The mayor of Chicago now wants all gun purchases in Chicago to be videotaped, calling gun violence the city's "most urgent problem". It certainly is, and has been at least since the late 1960's when the hundreds of thousands of dollars in block grants were given to the Vice Lords gang in some Great Society experiment to turn thugs respectable (the VL's used the veneer of respectability and the funds to arm themselves and grow). Sure, it's another creeping check on the second amendment, just like the supposed micromanaging of peoples soft drink choices in New York offends the liberty of many.
But what is to be done in Chicago, and should I care? You can hardly blame the sentiment behind it. Shootings are what one thinks about when one considers Chicago. The problem is that there is currently a cultural/cognitive dissonance going on with regard to guns. You can't go a week in the NYT/Salon/Slate/WaPo media complex without some kind of identity politicking about macho redneck gun culture. Unfortunately, the cities don't have too many Bubba's shooting up the place, but rather race-based gangs, and the suburbs and progressive towns don't either: they get nerdy, passive-aggressive dweebs from liberal backgrounds who've lost the thread between video games and real life and decide to go postal.
I live in a somewhat liberal outpost in a red state. It's pretty doubtful that such levels of statism is coming to my town soon. Libertarians and gun rights advocate are vigilant against slippery slopes, and in the past, I shared the slippery slope outlook. For example I counted myself as being pretty close to a free speech absolutist. I had that eternal vigilance is the price of liberty view, and that meant that folks like the ACLU were there to make sure that Pfoofer's Corners, Wyoming had the same rights as the Lower East Side. But lately I've begun to accept more of the idea of states and towns as democracy laboratories. Local initiatives on topics like fracking and weed seem to be stronger than ever. Granted, Chicago my not be my idea of democracy, but let's face it: Chicago and New York attract fairly statist people, and in Chicago, there's a lot of people calling for the state to be their patriarch. If they feel like they need more adult supervision, well, let them have it.
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Not Watching the Super Bowl
Thinking about how many people tonight are riding money a football game.
In my sleepy cotton town, the bookie joint was like an Elk's Lodge. Situated in the alley behind the row of cotton factors and brokers, you could walk in and hang out all day long, have a coke, crack open some whiskey, make a bet, read the paper, watch sports, talk shit.
My father enjoyed taking me there just to see the characters drawl on. They were an assortment of cotton factors, farmers, cops, lawyers, and two-bit county politicians. There was a stove, a counter, four tables, and a coke machine. The whole room was no more than 30' x 30'. The mayor of the village nearby would drop by and make deer sausage with cheese grits.
Stacey, the bookie, would be updating the point spread as the day went on, and joke around with the characters. You could bet on anything ten dollars and up, straight bets, teasers, round robins. I watched a card game once when I was in there with my father- I was maybe twelve- where a fellow lost a hundred acres of prime land on a single hand. I've never been tempted to gamble.
In my sleepy cotton town, the bookie joint was like an Elk's Lodge. Situated in the alley behind the row of cotton factors and brokers, you could walk in and hang out all day long, have a coke, crack open some whiskey, make a bet, read the paper, watch sports, talk shit.
My father enjoyed taking me there just to see the characters drawl on. They were an assortment of cotton factors, farmers, cops, lawyers, and two-bit county politicians. There was a stove, a counter, four tables, and a coke machine. The whole room was no more than 30' x 30'. The mayor of the village nearby would drop by and make deer sausage with cheese grits.
Stacey, the bookie, would be updating the point spread as the day went on, and joke around with the characters. You could bet on anything ten dollars and up, straight bets, teasers, round robins. I watched a card game once when I was in there with my father- I was maybe twelve- where a fellow lost a hundred acres of prime land on a single hand. I've never been tempted to gamble.
Thursday, January 30, 2014
A short open letter to the Atlantic, HuffPo, NYT, and the rest of the east coast media establishment:
A short open letter to the Atlantic, HuffPo, NYT, and the rest of the east coast media establishment:
Please, get out of your offices some. Please, take a deep breath. Leave your urban outlets. Put down that cappuchino. Get out of your parochial environment, and go meet people with bloodstreams. Get out to flyover country some, however distasteful that may be. Get to know your Saidian "Other". Stop coming up with ridiculous rewrites of your master's thesis in sociology. Stop imagining that bowling leagues are precursors to Nazi rallies, or that beards are signifiers of the power structure. Please burst that bubble. Develop a sense of humor. If you do this, your articles will look less like Onion parodies.
Non-intervention: Learning to Look the Other Way
Folks I know seem to really appreciate countries like
Switzerland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and
the Czech Republic. In our
hemisphere, Chile and Argentina often get a shout out. What’s something that these places have in common? One thing is that they usually aren’t on the
imperialist running dog list of foreign intervention. That means that they prefer diplomacy to
boots on the ground, and can in most cases spend what would be a military
budget on social welfare programs. In
other words, when some wild and crazy civil war breaks out in the latest failed
state, they largely look the other way.
As does China, Japan, and all the other Asian Tigers. As does most of the world. For when it’s UN Humanitarian Intervention
time, anything passing above the token contingent is often the same players,
France, Britain, often Canada, and of course the US. All but Canada are old hands at empire,
though the US never got into the colonial aspect of it, instead preferring
bombs and briefcases of cash. Complexity
and nuance are not America’s strong suits.
The problem with modern imperialism is that it doesn’t
resemble that of, say, Genghis Khan’s Mongols, who erased any moral qualms they
might have had by annihilating and enslaving its victims. For us, it’s always a
mixture of brute calculation and naïve idealism. Bombing people into modernity and liberal
democracy is the peculiar heritage of our Jacobin era. And guilt, guilt, guilt.
So, let’s close those bases.
Let’s withdraw those troops. Tell
those petty dictators, no more briefcases or bitcoins: we’re out of the empire
business.
But can “we” do it?
Can you do it? Can you look the other way? Can we mind our own business?
Our own business. Is there really any such thing
anymore? With all that global,
interconnectedness, this neo-feudal web of obligations and ties. Not very sexy is it, isolationism.
Of course, we can’t. Part of Jacobin morality is, “you break it, you own it.”
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Bachelor of Barista?
Today, a friend of mine posted this question: “Education for the new economy...Bachelors of Barista?”
Good question. Heck, why not? You see all these twentysomethings these days
pour coffee after ringing up five and six-figure debt getting some fatuous
degree.
Bud Light actually had a tribute to them on the radio a few years back:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyEvTDurudw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyEvTDurudw
Another friend who did a couple of years in Asheville told
me that he was blown away when he first moved there by how all the sweatiest jobs
like picking up rubbish and trimming hedges were done by dudes with
degrees. Places like Asheville, though, have tuned into keeping their people's self-esteem high, so they've invented professions
like Artisan Plumbing. That’s a college town for you,
but you’re starting to see that more and more in average towns as economic
downturn dovetailing with market saturation for liberal arts majors begins to
take its toll.
There’s this dude in my town whose hook is that he delivers his hand-roasted, micro-batch coffee by bicycle. Well, why not? Somebody should do it. If delivering arugula by wheelbarrow pays the bills (you are free to steal this idea), go for it. There’s a lot of folks who tingle at the idea of an urban scene filled with the kind of street hawkers and micro markets that they pay to look at on vacations to Europe, and they revere it accordingly, much like the way the EU government gets worked up in debates about the terroir. I don’t blame them. When my son and I went to the Euro outpost of Quebec, my gluttonous self was in nirvana at all the fromageries and fruiteries I saw, with not a one of their storefronts more than twenty feet wide. Micro indeed.
One way today’s young deal with finding out their true market value is to get an internship at an organic farm or "institute". You could be swinging a hoe all day, but if the dirt’s organic and the payoff includes smoking a bowl at the end of the day, then you are interning. I’ve seen one place not only hire interns rather than “laborers”, but even charge folks for the experience of feeding their goats and spreading mud on a daub hut. When I was a kid reading Tom Sawyer, I thought it was nuts that boys were lining up to pay Tom to whitewash his fence for him, but now I know that he was just clever at marketing.
Meanwhile, there’s other proletarian work out there that pays a whole lot more, though it’s short on cool. If you’ve got the stones to work with 84,000 volts of alternating current, the International Brotherhood of ElectricalWorkers might be for you. $74,200 Transgender Studies bill? Heck, my friend Cary will clear that and then some this year as he hooks himself to a high voltage cable that delivers the power that’s running my laptop right now. It’s enough to make an ironic moustache curl even harder. It takes serious delayed gratification, with a five year apprenticeship program, and has some genuine safety hazards, but the pay and benefits are good, and the IBEW is better at organizing than your affinity group is.
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Universalism
Universalism
is the pantheist neo-Gnostic creed of the era, where the children of
speed and telecommunications find techno-rapture in the illusion that
they can be anywhere, anything, at anytime- a kind of simulacra of the
singularity. Far from marking
them the sophisticates that they imagine being, their disdain for
the parochial is the inverse of the nation-state that they imagine they
are transcending. Instead of the slavishisness of nationalism, there is a
petty narcissism, a Whitmanian "Song of Myself" that imagines that they
can love everyone, and by extension, everyone should love them.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Housing Startups
Using housing startups as a marker of economic health is a kind of American cargo cult.
When I was 19, I was wandering around a Western city, and stumbled into a neighborhood that was essentially unfinished. You know the kind: Peach Orchard Street, Peach Orchard Lane, Peach Orchard Circle. There's probably now some software for developers that churns out this stuff, but then it was a revelation. Coming from an "undynamic" area, I'd never seen this kind of stuff. And it had never been occupied, save by an unlucky few who already had signs out. I'll spare the suburban cul-de-sac inferno culture critique. The area was in a downturn, I guess, and there were acres and acres of unmet success all around me.
Creative destruction is the spin: if a city isn't growing, it's dying. That's probably true, as we just don't have any other economic model.
"Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell."
When I was 19, I was wandering around a Western city, and stumbled into a neighborhood that was essentially unfinished. You know the kind: Peach Orchard Street, Peach Orchard Lane, Peach Orchard Circle. There's probably now some software for developers that churns out this stuff, but then it was a revelation. Coming from an "undynamic" area, I'd never seen this kind of stuff. And it had never been occupied, save by an unlucky few who already had signs out. I'll spare the suburban cul-de-sac inferno culture critique. The area was in a downturn, I guess, and there were acres and acres of unmet success all around me.
Creative destruction is the spin: if a city isn't growing, it's dying. That's probably true, as we just don't have any other economic model.
"Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell."
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