A Week In Repose/Review/Reprise

I was not sure what the week would bring as with it came unrelenting heat and humidity, and in the Pacific Northwest it was truly a new level of pandemic catastrophes that have literally and metaphorically plagued the region. And being from there we thought Air Conditioning was for sissies and then this. For years they have been facing drought, fires that literally poisoned the air and once again proved that yes folks stupid does live in Liberal regions. They ran out of air conditioners and people being asked to turn off power to prevent surges, and even grocery stores had to stop selling perishables thanks to the issues with cooling. The irony was that Seattle, finally out of stage whatever level lockdown ends up with rolling blackouts, deaths and hospital overcrowding thanks to heat related illnesses. Portland was even worse and the irony is not lost as both cities took it upon themselves the last year to go batshit crazy over Black Lives Matter in ways that cities with way higher Black populations and incidents of Police related deaths and incidents did not. We saw some horrific displays of White Power in Kenosha and in Minneapolis where the Boys were proud to step it and up or whatever the fuck Trump said they did to basically make things worse; I did not see this in Newark or in Cleveland, Baltimore and Detroit that are by far more Chocolate cities. The South, however, well it is the South and even some Southern cities found themselves much calmer than the whitest cities in the U.S., Seattle and Portland. But again over 90% of the protests were in fact civil and peaceful. And with that the greatest threat to American safety is not urban crime or violence, but White Supremacy. Go figure. It is they who are suffering from White Fragility, not normal folks who simply are ignorant about race, as most folks are not actively oppressing those not of the same race, they are just as bubbled and self involved as our culture has permitted if not encouraged. That said, ignorance is not bliss it is ignorance and for many it took a pandemic where you forced into lockdown yourself to watch a man die and realize that this was not something new or unusual in the Black/Brown community. Yes we are now broadcasting Snuff films on national television and we watched, let the Gladiator games begin. Stephen King called it in The Stand, he is a prophet and now I am off to Maine to form a cult around him.

And with that we have the sentencing of Allison Mack former actress from a long ended series but who ended up with a new role as crazy recruiter for another angry sexually perverted white man, the head of NXVIM. Having watched all the documentaries on this subject, listened to the podcasts and read all I can I am trying to understand this as to why anyone would listen to this dude who looks like a Middle School Science Teacher, let alone get branded with his initials. I would not get a hand stamp from the man nor engage in what is multi level marketing, something this idiot did before turning it into a sex slave mindfuck cult. Hey, nice work if you can get it and my Stephen King one is going to be fantastic!

In more sentencing news, Derek Chauvin was also sentenced, the relative calm again surrounding it proves that Black Lives Matter and for many it was not long enough but it was enough as for years their tears went unrecognized. And the rest of the douches that sat there and watched the murder are up next. This may again prove that sometimes just sometimes Justice works.

Speaking of Justice the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell is getting ready to begin and this time I too am ready to finally photo bomb and become a MEME after Covid shut down the Harvey Weinstein trial which I had been prepping for days to attend. I actually find this more interesting as we seem to think Women are often just victims and yes many times they start out that way but to prevent further abuse they too become the abuser. And here we have two women who were never victims in any sense of the word, they simply joined the hideous lunatic in his pursuit of lurid sex and debauchery, and the examples are Allison Mack and now our dear Ghislaine. She too is the subject of her own documentary on Peacock which for the first time I will sign up, watch it and then immediately cancel, like I did Starz with the one on NXVIM.

And as one celebrity goes to jail another comes out and Bill Cosby was released as the Superior Court of Pennsylvania found that his prosecution was illegal. Who knew? Well half of the people currently in the slammer for crimes they did not commit. Ah yes but they aren’t famous and rich and have to wait for a non-profit to take up their case to dig that shit up. But hey Bill is free! And the only person happy about is Phylicia Rashad. Watch for her to get quietly written out of This is Us. Canceled!

In California they are trying to cancel the Governorship of Gavin Newsom and the contestants on this new reality show include a reality star from Orange County, the love tank filler of Vicky Gunvalson and formerly Bruce Jenner. This is again while a State reels from fire and drought and Covid and it appears that maybe all that glitters is not gold in California, home of Hollywood so that much is true, as the fire preparations were not what Newsom claimed. This could be the undoing as this has been a major problem in the region and with that a drain on the state in ways Covid could never be. And while the New York Mayoral race is plagued with issues it provides the cover for Cuomo that all the handy Covid art failed to do. Welcome to term three Andy!

And with that comes the last bit of the saga of Britney Spears who testified that it was abuse and imprisonment and promptly the new female Judge connected with her on a woman to woman level and retained the arrangement. Yeah, women our are worst enemies especially with little evidence to support Britney’s argument or the Conservators beliefs she is not capable, carry on! Really? And with that the Conservator is resigning leaving Dad to his trailer. But lawmakers are on it as they have never seen or heard a public lynching that didn’t require their intervention, just the type and kind have been debatable of late. Hi, Mike Pence! So they are beginning to look into these “arrangements” as it is a form of abuse and control that often enriches one and isolates the other held in non-covid captivity. Try to imagine that as permanent and even more restrictive. Again this is not about Britney bitch, but she brought this to light. One time White Fragility worked out and we got woke.

And talk about prisons, apparently Australia is one as it is now once again in big time prison bitch lockdown. Even residents are beginning to be come distressed as the costs and measures to make Australia number one in preventing Covid deaths is in fact killing people softly. Good on ya mate!

And with that the Trump Organization is facing its own type of inquiry and challenges and with that it will all I will say about he who should be nameless as it is time to move forward and onward with a new optimism and hope about the future. I never thought it would come in the form of an aging white man who has spent his entire life in politics and then yet again as I have long thought we are moving back in time and Biden is LBJ, which means Harris the JFK who will have a short term Presidency and be one that we will always look back with in fondness and go, “Wow we had a Black-Indian Woman as President and a Jew as her First Man.” Yes we go one step forward and two steps back, welcome folks to the late 60’s. Swing On!

Spoon Man

Ah Seattle, home to Grunge. This is the music but the city has always been just that way until the new money arrived and wanted that all gone away.  I knew the CHOP/CHAZ in Seattle was a poor man’s occupier.  Having grown up in the Northwest it is not a friendly warm place.  I have written extensively about the Seattle Freeze, the arrogance and the suppressed racism and well overall assholism that dominates the vibe.  It is a city that you speak the dogma, the message and in the manner of a passive aggressive individual with several monikers to identify your gender, your personage and political belief.   There is Liberal, there is Progressive, there is now apparently Social Democrat, and there are the supposed other angrier anarchists along with the white nationalists and other far right groups that have equal divisions.   The more labels the better to ostracize, segregate and demean you. The difference between Seattle and Nashville is the vocabulary level in which to insult.

I have first hand witnessed one elected Official after another fuck up Seattle.  From Paul Schell at the WTO to Jenny Durkan and CHOP, this is just a long line of Mayors who simply are elected as they fit a type, check a box and have the current talking points down to a point of no return. Once elected and not re-elected by choice or not, they fade into the background to never be heard of again. Seattle is like Nashville in ways I never thought I would imagine nor believe but as I sit here far away from both, I cannot say anything good about either, so I won’t.

Now as for Portland the violence and protests about black lives is raging. Is it really still about black lives?  I am not seeing anything here on this coast or in any other major metropolis at this point about the subject which again, not surprising.  But we have had major primaries and it appears that many Black Women are bringing votes to the the box and the same with some other candidates who are Gay, Black, Hispanic and are all voices of change.  Ah there is where it matters.

Portland at this point has descended into chaos and stupidity.  The Wall of Moms became infamous for being white, the color of the population there, ignoring that the faces of Mothers have long been forefront of activism going back decades. But when the Moms are white we give a shit until we don’t.  Moms Demand Action?  They came AFTER a group of Black Mothers began a similar movement.  Yes we have been here before folks and we will go there again.  And that chaos and protest is not new and like the south, racism and dissent is built into the DNA.

 Seattle is now trying to clean up the mess made and the area of town now has the scars and the bodies of the kids who in the best of moments meant well, in the worst of moments did worse. Shootings, murders, deaths of a protestor by a young black man driving into them (and now buried in the media as it doesn’t fit the narrative) are now all marks of the Summer of Loathe.  This was not about change, this was about anger, the rising homelessness, the issue of work, jobs and of course drugs and money were really the issues and black lives were the shields in which to hide behind.  I know Seattle and Portland and black is a color of the goth gear not of their friends, co-workers, neighbors or anyone who matters.  Just like Nashville, I cannot recall any face of color in the front of the house of coffee shops, yoga studios, gyms or businesses I frequented. Not one, or well one or two but they never stayed long.  My personal favorite was the woman I knew in Nashville who had a General Store, proclaimed to be an activist and never had a face of color work for her, claimed to know many Black individuals, never saw her in the company of one, quoted and cited endless tropes about racial issues, but when it came down to it, was just like the rest of those in Nashville, all talk no walk when it came to actually acting upon the narrative.

I know the street of CHOP and I know the business, I know the park, the block and some of those in the story below.  I know their neighboring businesses, the people that did live and work there and went to school there and I recall dancing at the bars when the district was a large Gay community now gentrified to meet the flow of the river of Amazon.   When I was still there in 2016 on the very corner CHOP burned, I watched a woman Cop stop a Black man with a Golf Club a Cane and haul him into jail for allegedly hiding her car.  It was noon and I was on my way to a Barre class and I did not see that, and when I mentioned it to someone, they said it happens all the time, really?  But the area was full of homeless youth, drug addicts and others who prey upon those individuals.  One morning I was walking to the same class only early and stumbled upon a man injecting himself with drugs. The bars there are notorious for drugging drinks with date rape drugs and little to nothing was done then.  Or how about thousands of untested rape kits.  Again, no protests, no hysteria, no nothing and it was already a pattern well established by Seattle Police,  the King County Sheriff, the District Attorney’s of both the City and County.  So tell me again what you are wanting to accomplish?

Nothing will change for good or bad and the lawsuit will be shut down in the Courts of Seattle as the Judges are elected, as is the Sheriff, the Prosecuting and City Attorney and all of them will talk the talking points, say the script and they will protect the quo and the status of a city in decline.  As long as Amazon is served that is all that they have on the menu.




Abolish the Police? Those Who Survived the Chaos in Seattle Aren’t So Sure

What is it like when a city abandons a neighborhood and the police vanish? Business owners describe a harrowing experience of calling for help and being left all alone.

The New York Times
By Nellie Bowles
Aug. 7, 2020

SEATTLE — Faizel Khan was being told by the news media and his own mayor that the protests in his hometown were peaceful, with “a block party atmosphere.”

But that was not what he saw through the windows of his Seattle coffee shop. He saw encampments overtaking the sidewalks. He saw roving bands of masked protesters smashing windows and looting.

Young white men wielding guns would harangue customers as well as Mr. Khan, a gay man of Middle Eastern descent who moved here from Texas so he could more comfortably be out. To get into his coffee shop, he sometimes had to seek the permission of self-appointed armed guards to cross a border they had erected.

“They barricaded us all in here,” Mr. Khan said. “And they were sitting in lawn chairs with guns.”

For 23 days in June, about six blocks in the city’s Capitol Hill neighborhood were claimed by left-wing demonstrators and declared police-free. Protesters hailed it as liberation — from police oppression, from white supremacy — and a catalyst for a national movement.

In the wake of the killing of George Floyd by the Minneapolis police, the Black Lives Matter movement is calling to defund the police, arguing that the criminal justice system is inherently racist.

Leaders in many progressive cities are listening. In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio has announced a plan to shift $1 billion out of the police budget. The Minneapolis City Council is pitching a major reduction, and the Seattle City Council is pushing for a 50 percent cut to Police Department funding. (The mayor said that plan goes too far.)

Some even call for “abolishing the police” altogether and closing down precincts, which is what happened in Seattle.

That has left small-business owners as lonely voices in progressive areas, arguing that police officers are necessary and that cities cannot function without a robust public safety presence. In Minneapolis, Seattle and Portland, Ore., many of those business owners consider themselves progressive, and in interviews they express support for the Black Lives Matter movement. But they also worry that their businesses, already debilitated by the coronavirus pandemic, will struggle to survive if police departments and city governments cannot protect them.

On Capitol Hill, business crashed as the Seattle police refused to respond to calls to the area. Officers did not retake the region until July 1, after four shootings, including two fatal ones.

Now a group of local businesses owners — including a locksmith, the owner of a tattoo parlor, a mechanic, the owners of a Mexican restaurant and Mr. Khan — is suing the city. The lawsuit claims that “Seattle’s unprecedented decision to abandon and close off an entire city neighborhood, leaving it unchecked by the police, unserved by fire and emergency health services, and inaccessible to the public” resulted in enormous property damage and lost revenue.

The Seattle lawsuit — and interviews with shop owners in cities like Portland and Minneapolis — underscores a key question: Can businesses still rely on local governments, which are now rethinking the role of the police, to keep them safe? The issue is especially tense in Seattle, where the city government not only permitted the establishment of a police-free zone, but provided infrastructure like concrete barriers and portable toilets to sustain it.

The economic losses that businesses suffered during the recent tumult are significant: One community relief fund in Minneapolis, where early protests included vandalism and arson, has raised $9 million for businesses along the Lake Street corridor, a largely Latino and East African business district. “We asked the small businesses what they needed to cover the damage that insurance wasn’t paying, and the gap was around $200 million,” said Allison Sharkey, the executive director of the Lake Street Council, which is organizing the fund. Her own office, between a crafts market and a Native American support center, was burned down in the protests.

Some small businesses have resorted to posting GoFundMe pleas for donations online.

Many are nervous about speaking out lest they lend ammunition to a conservative critique of the Black Lives Matter movement. In Portland, Elizabeth Snow McDougall, the owner of Stevens-Ness legal printers, emphasized her support for the cause before describing the damage done to her business.

“One window broken, then another, then another, then another. Garbage to clean off the sidewalk in front of the store every morning. Urine to wash out of our doorway alcove. Graffiti to remove,” Ms. McDougall wrote in an email. “Costs to board up and later we’ll have costs to repair.”

The impact of the occupation on Cafe Argento, Mr. Khan’s coffee shop on Capitol Hill, has been devastating. Very few people braved the barricades set up by the armed occupiers to come in for his coffee and breakfast sandwiches. Cars coming to pick up food orders would turn around. At two points, he and his workers felt scared and called 911. “They said they would not come into CHOP,” said Mr. Khan, referring to one of the names that protesters gave to the occupied Capitol Hill area. “It was lawless.”

He had to start chipping in for private security, a hard thing to do when his business had already been hurt by the coronavirus.

But he considers himself lucky — and he was. Even weeks after the protests, blocks of his previously bustling neighborhood remained boarded up and covered in shattered glass. Many business owners are scared to speak out, Mr. Khan said, because of worries that they would be targeted further.

One mid-July morning in the neighborhood, workers in orange vests were mopping off the sidewalks and power-spraying graffiti off the sides of buildings. Two window repair guys said they had their hands full for weeks. Shattered street lamps were being unscrewed and replaced.

A confusing array of security teams wandered around, armed with handguns and rifles. Some wore official-looking private security uniforms. Others wore casual clothes and lanyards identifying their affiliation with Black Lives Matter. A third group wore all black with no identifying labels and declined to name their group affiliation.

When a tall man in a trench coat and hiking boots walked over to question Mr. Khan, the man spread his coat open, revealing several pistols on harnesses around his chest and waist. He presented a badge on a lanyard that read “Black Lives Matter Community Patrol.”

His name is Rick Hearns and he identified himself as a longtime security guard and mover who is now a Black Lives Matter community guard, in charge of several others. Local merchants pay for his protection, he said as he handed out his business card. (Mr. Khan said he and his neighbors are now paying thousands of dollars a month for protection from Iconic Global, a Washington State-based private security contractor.)

