeps me busy. I also know that my representative will vote for reform and it’d be redundant to yell at him. I do send petitions, emails, make phone calls etc. but going to a meeting is just not possible right now.
I just need a good slogan as well …
I think there are liberals at these town halls but they cannot say anything because the jerks are screaming.
As in many social situations, the uninformed control the discourse.
That is a famous saying but I don’t know if I have it phrased right.
Isn’t that something to do with Michel Foucalt, and the orders of discourse?
The discourses of a society determine what is right, proper, and “true,” so those who control the discourse control knowledge.
And the idiots have succeeded in controlling the discourse, that much seems true. So to speak.
Oh boy. :fustrate: