Tuesday, June 29, 2010
footnote
getting close to the so-called "leaders".
What were those leaders doing that was so important? Apparently, they have decided
not to spend more money on schools, jobs, or anything social.
It goes without saying that death and destruction will have all the money they want.
Why would those G20 people be so afraid of ordinary people?
Would a democratic leader need to fear the people s/he represents?
And then there were those terrible young people in black! breaking shop windows!
Setting police cars on fire!
Let's see, we have how many people who will die today from lack of clean water,
from lack of sanitation... how many people who live in despair because they've
lost their jobs or homes....we have oil spilling in the Gulf of Mexico...
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, murders by remote-controlled plane in Pakistan,
sweat shops in Haiti, supression and worse in Gaza.......and.... and... and.......
you can fill in the blanks easily enough.
That's in the one corner... (on the side of the G20)
and in the other, what do we have?
and then we have a few broken windows and burned police cars....
not violence, but public property damage (not mere criminality but an act of political disobedience).....
Maybe we would be better off if the black garbed people were in charge; they would be less destructive.
Sunday, June 27, 2010
killers
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Deeply Anti-Social
The other day I happened to notice a small park just near the public library.
A prominent sign said the park was closed from 10pm until 6am.
Why?
That makes no sense.
In El Paso, Texas it doesn’t even begin to cool off until 10pm.
If I wanted to sit outside in a park, after 10pm would be the perfect time.
So here you have a public good that is inaccessible to the public during the hours when it would be most attractive.
What exactly are the rulers of El Paso afraid of?
Are they afraid that teenagers might sit in the park drinking beer?
What’s wrong with the public consumption of alcohol? Why must it be a crime?
There are countries where it is not criminal. There are countries where people do drink in public without any damage to the social fabric.
If there is a problem with the consumption of alcohol in this country, then someone should ask: why? Maybe there is an overall invisible level of oppression which leads to excess when those who have been trodden upon finally have a little space to breathe.
During my recent visit to Vienna, one of my most pleasant evenings was spent sitting in a park talking to a friend until 1 or 2 in the morning.
No one bothered us, and our activity was perfectly legal.
Of course, there is another angle here. If it is illegal to be in a park after 10pm, then should you want to socialize, either you invite your friends to visit your home, or you go to a bar. If you close the parks, there are no free public spaces in which friends can meet.
Something is wrong with this country.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
current events: President Fires General
The nakedness of our pretense was momentarily exposed,
by a professional assassin, a “tough” guy, who made the mistake of talking too much,
And (How uncouth!) getting drunk with those he was supposed to be supervising!
But he was made to answer to the urbane man in a suit,
he who is oh so liberal and progressive with his open shirt collar,
--And, oh, so civilized!---But, oh, no less a murderer,
every bit as much a killer as the talkative tough guy.
When any hint of our brutality escapes,
we must maintain the pretense of civility.
Was the talkative general a threat to democracy?
As if the government were democratic!
As if the killing and maiming and destroying that goes on in foreign lands,
were all done for "the good of the people" or done in “defense”…
While the simple fact is:
There are some things we do not say in public;
But we can do any damn thing we please.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
The Bad General
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Don't grin and bear it
Saturday, June 19, 2010
El Paso's Greatness
Today we learned that El Paso has been selected as an “All America” city! Wait a minute! Shouldn’t that be “all American city”? Has the English language changed while I was abroad? Or is this the local variety of English?
Nonetheless, continuing to speak my own dialect (after all the most frequent response I get when I open my mouth is: “you’re not from around here—are you?”….No, I do not have the local accent…)
El Paso has been awarded the label, “All American city
It’s not hard to see why.
El Paso is a mirror of all the greatness that is America:
-Mindless dogmatic Militarism:
So-called public service announcements in the buses warning young men of the punishment they will face if they do not make themselves available for the next time the ruling class decides to invade a foreign country….
And Nationalism:
Omnipresent American flags (made in China)
And Climate Criminality:
--An over-abundance of enormous trucks, and
a variety of mostly large vehicles,
with the accompanying hostility toward
pedestrians… (as someone explained
to me after I had almost been run over
by a woman carting her children somewhere in an enormous truck) ..”We don’t expect to see pedestrians….”
… and a mediocre public transit system, which has the nerve to claim it is the best in Texas….as if being the best public transport system in a region which hates public transport is some sort of achievement….
(But to be fair, the El Paso bus system did not make it up. Someone actually gave them an award. Which tells you something, namely, that nobody in their right mind should take such awards seriously…)
-a public transport system which is so inefficient and slow that it would make any sane individual immediately run out and purchase his or her own personal Self-piloted Metal and glass box, no matter what the cost.
And then there is the sheer vanity and desultory meaningless of consumerism:
We all have (or aim to have) our own personal square of dirt or cactus or grass--grass not indigenous to the area and requiring an amount of water that would make sense in Scotland…
surrounded by a fence, and guarded by one or two or more dogs…
In this way, we can contribute to the wealth of the upper class even when we are not working, by purchasing home and garden supplies on the weekends at Wal Mart.
And then there is the local cuisine:
Someone should count the number of
“convenience” food places—fast food places specializing in greasy food. I know it is greasy because whenever I walk across the parking lot of an abandoned shopping mall, whose stores are deserted, but whose outskirts are ringed by fast food stores, I can smell the horrible fatty stuff… and it is sickening…. (and I can see lines of enormous trucks waiting to pick up the food the drivers have ordered….)