Mr. Hearns has had bad experiences with the police in his own life. He says he wants police reform, but he was appalled by the violent tactics and rhetoric he witnessed during the occupation.

He blamed the destruction and looting on “opportunists,” but also said that much of the damage on Capitol Hill came from a distinct contingent of violent, armed white activists. “It’s antifa,” he said. “They don’t want to see the progress we’ve made. They want chaos.”

Many of the business owners on Capitol Hill agreed: Much of the violence they saw and the intimidation of their patrons came from a group these business owners identified as antifa, which they distinguished from the Black Lives Matter movement. “The idea of taking up the Black movement and turning it into a white occupation, it’s white privilege in its finest definition,” Mr. Khan said. “And that’s what they did.”

Antifa, which stands for anti-fascist, is a radical, leaderless leftist political movement that uses armed, violent protest as a method to create what supporters say is a more just and equitable country. They have a strong presence in the Pacific Northwest, including the current protests in Portland.

When the occupation in Seattle started in early June, Mayor Jenny Durkan seemed almost amused. “We could have the Summer of Love,” she said.

After President Trump took aim at the governor of Washington State and Seattle’s mayor on June 11, Ms. Durkan defended the occupation on Twitter as “a peaceful expression of our community’s collective grief and their desire to build a better world,” she wrote, pointing to the “food trucks, spaghetti potlucks, teach-ins, and movies.”

The lawsuit by the small-business owners, filed by the firm Calfo Eakes on June 24, seizes on such language, pointing out that the city knew what was happening and provided material support for the occupation.

Matthew Ploszaj, a Capitol Hill resident, is one of the complainants. He said his apartment building, blocks from Mr. Khan’s shop, was broken into four times during the occupation. The Seattle Police were called each time and never came to his apartment, according to Mr. Ploszaj. When he and another resident called the police after one burglary, they told him to meet them outside the occupation zone, about eight blocks away. He and other residents spent nights at a friend’s house outside the area during the height of the protests.

The employees of Bergman’s Lock and Key say they were followed by demonstrators with baseball bats. Cure Cocktail, a local bar and charcuterie, said its workers were asked by protesters to pledge loyalty to the movement: “Are you for the CHOP or are you for the police?” they were asked, according to the lawsuit.

The business owners also found that trying to get help from the Seattle Police, who declined to comment for this article, made them targets of activists.

Across from Cafe Argento is a funky old auto repair shop called Car Tender run by John McDermott, a big soft-spoken man. On June 14, Mr. McDermott was driving his wife home from their anniversary dinner when he received a call from a neighbor who saw someone trying to break into his shop.

Mr. McDermott and his 27-year-old son, Mason, raced over. A man who was inside the shop, Mr. McDermott said, had emptied the cash drawer and was in the midst of setting the building on fire. Mr. McDermott said he and his son wrestled the man down and planned to hold him until the police arrived. But officers never showed up. A group of several hundred protesters did, according to Mr. McDermott, breaking down the chain-link fence around his shop and claiming that Mr. McDermott had kidnapped the man.

“They started coming across the fence — you see all these beautiful kids, a mob but kids — and they have guns and are pointing them at you and telling you they’re going to kill you,” Mr. McDermott said. “Telling me I’m the K.K.K. I’m not the K.K.K.”

The demonstrators were livestreaming the confrontation. Mr. McDermott’s wife watched, frantically calling anyone she could think of to go help him.

Later, Mr. McDermott’s photo and shop address appeared on a website called Cop Blaster, whose stated aim is to track police brutality but also has galleries of what it calls “Snitches” and “Cop Callers.” The McDermotts were categorized as both of those things on the website, which warned they should “keep their mouths shut.”

Many of the listings include names and addresses of people who are said to have called the police. Since the Cop Blaster post went up, Mr. McDermott’s shop has received so many harassing phone calls and messages that some employees have had to take time off.

A block away is Bill Donner, the owner of Richmark Label, who let police officers use the roof of his factory to monitor the demonstration. Inside, his company had spent 50 years making labels for products like whiskey, soaps and natural beef jerky. Many days during the occupation, Mr. Donner, who said he was in favor of police reform, had to negotiate with the occupiers of the zone for access to his factory.

Twice, he called 911 and was told that the police would not be coming into the area.

The experience of the small-business owners seems a universe away from the rhetoric of Seattle’s politicians. As the violence turned deadly, Councilwoman Kshama Sawant, who represents Capitol Hill, defended the protesters’ use of their own armed guards instead of the police.

“Elected committees of self defense have historically played vital roles during general strikes, occupations and in mass movements, in order for the working class and marginalized people to defend themselves and carry out necessary functions in place of the forces of the state,” she wrote. She has called for the local police precinct to be permanently placed under “community control.”

When the mayor did send in police officers to end the occupation after the shootings, Ms. Sawant wrote on Twitter, “Shame on Mayor Jenny Durkan for deploying Seattle police yesterday in a brutal attack against peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters & homeless neighbors at the Capitol Hill Organized Protest.”

Many protesters who remained in early July were milling around a small tent encampment on a lawn at Seattle Central College, some with rifles slung over their shoulders. The smell of weed drifted through. The streets were full of moving trucks.

The crowds were gone, but every now and then, the demonstrators gave speeches about the importance of disbanding the police. Sometimes the activists spoke about what went wrong with the occupation. One young woman on a bullhorn argued to passers-by that the police left too quickly and that a sustainable police-free region would have to be built more slowly.

These days, storefronts in the neighborhood remain boarded up, covered in Black Lives Matter signs and graffiti. Demonstrators still hold evening protests, albeit smaller and quieter than before. But the businesses remain on edge.

“This is an ongoing crisis,” Mr. Donner said on Tuesday. “Protesters are apparently staying until they get some of what they want. No one knows what level of city cooperation will be enough for them.”

But the area is slowly going back to its old normal. The park and playing fields have been cleared, and police officers have returned to the streets. An apartment building that opened earlier this summer is finally attracting prospective tenants.

A spokeswoman for Mayor Durkan did not comment on the lawsuit but acknowledged frustrations from small businesses.

“Many who live and work in Capitol Hill and other parts of the city continue to witness daily protests that are rightly demanding an end to systemic racism,” she wrote. “In some circumstances, businesses and residents have faced property destruction in the last two months.”

She encouraged the businesses to file claims.

Crashing and Burning

Currently the state of the world now seems as if it is crashing and burning into a wall of Covid. There are few havens of safety and in turn places that seem to have handled this crisis well.  Well, not true as many countries have been successful in stomping Covid transmissions but this walk in the woods is not over yet and the sun is setting and its not getting brighter anytime sooner.

A great deal of success seems to center on Women leaderships and how they approached their response to this in both political and social ways.  Those two issues are essential for a buy in to gain the cooperation and more importantly the collaboration of those in communities to uphold the demands placed upon them.   We can look at each approach and realize that to compare New Zealand to Taiwan is a relative easy one as they are small in size and have a smaller populations to manage.  Then we have Sweden the outlier in the idea they did nothing but ask those to be careful with the idea of herd immunity as the ultimate goal. It did not work as planned, and they faced serious deaths but in the process I have never heard from one single person in Sweden with regards to how they felt about it.  We here in America have never stopped opining on that. Well funny there was a survey on that and it was the cohort more at risk and older who responded favorably to the Government’s plan.   And if you recall when Texas’s Lt. Governor said that old people would be willing to be sacrificed to get the economy going he may have well been right with regards to Swedish people but  I am 60 and no, no I’m not.  But in turn Sweden’s populace has greater respect and trust in Government which few Americans do and given the dopey Grandpa in office that is not surprising.

But in reality that is why he was elected, to drain the swamp and of course he was the greatest swamp dweller of them all in his private life so why would that change in the present.  The Federal Government became a divisive mess of partisan politics with the arrival of the swamp king from Louisiana, Newt Gingrich.  Now given that Newt was from Pennsylvania originally, it seems fitting that he found his tribe in the place where marshes and swamps dwell.  He is the one man who turned Congress into a blood sport and that is being carried on with another Southerner, Mitch McConnell.  Between those two enablers of Trump (for the record Newt in the early days was Trumps back up surrogate) it explains much of the bizarre contradictory behavior.  I have often thought Trump was from the South, given his idiocy, his pretentiousness and his overwhelming raging temper and racist leanings.   Again, I cannot stress enough that racism is not a Southern “thing” but the arrogance, the moral superiority, is built in the DNA and in turn racism is just a part of that but it is not mutually inclusive.  Racism is fear of the outsider and with the current state of America that has now been turned towards the Immigrant.  This is largely directed to those of Latin origins but this includes anyone not white.  And yes this means Africans, Indians, Middle Easterners and anyone not Christian.  The South really loathes those not Christian, so Jews, Russians or Greek Orthodox, Hindus, etc.  are not going to be any more welcome.  However they may be more tolerated as they are again not of a color that that is black or brown.  For the record folks from India, the founders of Caste system are often respected as they are ultra conservative in politics and attitudes.  Funny how that works out. I have said had anyone talked to any Latinx family they too would be surprised, they are conservative and religious but it is Catholic and again I have met many Evangelicals who suspect Catholicism as a faux religion. Again religion and money rule in that region over race.

Right now in Tennessee they are a hot mess, they are in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Texas and the rest of the alignment that defines the South. It appears that for all show and tell, Tennessee is expecting a rash of financial failures.  For all the lists they loved to claim they were on, the failed to mention the most in debt.   And look at the bankruptcy filings by State and reconcile them as per capita as New York makes sense given the size and scale of businesses/people here, but that top ten list is regarding Commercial lending. What is interesting is that States much smaller in scope and size,   the amount of debt on the personal level and the South is right up there in both. Surprised? No. I have never lived anywhere where I have seen means and ends not meet and denial is the river that runs smack through Nashville its just called the Cumberland.

As for Southern men, they  are a unique breed. I have repeatedly given the women the moniker of cum dumpsters, and that is largely a way they are raised as worth comes from the vagina, to attract the right kind of man an in turn breed.  But again, here is the conundrum,  men are not raised by men, they are usually raised by their Grandmother, the Matriarch in the family.  It is she who instills in them the whole notion of heritage and manliness all while not facing the truth that their own children have dumped them with another generation to raise, so they toughen their children to match their skin, rough, worn and scarred from the abuse, physical and mental, they endured themselves over their years.  It is a cycle that is very much the beauty parlor philosophy – lather, rinse, repeat.

And when you look at the leadership of this area, all white, and all male they are children in search of a  Mother and of course the resentment that in fact that is what they want – Mama.  One’s Grandmother is not the same as a Mother and it instills the Misogyny and distrust of women that dominates the Southern mentality.  Obsessed with sex they fear Homosexuality as that is the ultimate in male power,  the ability to fuck without recourse or that women can be happy without men.  As for Transgender folks that just is too much, it simply confuses them and frightens them more. If you can be a man then how can they be their own man?  Competition is the rule and the honor code is the game.  Almost all violence centers on sex and money. That is the twinset of Southern rules. And it explains that for the last decade the same states have gravitated to the businessman as leader or retaining it in family dynasties, which is another Southern thing.  We have that here right now with Cuomo,  but the cities and states across the country are largely helmed by professional legislators/career politicians or as Trump calls them “swamp dwellers.”  Ask Ohio about Mike DeWine.

Again folks I don’t hate the South, I just get it.  It wants to be someone else, anyone else but it also wants to be loved as it is.   Think of a 10 year old child who just wants you to love them as they are but they are angry, stubborn and selfish and just won’t play nice. That is the South.   Who else does it sound like?   That is the only difference between Trump and some of the other Southern elite, he was raised WASP and spoiled by a Scottish mother and abused by a Teutonic father.  But the end results were the same, childish, abusive, spoiled, stubborn and retaliatory.  Welcome to the South!

As I watch what happens in Tennessee it makes sense as you see it throughout the rest of the region, a businessman elected Governor (a Trumpolyte) , a lack of communication, an agenda, blurred lines about personal and professional obligations, an obsession with the Church (real or imagined), focus on money while eschewing the reality that most of the state and its constituents are laden with debt while professing fiscal responsibility.  The best part is the overwhelming cases in Alabama with a woman Governor whom Trump has not vilified despite her own issues and failures but hey its the South and they want women to fail too!  You can see the constant contradictions that I call the reality of the South, the wishing to be one thing while being that which you hate.  And all the Covid idiocy has been from the Governors of the region, its a dumb off down there clearly.  Ah the conundrum that plagues all of the area and that crosses color lines. I read today about the meltdown of Andrew Gillum of Florida and thought, “Where have I heard and seen this before?”  Oh yes Ray Nagin, the former Mayor of Orleans who was complicit in some of the most horrific racist bullshit during Katrina and well documented in the book with the same name.  Ah the white power brokers never stop marginalizing the black man and that time in that place in history is an utter atrocity that shows how money can do more damage than even a hurricane could.

And while South Carolina and Louisiana have both elected Governors of Indian heritage, Nikki  Haley has tried desperately to remain relevant even after leaving a job in the Administration of which she was vastly under qualified for and Bobby Jindal, is well nowhere to be found after his own idiocy was  revealed, only continues to prove to me that when you are a face of color in the South you are a convenient shield from which to hide behind. For it is the faces behind the door who are controlling it all  and they are anything but of color, and of any gender other than male.

I have seen this repeated throughout history, by putting faces of color in jobs that are high profile, Clarence Thomas comes to mind, and enabling them to do little more than simply protect that job and using boring tropes and myths to somehow justify how they earned their way with the whole bootstraps bullshit.   I have not seen nor heard of Thomas helping young faces of color excel nor move forward in the legal field or mentor anyone of import.  I am aware the Obama’s are doing so but at this time I can  understand why that is not as active as it should be, but Thomas has been in his gig a long time.   And his wife is another Trumpian who has no interest in mentoring anyone nor doing anything but putting forward policy that is to say racist and elitist.  I would also mention Ben Carson, who for a brain surgeon neglects to have a functioning one. Again the caste system is alive and well in America.

And there is no irony that in the most liberal bastions of Seattle and Portland that black vans and unmarked cars, conveniently rented from Enterprise Car Rental are sweeping young and largely white protestors up and dumped later with little information as to where they were taken and held during that time.  Are these the same facilities used by ICE? I suspect so.  And again this is not new behavior but like the Moms who marched, they too have a role in history over Civil Rights. But when white folks do it its as if its a new shiny toy in which to play with.

As for my new home State, New Jersey, well its New Jersey, and we swing in more directions that a Trump golf club, from Christie the fatty swampiest one to the business elite Murphy, we just have no clue and this is a State where  we are even more corrupt and sexist than the South and no one seems to care.  And with that I suspect Murphy is history come next election as many in most States will find themselves at the end of the line.  Irony that it appears New York State is going to be the most liberal political state in America.  Once again proving that I was right to come here when I did and not one day goes by where I thank myself for that decision. God, not so much, as I have never thought he was real other than being a good invisible friend to talk to.  As for Jersey,  we seem to be outliers and I love it here for that very reason, no one gives a flying fuck about anything here.  We may do it first, we may do it worse, we may do it better, but hey it’s New Jersey so fuck it.    But one thing is that none of our streets burned during all of this and those that did were quickly put out.  No black vans, no massive press coverage, just handled without histrionics.

 Just one PATH stop away is Newark, the other Manhattan, and both saw protests and unrest. It was non existent in Newark as their Mayor was front and center, while in Manhattan it was a week of unrest but the protests have been ongoing.  However right now is the summer of violence and  we have a new plan, as the Cops who have decided to give us a preview of what it will be like when the Police are defunded.  Apparently they will not be there when children are gunned down in the streets in broad daylight, or are shot crossin the street, at a  BBQ, or in a playground.  But a murder of a wealthy tech entrepreneur is solved within a week. Well money talks.  And to add more mystery to irony the tech dude was Indian, the alleged killer, a young black male who used to work for him.  Or did he? Again there will be a story as all crimes have history and a past. We live in the past now in the present.