And then they should count how many actual grocery stores there are… What is the ratio? Ten or twenty or more greasy food places for every one grocery store? I would really like to know…
Without actually counting, I would bet that the proportion of actual grocery stores is very low here. In my old neighborhood in the post-Socialist Bratislava, there were three fruit vendors, and three grocery stores within easy walking distance. And there were two larger grocery stores at a slightly longer walking distance. Nothing comparable exists in El Paso.
(And I won’t mention that the quality of the food here is lower than in Central Europe—the fruit and vegetables less fresh….)
In our sociological survey, we should also count
the number of churches per block. Their numbers
are certainly up there with the fast food places. We are a God-fearing nation, and, again, El Paso is representative.
Finally, there is a feature of the city that is almost invisible: the sheer amount of work done by citizens of Mexico who cross the border every day to do it. How many homes are cleaned by women coming across the border from Juarez every day? How many gardens or lawns are tended by Mexican gardeners? How well are they really paid?
In this final feature, the city of El Paso truly is American, taking advantage of a poorer country to do the work that is essential to the life of the city…so typically American in the unjustice of it all…. (I suppose the God we all worship is not a just god....)
All in all, in El Paso, Texas, we see everything that has made the USA the great country that it is.
Hence the award “All America[n] City’ is well deserved.
Congratulations El Paso! You deserve it.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Public Transport Blues
is the value of CROWD CONTROL.
The bus company has strict rules about entering and exiting. You can enter with
a gun. That's important, because that's the law. (Of course. you do have to have
a license, but that is a minor detail.) But heaven forbid you should exit at the wrong place!
Today as the bus approached the changing center, located a stone's throw from Mexico,
the bus suddenly stopped. The doors opened and several passengers got out.
Now, I happened to be standing up, as I was eager to leave the bus.
However, I did not depart. Neither did I press the door in order to open it.
Nonetheless, the bus driver directed his attention at me, sternly warning that this
was not a place to get out.
It was too late to tell the two people who had left. They were safely down the block
by now.
I explained to the driver that I had "done nothing; I was just standing here."
But the whole affair is insulting, paternalistic.
The doors opened because the driver did something--such as pushing a button.
This has happened before.
But the whole idea of the right and wrong place to exit! Give me a break! The people who got off the bus are not stupid. They are not willfully going to jump in front of a car or bus!
Again, the El Paso bus system insults the riders.
I notice a similar antipathy toward pedestrians when drivers steer far away from me when I cross the street, or when I stand on the curb preparing to crosss--as if they were afraid I were about to hurl myself in front of them......a sick country...really...
But as for the El Paso bus system, we see once again that the bus drivers have a dual role: they drive the bus and they act as POLICE to control the passengers!
What is it?
quality of Vienna's public transport system....
He might, with equal justice, have commented upon the LOW quality of the El Paso bus system...
Not to mention the "crowd control" mentality fostered by the designers and managers of that bus system...
Public address system announcements telling the mob what they can and cannot do....
Not to mention the insulting use of whistles at the central changing center...at best paternalistic....
Not to mention the ban on food in the buses....
One might also mention in passing that people actually eat and drink in Vienna's metro without fear of punishment.
The last time I was in Bratislava, the Slovaks were a bit less liberal: in their public transport there is a ban on ice cream.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
democracy
When? Not today, surely not...
Making public, exposing, the murder of civilians in Iraq is an act of decency....
Covering up this crime is, at the very least, the opposite.
No democracy in the USA today.
Unfriendly El Paso
... and how much time they spend forbidding passengers from eating apples,
or drinking alcohol, or eating at all on the buses..
..not to mention negotiating with them about the cost of a fare... or requiring them
to prove that they have paid....
So much time is wasted every day with the time-consuming process of swiping cards and paying with cash...dropping the coins in the fare box, etc., or asking how much the fare costs. Wasted time which makes it a cruel joke that the managers of the El Paso buses dare to proclaim the bus system a "metro"...I would laugh if I weren't more inclined to weep at all the time I lose because of this inefficient and unpleasant system.
And there is the sheer physical geography of it: one must be inspected by the driver before being allowed to enter. This physical fact creates an ugly hierarchical situation, much like the border between two countries. And some drivers have, it seems, have gotten the message in their heads that they are superior to the passengers...
It occurs to me that in Central Europe the drivers of public transport do nothing but drive. This makes for a faster, more efficient trip.
Of course, in the Central European public transport system, there are people with the specific job of checking that passengers have paid, and they do this from time to time. But the bus drivers (or tram drivers or metro drivers) don't have to do this. They can concentrate on driving. It make the trip faster and more hassle free.
I suspect that this reflects a broader social attitude in these United States:
Heaven forbid that someone should ride the bus without paying!
That sort of pettiness fits well with the mindless and oppressive emphasis upon hard work so common in ordinary conversation... In ordinary conversations, people seem to be working very hard to prove that they are not lazy, and that they follow the rules..... unlike the bad people we read about in the newspapers or see on television.
Work? In the real world, it is an oppressive business. It is all about
some people sweating and being stressed so that bankers and their ilk can gamble with other people's money.....the whole system is transparently cruel and hopeless...