As for us here on the East Coast the reason why there are no black vans here – MONEY. We are the financial center of the world and Trump’s family still have interests here.  The adage goes, follow the money and so I do. That and Fox news is in Manhattan and they can’t be having shit in front of their studio so guess where they target? The West Coast.

And that is why in the South, the riots in Kentucky continue but without interference as that is home to Mitch McConnell.  Where Covid is running rampant there is no Governor screaming on TV daily as ours did to demand accountability and in turn try to do something versus nothing.  And the Governors of Washington and Oregon are of course not as vocal and posturing in their demeanor as Cuomo is and that has a lot to do with also what is happening.   Cuomo is a bully and that is well known among anyone in the area and I suspect that throw down would do nothing for Trump so pick on the easy targets, as Oregon’s Governor is a woman and Inslee of Washington State is well, Inslee.  Seattle’s Mayor a woman and Portland’s Mayor who tried to join protests, Trump gleefully proclaimed he “got his ass beat.”  This is Trump, he is the Southern President right down to racism, elitism, sexism, and of course the bullying tied to the honor code.  And yet perhaps one of the most dignified and beautiful memorials occurred this weekend, with the late John Lewis, making the last trip home.  Again if this was about those whose faces are Black, the issue is not about color but about race and again about poverty.  It is always about money first in the South and when you have fame, success, and recognition then color is not an issue unless it serves to be one.  It is a complicated dynamic.

The critical element here is allowing if not forgiving the South for slowly realizing Confederate flags, Statues and other memorabilia dedicated to the Civil War is less about heritage and more about racism and suppression than recognition of what amounts to loss and ostensibly war crimes but hey one thing at a time!  The New York Times did this piece on a town that centers almost solely on Civil War icons and how does and can it change? The idea that you can erase this history and who these people are is perhaps the worst idea ever.  If that was the case why do we teach about Hitler? Stalin or any other despot or individual capable of hideous acts?  To perhaps not repeat history?  I do think that there should be a Civil War Museum dedicated to the Confederacy, to contain the statutes, the letters and other items that enable a teaching moment to put context and understanding to the complicated issues that surround the Civil War.  In the same vein that Tom Cotton is in histrionics about the 1619 Project, it is just another tool in which to use to offer perspective. Again I recall the People’s History of the United States being controversial at some point, and today I wonder if anyone has ever heard of it or if it is still used?   If all curriculum was left to the ed reformers it will strictly be STEM and that would remove any of the icky sticky shit like English, History and PE that nerds never did wellin anyway. Right Bill Gates?  And that is why subjects like Music and Philosophy and Civics are barely taught if at all as they cannot be tested to a metric that takes away the objective versus the subjective. Yes I can ask you names and dates but the nuance, the actual long term affects and effects of an act or deed that went beyond the moment in time is in fact interpretational.  We can say Columbus was a man who destroyed a peoples but in turn he is a respected individual in history and a man of respect in the Italian community.  Who wants to wrestle with that one? Not me.  Just keep it basic, simple and allow those to take from it a full and realized portrait, warts and all.   You can sill look at a Picasso and see the beauty beyond the artist and yet there is no beauty without the artist.  It’s never going to be easy and that is why we don’t want to teach it or do we? Or more importantly how?  No one will like it regardless and yes someone will be offended and that is how life is. But not today, we cannot have that today. Grow the fuck up, we are not perfect, not ever will be and that is what makes us all better for it.  We crash and burn and we get up and heal. And yes you do heal, you are not the same but maybe that is the point.  Times change and we can be persuaded to do the right thing in the right way.


A Liberal Town Built Around Confederate Generals Rethinks Its Identity

In Lexington, Va., where Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson are buried, people are reassessing the town’s ties to a legacy that symbolizes slavery and oppression.

By Reid J. Epstein
The New York Times
July 26, 2020

LEXINGTON, Va. — It’s a short drive in Lexington from a home on Confederate Circle past the Stonewall Jackson Memorial Cemetery and over to the Robert E. Lee Hotel, where locals like to stop for a drink.

There may be tourists there looking for directions to the Lee Chapel, or one of the two Stonewall Jackson statues in town. They might see a Washington and Lee University student paddling a canoe down the Maury River, named for the Confederate oceanographer Matthew Fontaine Maury.

If medical treatment is needed, residents can head to the Stonewall Jackson Hospital. For groceries, there’s a Food Lion at Stonewall Square, which isn’t far from Rebel Ridge Road, just up the way from Stonewall Street and Jackson Avenue.

For 150 years Lexington, a picturesque city nestled in Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains, has been known to the outside world as the final resting place of Lee, the Confederacy’s commanding general during the Civil War, and Jackson, whom Lee referred to as his “right arm.” They form the basis of a daily existence here that has long been tethered to the iconography of the Civil War and its two most famous Confederate generals, whose legacy has seeped into the town’s culture like the July humidity.

But Lexington is no longer a bastion of conservatism. It is a liberal college town of about 7,000 people that voted 60 percent for Hillary Clinton four years ago, and in 2018 gave 70 percent of its vote to the Democratic Senate candidate, Tim Kaine. Black Lives Matter signs dot the windows of downtown stores, and residents haven’t backed a Republican for president since Ronald Reagan.

These dueling sensibilities place Lexington at particularly delicate intersection of the national debate over Confederate monuments and emblems. As Americans protesting racial injustice have torn down statues and memorials to Confederates, the town finds itself reassessing its identity, divided between the growing imperative to eradicate symbols of slavery and decades of cultural and economic ties to the Confederates who fought to preserve it.

“When you’re surrounded by all of the symbols, it just is a way of life,” said Marilyn Alexander, 67, the lone Black member of the City Council. “It was not until recently that there was a realization for me that there was such an outcry from the community, that felt these symbols and signs needed to come down or be changed.”

City Council meetings in July have been almost entirely devoted to the question of the city-owned cemetery named for Jackson; one session lasted five hours, ending with a unanimous after-midnight vote to remove signs bearing Jackson’s name. A second meeting began with pleas from residents to put the signs back up. The council plans a session on Friday to discuss new names, with a vote possible in September.

“I long for the days of people complaining about potholes and not heritage,” said Lexington’s mayor, Frank Friedman.

Ms. Alexander said it had never occurred to her to propose taking Jackson’s name off the cemetery, believing that it would have no support from white Lexingtonians. “Most of my life I have come to realize that these are things that have just been, this is the way it is and this is the way it’s always going to be,” she said.

For decades, the names of Lexington’s Confederate forebears have mostly gone unchallenged. A 2011 City Council vote to forbid flying the Confederate flag on municipal flagpoles drew a lawsuit, eventually dismissed by a federal appeals court, from the local chapter of the Sons of Confederate Veterans; until this spring no one had proposed removing Jackson’s name from the cemetery, where a towering statue of the general rises above his family plot.

At Washington and Lee, students’ degrees still come with portraits of its two namesakes, and at the Virginia Military Institute, where Jackson taught before the war, first-year students are required to re-enact the 1864 Battle of New Market as Confederate soldiers.

Still, attitudes have started to change in recent years. Grace Episcopal Church downtown dropped Robert E. Lee from its name in 2017, and last year the local Boy Scout council changed its name from the Stonewall Jackson Area Council to the Virginia Headwaters Council.

Bigger changes are now afoot in town, which has a Black population of just under 9 percent. Carilion, the Roanoke, Va.-based health care conglomerate that owns the Stonewall Jackson Hospital, said Thursday that it would change the name to Rockbridge Community Hospital. Francesco Benincasa, whose family owns the Robert E. Lee Hotel, said Friday that it would be renamed “The Gin” starting next month.

“It’s a little hard to brand hospitality after generals,” Mr. Benincasa said in an interview.

Adama Kamara grew up in Lexington, attending preschool in a church named for Stonewall Jackson. A 2020 graduate of Emory University, in Atlanta, she had never protested the city’s Confederate memorials, but when the City Council met on July 2 to debate the cemetery’s name she called in via video conference.

“It’s not just the history that’s shameful, it’s the way the people are so committed to preserving it in this town,” she told city officials. “This preservation has caused me deep pain.”

Almost instantly, Ms. Kamara, 22, began receiving supportive text messages and emails from former classmates, teachers and longtime friends in town, people with whom she’d never before discussed the city’s Confederate forefathers. She and other young people, Lexington natives who’d gone away to college but returned during the coronavirus pandemic, began organizing to protest the city’s street names, statues and the local public school curriculum, which they said focused too much on lionizing local Confederate history at the expense of America’s Black experience.

“I don’t think we have ever been given the space to say we as Black people feel very uncomfortable about this,” Ms. Kamara said. “We have been silently thinking these things and silently compartmentalized this, but until we started hearing each other we had no idea that we all felt this way.”

It did not take long for resistance to removing Jackson’s name from the cemetery to grow.

Representative Ben Cline, a Republican who represents Lexington in Congress, wrote on Facebook: “I suppose they’ll rename it something like ‘Lexington Cemetery: Now with Surprise Inside!’ Or if they want to be more accurate, something like ‘Future Democrat Voter Quarry.’” His office did not respond to phone calls, emails or text messages seeking an interview.

Heather Hopkins Barone, a local marketer, wrote to the City Council that she had more than 2,000 names on a petition opposing the change.

“You cannot erase history because a few people are offended,” she wrote in the letter that she also shared on a Facebook page devoted to local affairs. “The affect that it will also have on the tourism industry and the Alumni will destroy this town.”

Tourism is the biggest component of the city’s revenues after property taxes, and the biggest economic drivers are the two universities, which are inextricably linked to Lee and Jackson.

In a house two blocks from a downtown shopping strip that includes the Red Hen — a restaurant briefly famous for refusing to serve then-White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders in 2018 — Ellen Darlene Bane, 64, flies three flags: The Confederate battle flag, a flag that combines the Confederate emblem with the Virginia state seal and the yellow Gadsden flag that’s become associated with the Tea Party.

Ms. Bane, who lives across the street from a Black church, the Gospel Way Church of God in Christ, said she began flying the flags six years ago and has never received a complaint. She called the movement to remove Lee and Jackson’s names “crap” and predicted escalating racial tensions in Lexington.

“Everybody’s getting racist,” she said. “It’s going to be the Blacks against the whites.”

Lexington’s universities are facing their own reckoning. At Washington and Lee, 79 percent of the faculty voted on July 6 to strip Lee’s name from the school, prompting the board of trustees to announce “a thoughtful and deliberative process” to examine Lee’s legacy.

One of the leading proponents of keeping the Lee name is Lucas E. Morel, an Abraham Lincoln scholar who is chairman of the politics department. He argued that the name honors Lee’s contributions to the school — he led its revival after the war — without making a judgment about his leadership of the Confederate army.

“We can separate Lee’s generalship of the Confederacy and his symbolism as patron saint of the Lost Cause from his laudable contribution to the university,” Professor Morel said. “To remove Lee’s name is to say, ‘Thank you for the gift of saving this college, but we don’t appreciate that contribution to such an extent that we think we should continue to honor you.’’’

At the Virginia Military Institute, until 2015 all students were required to salute the statue of Jackson when passing it. A public university, the school has retained its conservative politics, well after the Supreme Court ordered it to admit women in 1996.

But Virginia’s state politics, which govern the school, have changed. Democrats control the state legislature. Gov. Ralph Northam, a 1981 V.M.I. graduate who is working to take down state-owned Confederate monuments, “has confidence that V.M.I.’s Board of Visitors will do the right thing,” said his spokesman, Grant Neely.

Jennifer Carroll Foy, a member of the Virginia House of Delegates who in 2003 was among the first group of Black women to graduate from V.M.I., said the Jackson statue should be moved to a museum.

“We can’t say in Virginia that we’re open for business but we’re closed to diversity and inclusion,” said Ms. Foy, who is now running for governor. “No child looks at a Confederate monument and feels inspired.”

David Sigler, a City Council member who graduated from Washington and Lee and works as the financial aid director at V.M.I., said renaming the Stonewall Jackson Cemetery ought to be the first move to pivot the town’s identity away from its Confederate past.

“Our small business owners, they have products to sell, meals to prepare, they want their tables filled in their restaurants,” he said. “I will feel bad if they lose one customer because we renamed the cemetery. But I think we might gain two customers for every one we might lose in the long run if we’re not so one-dimensional.”

Little White City

Irony that the protests are the most virulent, violent and ongoing in cities largely not of color, Seattle, Portland, Austin.  Cities with large amounts of men, white, tech centers and of course liberals.  The average age also under 35 which lends to part of the problem, you know the same group when they put on the MAGA hat bring a gun instead.

Let me look at my former home town Seattle, a place where there even less love lost than Nashville   and that is saying something.

*** I do want to add that I went to Nashville with a purpose, finished it and left as I thought I would, it was just  way worse than I realized.  I own that ignorance with shame and rage but not street worthy in the least as that would be misdirected. Nashville will and can swim it on their own they don’t need me there to tell them. ****

Seattle, Washington Population 2020
783,137 

Seattle is a city located in King County, Washington. With a 2020 population of 783,137, it is the largest city in Washington and the 18th largest city in the United States. Seattle is currently growing at a rate of 2.50% annually and its population has increased by 28.67% since the most recent census, which recorded a population of 608,660 in 2010. 

Spanning over 142 miles, Seattle has a population density of 9,338 people per square mile. 

The average household income in Seattle is $119,707 with a poverty rate of 11.79%. The median rental costs in recent years comes to $1,496 per month, and the median house value is $605,200. The median age in Seattle is 35.5 years, 35.2 years for males, and 35.9 years for females. For every 100 females there are 101.7 males. 

Seattle, located in the state of Washington, is the largest city in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States and one of the fastest growing countries in the country. At the last census in 2010, the Emerald City had a population of 608,660. The Seattle metropolitan area has more than 3.5 million inhabitants, making it the 15th largest metro area in the country. 

Seattle has grown from just 1,150 people in 1870 to an estimated population of 659,000 in 2014. The Seattle metropolitan area, however, has a population of around 3.5 million people. This is more than half of Washington state’s total population. The Seattle metro area includes the Seattle-Bellevue-Everett metro division and the Tacoma metro division.
Seattle Diversity and Population Statistics 

Seattle has historically had a mostly white population. While Seattle’s percentage of white residents is lower than the United States as a whole and declining, it is still one of the whitest large cities in the U.S. From 1960 to 2010, the percentage of whites in Seattle has dropped from 91.6% to 66.5%. 

According to an American Community Survey, people who speak Asian languages at home account for 10% of the population, followed by Spanish at 4.5%. 

Seattle’s foreign-born population has increased by 40% in ten years. Of the Asian population, 4.1% are Chinese with origins in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. Seattle also has a large Vietnamese community with more than 30,000 Somali immigrants. The Seattle metro area is also home to one of the largest Samoan populations in the mainland United States. 

There is also a large lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender population in Seattle, which is one of the highest per capita in the country. 12.9% of Seattle citizens identify as gay, lesbian or bisexual, just behind San Francisco.

Seattle Population Growth
Seattle has been undergoing a population boom over the last decade and, according to recent Census data, it had the 14th largest population increase in the country, adding more than 12,600 residents between 2011 and 2012. 

Seattle has struggled with its population growth, and it has experienced trouble creating space for more residents. Planners in 2006 projected the population would grow an additional 200,000 by 2040, and work has been underway to construct apartment buildings to house new residents. Since 2009, the downtown area alone has experienced a growth of 77% in twenty years. 

By 2040, the larger Seattle area is expected to grow by 1.7 million people, with a total of 782,00 in Seattle proper by 2040. 

The Seattle area was inhabited by Native Americans for about 4,000 years before the first European settlements. The first European to visit the area was George Vancouver in 1792 during an expedition to chart the region. In 1851, members of the Denny Party founded the village of Dewamps, which was later renamed Seattle after Chief Sealth of the Suquamish and Duwamish tribes. Seattle was incorporated in 1865. 

Seattle’s early history experienced many boom-and-bust cycles like other areas near natural and mineral resources. The first boom covered the lumber industry, although there were tensions between management and labor and ethnic tensions culminating in the anti-Chinese riots of the late 19th century. The Klondike Gold Rush caused the second boom and bust. After this, Seattle became a major center for transportation. It was during this time that American Messenger Company (which became UPS) was founded in the area. There was also a shipbuilding boom during World War I that nearly turned Seattle into a company town. 

Today, Seattle’s economy is more diverse and involves several major technology companies — including Nintendo of America and Amazon.com — and biomedical corporations like Eli Lily and Company and Boston Scientific. Seattle now ranks high for the quality of living, sanitation, crime, recreation, and public services. 

Seattle Demographics
According to the most recent ACS, the racial composition of Seattle was:
White: 67.99%
Asian: 15.05%
Black or African American: 6.99%
Two or more races: 6.78%
Other race: 2.32%
Native American: 0.58%
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: 0.29%

Portland, Oregon has its own racist history which was covered in The Atlantic as The Whitest City in America in 2016.

And lastly another town I lived in the late 90s was Austin.  Today it is very different city than the one I lived in and again this article in the Texas Monthly may explain the more sinister reason behind the motto, Keep Austin White, whoop I mean Weird.

When you pretend to be liberal you are not, its like Libertarians who are Republicans who smoke pot and may be Gay or want porn, whatever.   I am a screaming Liberal and apparently that is believed to be akin to an Anarchist, uh no.  Those are well not Antifa or whatever they are as that seems to be a group that just shit stirs when the opportunity arises.  And then they get labeled as Outsiders who are the cause of disruption.  Another myth in protests is that of the “outsider” and again not quite true. From politics to activism and these protests currently ongoing is bullshit and like the whole sex trafficking agenda or whatever it is easy to create a false narrative and somehow a strawman argument when things go horribly wrong – see why you can’t have nice things cause bad people do bad things.  It is why there are no clear leaders, centralized organization and a well planned argument with defined demands and a means to negotiate as Deray McKesson explained about BLM (but this goes with all of them from Occupy to the Gun Violence ones to the Women’s movement)

‘We never want one leader … because if you kill the leader, you kill the movement’

And that is why we have what we have right now.  Unless you are willing to do the heavy lifting, to organize, channel, direct and focus with clear plans, an agenda and hitting the streets to attend every Council meeting, every planning meeting, school board meeting and vote; In turn, find candidates willing to step forward and upward this will continue.  When lovely white bastions of civility are facing unrest when none of it actually concerns them on a daily basis as they never experience it this is all for naught.  Seattle had a killing of a Native American carver years ago, it lead to the Police Department being under control of the Justice Department. The WTO Protests were insanely violently mishandled by the Police which the former Chief, Norm Stamper, deeply regrets. In the interim the city go whiter, it had a bigger drug problem so it put its energy on clearing that up, a problem largely affecting the white community.  Meanwhile the faces of color that one had a thriving community got pushed further out and in turn away. So STFU when you are in the streets what are you doing to help build Black owned business, giving them loans, advice and of course clients to grow them? Nothing.  Hell the boys on Queer Eye have done that repeatedly and given them a makeover. SNAP!   Okay then grab that cheesecake and head home.

Walking and Thinking

As I read the ongoing trial of Bill Cosby the phrase ‘throwing up in my mouth a little’ seemed insufficient as I truly believed I was going to projectile vomit.  An awkward move as I was sitting in a  coffee shop at the time.  But then again you read this article about a sexual assault victim and her being jailed as a way of forcing her to testify and you think it could not get any worse.

I have had enough.  I am not even sure I understand the depth and breadth of this statement. I am not suicidal or homicidal, just in case anyone feels compelled to send Cops to my door – AGAIN – as they are neither trained mental health professionals nor all that intelligent to actually comprehend my rage and where their idea of resolution is using you as target practice.  But then again Eric Trump has explained it – Democrats are not human.  This from a robot who kills big game for sport.   Again a qualified individual placing a collective upon a group of people; Replace ‘Democrats’ with Blacks, Women, Muslims, you see my point?

I wish I had moved to Pittsburgh, which was my other choice when I was looking to relocate for my Medical/ Dental needs.  It got a shout out by the President this last week as it is apparently the Paris of America.   Pittsburgh figured out how to repair itself and in turn it has re-invented itself in a way that demonstrates the idea of grit. Instead I chose Nashville, whoops, well we all make bad choices.

I keep wanting to believe it will get better but in reality I think a red state is one of the safest as there is no reason to target or raise a riot to garner attention.  And the march/riot/protest in Portland brought out the best and the worst in people and I expect more of this in the months to years ahead.   The Northwest is not absolved of guilt towards open racism it is just that the pockets of Portland and Seattle do better at subverting it but it exists, the history speaks  volumes.  

But I want to point out that while I live in Nashville and find the people utterly lacking I did find the same in Seattle, just different.  It is the whole poseur and faux hipster class in Seattle and the tech sect and yes I mean sect versus the whatever fuck hillbilly faux Amish shit going on here and the Jesus is my Christian Soldier sect.  Yes they too are the same in the need to follow a dogma, official or unofficial.  But fear is a strong bonding agent to both  enrage and ensure compliance.  That and the MEME class has taken the youth thing to a whole new level.  I get the Ben Sasse shit but another messenger might have been more prudent. But when you look around and see conformity to the level we have now regardless of the type – alt right, hillbilly, hipster, etc – you have a problem with diversity on every level.

I finally decided that I don’t care about Nashville in either or a love/hate way as that takes too much energy and at this point the clock ticks.  The next year I move toward the last of my dental treatment and once that it is finally concluded in 2019 I put my shit into storage and leave.  I need time to travel, to find where I want to go and the person I need to be with people just like me.  Oh wait. Table for one please!

Reading this profile in the Atlantic about the White Supremacist, Richard Spencer,  and one can see that he has tried to find his footing in numerous persona’s now settling on angry white man – the territory abandoned by Glenn Beck and the now unemployed Bill O’Reilly.  By putting the “alt” it means I have cooler hair cut and occasionally dabble in gay sex.

Anger. I get it. I really do. I guess mine comes out with sarcasm, angry missives like this and a lot of walking and thinking.   Perhaps that is why few do it are they afraid or is that impossible?

State of Denial

I am burned out on Nashville’s self obsession.  If I hear the infamous “85 people a day are moving here” one more time I will stab them in the eye.

There is little to substantiate that actual number as it is pulled out of someones ass as a way of validating the rising costs of living here without raising pay.  Seriously they believe that the 5%, another vague number coming from the Chamber as cited as the “cost of living is 5% less here,” explains that.   They don’t bother to explain 5% less from where – Cincinnati?

For a town with as many Universities that surround it,  they are hideously bad with numbers.  To have 85 people a day MOVE here that would  be over 31,000 people a month; this would mean over 372,000 people are moving here annually.  Really, I see, says the blind man.

Okay so I read this article which in convoluted fashion sort of kind of negates that figure:

But in the view of Nicholas J. Lindeman, economic and systems data analyst with Nashville Area Metropolitan Planning Organization, that 85 people a day estimate doesn’t present the complete picture.

His analysis of five years of census data through mid-year 2015 shows a net migration of roughly 58 people a day into the Nashville region. That’s based on total population growth of 159,449 people across the 14-county region in the past five years, which includes a net migration of 105,958 plus a net natural increase of 51,809 people taking into account both births and deaths.

At the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce, Vice President of Research Garrett Harper cites a rate of 71 people per day as the most recent figure based on last year’s net growth of more than 26,062 people moving in and out of the Nashville region. Add the number of people born or who died here and that number would increase to nearly 100 a day.

“While the 100 per day is the highest in numerical terms in recent years, it’s not quite the highest in percentage terms,” Harper said. “What we’re experiencing now is comparable to what we were experiencing in 2006 and 2007. It’s not very different in level of growth for those two years.”

In Davidson County, the total population growth trend has varied from year to year, according to Gross’ analysis that shows 27 people moving to the county daily last year versus 26 the previous year and only 21 between 2010 and 2011.

Meanwhile, on average more than half of migration into Davidson County over the past five years — more than 60 percent last year — has been international migration. Also, just over one out of five of the net migration into the overall Metro area has come from overseas.

“We’re becoming more diverse in terms of our art and culture, in terms of the labor force and the types of services we provide,” Gross said. “It’s affecting all different parts of our lives.”

As an undergraduate economics major in college, one of the first lessons I learned is that statistics is never an exact science. “It’s not about the actual numbers, it’s about direction of the numbers — are they going up or down?” economics analyst Wald said.

So the reality is that we have a mixed migrant issue that includes births and relocations from other counties in the region.  Note they don’t count the immense amount of students who “relocate” here for the duration of their education and there is little data to indicate if they in fact remain in the region or leave upon completion of their degree.  Again, we are a little vague with facts and figures here as that would require well truth and logic, two elements sorely lacking here; note the final comment from the economic analyst – numbers are not actual. HUH?

Last night a local broadcaster ran a Town Hall.  Now when I think of a Town Hall I think of a panel of experts and officials meeting the town and responding to questions from both the moderator and the town. Well no.  This is Nashville so this meant a motley crew of legitimate officials and some whom I have no idea who they are and their relevance to the subject regarding the Growth of Nashville.  However, one essential element was missing – the actual members of the town.  Okay, then.

Mostly it centered on the favorite subject here in Nashville, “whose gonna pay for it?” query which beings and ends any question or demand for change.  We want low to no taxes and if that means having no sidewalks, mass transit, clean water and decent schools then so be it!!

In this non town town hall they did discuss mass transit  but I have no idea what else they discussed as they kept going back to taxes and that Tennessee is a no income tax state.  Yes so was Washington but we did not charge tax on food and we did vote by “county” to fund schools, buses and other matters of import such as gun control. This is a concept new to the area and something they are exploring.  What that means is unclear as well this is Tennessee and details are for well later.

The area is full of “dis”information as very little of the local news is actually news. I have never heard any international coverage and national coverage is also fairly non existent.  They do however love their crime reports.  And yes I watch all three networks in an attempt to gouge any semblance of journalism of which I can safely say – no.   And yes the focus is largely on black crime and when they do profile a white criminal my first thought is that it must of been a low crime day.

The news rarely reports “investigations” and when they do they speak to only business executives or politicians who spout their standard fare.    When they do speak to the general public I am not clear where they found these people and if this is again a selective opportunity to explain Darwinism at its most tragic.

The move of Bridgestone to the “downtown” corridor of Nashville is again a triumph and statement of growth.  There is no discussion that the downtown of Nashville is next to non existent.  That aside from the issues of infrastructure dominate, the services and businesses of the area are also non existent, unless you drink a lot.   That is the second announcement, whatever new bar or honky tonk is being opened or is to open as if that is another example of the jobs being created in Nashville, service ones.   They never ask specifics on the nature of jobs when speaking to the already two major players here in the area – Bridgestone and Nissan – with regards to average salaries and growth potential to encourage higher degrees and long term commitment to both the company and the community as they actually believe low wages and low unemployment are fine as the real benefit is living in Nashville.  Health care? Who needs that? Ah irony as that is the biggest employer here, Vanderbilt with well over 120,00 employees, yes in actual real numbers.  And those are not all Doctorates or Doctors as they would raise the median wage as well as the number of residents holding post secondary degrees. 

People with well paying jobs have a tendency to stay.  Those with jobs that are highly mobile are more transient and  those too are the same jobs that are cut when business changes and profit ranges are not met.   And this will happen to the largest employment sector in Nashville now that the ACA is being decimated.   These are lab techs, technicians and others who are not as essential to serve their customers/patients, there is already a shortage of Primary care Physicians in this country so who do you think screens and treats you first?  Well that appointment might be awhile maybe I can go to Canada and have less wait time?  (Remember that threat/con?)

I have often joked but  that Nashville should expand past the wedding industry which drives a great deal of the hospitality trade that dominates and instead expand into medical tourism.  There is no shortage of medical treatment facilities and guess what both insurance and hospital trades dominate our real largest corporate employer.  The ACA generated a lot of jobs as it required everyone to be insured and in turn people actually went to the Doctor.  Well not here in Tennessee as that in Nashville we have large portion without health insurance and in turn needed health care.  We passed on the Medicaid aid and the Governors plan (TennCare) which is the irony as  more of those covered with heavy subsidies and Medicaid used said services.  For people like me who fell into a whole new donut hole met the obligation of the law but with high deductibles and premiums but I am barely covered.  Then add to this we have few choices if we use Healthcare.gov as the declining amount of providers  led many to have to find new Physicians and/or in turn limit visits.   But that money maker starting today is coming to an end and no new ideas are forthcoming except put it to the States. And again, where do I live? 

 Medical care has always been well before the ACA a boondoggle, growing at fast rates, with huge costs, contributing to a significant amount of our GDP and in turn leading to more personal bankruptcies than any other industry – 60%.   Welcome back said the newly excited bankruptcy class Attorney.   Today personal injury lawyers are going well we still have a business as people will need us more than ever to pay increasing medical bills.  It is a win win for Lawyers regardless.  And that is our fourth largest industry – Lawyers.  Both in civil and government related work.  We are the Capital and that will never change.

Living in the red sea does provide one with an odd sense of security.  We are so off the radar and so unimportant that little will actually change here thanks to the lowest education rates in the nation, the rising opioid crisis and the heavy duty dose of Jesus that dominates.  That enables a large culture of compliance and duplicity to work in tandem without recourse.  If Churches are serving the community why should the Government?

Nashville is a town of dreamers and be they in Music or some other profession, people here are less attractive versions of those in the movie LaLa Land.  The reality is that educated intellectual professionals have no reason to migrate here unless they have secured a job already and in turn significant salary in which they use to live outside of the city and not have to worry about the day to day issues that those who do reside here deal with.  When a Dollar General store rebrands itself DGX and becomes a high end bodega to sell food and drugs,  as no major other retailer has any desire to do so in the city confines, it says welcome to Nashville.  But hey we have the Gulch!!

This is a city that defines walkable as the ability to walk to one restaurant to the other.  What more do you need?  Isn’t that all millennial’s want?  And hence the obsession with the Gultch, the high priced condos and apartments and tons of bars and restaurants with some expensive retail and an organic bodega, called the Turnip Truck.  This is their crown jewel here in Nashville and they are going to build a walking bridge to get there despite that free buses and the ability to walk to it already exists but who needs sidewalks and buses?  The poors. Fuck the poors!

 And that is somewhat a shared view in the Northwests as they go out of their way to court the Millennial class as they are all that matter in many cities, Seattle and Portland and are all but on Match.com to attract them, but they also don’t have to.  Both cities have large industries and businesses, walkable communities and more important largely liberal tolerant and diverse major cities.     And shockingly they use mass transit, walk and bike to work.   They have many many oversea residents as the analyst likes to point out and thriving International Districts which is acclaimed, centralized, accessible (by buses, a trolley and light rail)  and well used.  Yes gentrifying but it is still where many work and shop.

And Nashville simply doesn’t.   We are very segregated here in many ways and those whom are educated and in turn want to be well compensated (again few and far between here)  will drink a few craft beers then realize they are in a State where they are creating a law that defines  the biological order/gender definition of a family;  have a law that permits Therapists to refuse service if the patient is of alternative sexuality; the bathroom mishegoss is still on the table as is vouchers, I don’t see that conversion therapy working with regards to the new liberal class.

The new class, the millennial class,  live on the coasts for a reason and that is not just the jobs or the taxes (again Washington State no income tax, Oregon, no sales tax)  – yes it is the politics.  And they like that part they also don’t want to deal with the heavy lifting that it would take to change that dynamic.  Change to these people means well let’s vote for Trump he can’t do that badly, can he?

Ah denial it is a large sea in which to swim.   Ever seen Jaws?