Urban Blight & Orwell’s Pyramid

16 07 2010

You can tell a lot about a city from its county newspaper. Of course, I am unnaturally interested in regional newspapers because there weren’t any in Singapore where I grew up. I was stunned by the provincialism of the Western Australian, amused by the graphic focus of USA Today, temporarily seduced by the cosmopolitanism and urbane tone of the New York Times, and now I’m in St Louis I flapped open the NorthSider, a free mag (and apparently in its first issue) that was lying on my friend Darell’s breakfast table.

Here are some of July’s Headlines -

REBUILDING BLOCK BY BLOCK

A NEW TOOL FOR REPORTING ISSUES

“OPERATION UNITY” CALLS FOR END TO THE VIOLENCE

NEWSTEAD DEVELOPMENT NEARING COMPLETION

TRANSFORMING O’FALLON PARK

ST. LOUIS LANDS $21M FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING

MISSOURI UNEMPLOYMENT NUMBERS SLIGHTLY BETTER

STATE OUTLAWS FAKE POT

Here are a selection of the ads:

MINORITY CONTRACTORS!

HELP KEEP YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD SAFE AND BRIGHT: LEAVE YOUR PORCH LIGHT ON!

LEADERS NEEDED! HELP RAISE THE STANDARDS – IF YOU DON’T LIKE WHAT’S HAPPENING ON YOUR BLOCK, HELP CHANGE IT!

So, I guess Darell did warn me before I came to St Louis that it is a “blighted city” – she’s working in an urban planning office to revitalize the city, after all, and it’s one of the most segregated (racially and economically) cities in America. Fortunately Southeast Asians are a bit of a rarity and so we encounter curiosity rather than hostility on either side. I had felt some of the tension in Chicago, but man, St Louis is something else.

“The Chinatown closed down,” Darell said, while we whooshed through the almost-empty metro onward to her apartment. “Have you ever heard of a Chinatown closing down??” Later in the evening I was cooking some Singaporean fish porridge for her. “Do you have any ginger?” She looked at me sheepishly. “You call yourself Malaysian???” “Judith, there isn’t an Asian grocery store around here!” Fair enough. We did, thankfully, have soy sauce and some pseudo-Asian fried onion flakes though. But no ginger.

“So what’s the socio-economic breakdown of St Louis, from what you’ve seen?”

“Hm, so, there are these really really rich people who live in mansions and have been here since the 1800s or something,” she said. “Then there are the young rich professionals who also live around that area. And then, well, there’s everyone else…”

“The proletariat?”

“Yup, the proles.”

“What would you say, 85%?”

“Yeah…. maybe 75%…. or yeah maybe 80.”

And you wonder why there’s crime and resentment and segregation.

I mean, here’s a little graphic depicting the social structure of Oceania in George Orwell’s 1984:

image from Wikipedia

Sounds about right?

I was talking to someone from China who was with the CCP from the start – he was a soldier in the PLA, a young, idealistic boy who joined up and wanted to help alleviate the suffering of the masses. He was curious about America, never having been there before.

“So, what do you find is different about America?” He asked, after relating his stories about the Chinese Civil War, and the Cultural Revolution. I was kind of embarrassed – not just because my Chinese vocabulary leaves much to be desired, but I wasn’t very sure what to say. Different from what? Different from Singapore? From America? From Australia? From everywhere else?

He gestured towards his balcony, which had a pretty green grill over it – it was a new condominium, and he’d just moved there in the last two years. “Do people have grates over their doors there?”

I wasn’t sure what he meant. “You mean, fences and gates for security?”

“Yes,” he said. “Do you need to keep thieves out?”

This was all a revelation to me. I had never lived in a place where you wouldn‘t want to at least install some grills over your windows. I mean, in Perth there weren’t fences around the houses, but already break-ins were more and more frequent and people were starting to put them up due to a surge of poor refugees into the city.

“Yes, yes, people have security grills.”

He laughed. “During the 1970s, everyone was equally poor,” he said. “There wasn’t anything worth stealing. We didn’t have grills over our windows then. I mean, we were all starving, but I guess we were all equal.”

I guess I just had never thought about it that way.

.

When I was back at college, I had to take a couple of psych tests in order to fulfill my requirement for Steven Pinker’s class, the Human Mind. At the beginning of the psych study we were asked what sorts of shapes we liked better – shapes like this:

image source

or this:

Generally, a preference for pyramidal structures indicates a tendency toward political and economic conservatism, while a preference for circular structures indicates a tendency toward political and economic liberalism.

Of course, it should come as no surprise that the actual pyramids of Egypt were built for a single man’s remains, possibly to preserve him as an immortal, on the backs of hundreds of thousands of slaves; it should also come as no surprise that the complete abject equality of the Cultural Revolution led to a destructive, collective purge of thousands of years of culture and civilization – in which the young and powerful beat the old and helpless, not for goods or because they were poor, but for fun, for acceptance amongst their peers, and out of a fierce, misguided ideological conviction.

In the end, all kinds of tyranny led to the same place: the War of All against All.

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Opening Up Cuba

7 07 2010

Perhaps, an efficient way to get rid of dictators is to start talking to them/trade with them and let loads of Americans flood into the country.


picture from the Washington Post

Especially if the Americans involved are the sort who kind of shiftily pretend to be Canadians during the Bush Administration.





Chicago History Museum

6 07 2010

Thanks Ben and Christine for taking me to the Chicago History Museum! I had a blast :)

This is Jean Baptiste Point Du Sable, the first permanent settler in Chicago. Of African descent, he married a Native American called Catherine. (1745 – 1818). He looks white in this picture but there is another pic of him that looks darker.

This is Me-Te-A, a Potawatimi chief who, together with Ottawa chief Blackbird, fought on the side of the British against the Americans in the War of 1812 for control over the fur trade. The fur trade ended around about 1690 due to overtrapping.The print I copied was printed by LT Prowon’s Lithographic Establishment, Estb. in No. 94, Walnut Street.

This is a nameless Anarchist who rioted in Chicago in 1886. A bunch of anarchists were hanged for sedition and terrorism. Print by Thure de Thulstrup, for Harper’s Weekly, May 15 1886. I think his hand gesture is like Lenin’s.

This is Abraham Lincoln, one of my two favourite American presidents. This bronze head was in the Lincoln Park part of the museum.

I cross Lincoln Park on a winter night when the snow is falling.

Lincoln in bronze stands among the white lines of snow,

his bronze forehead meeting soft echoes of the

newsies crying forty thousand men are dead along the Yser,

his bronze ears listening to the mumbled roar of the city at his bronze feet.

“Bronze”by Carl Sanburg (1878 – 1967) during WWI, Chicago Poems.

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I have a couple more sketches. But here’s this for now.

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Oh Dem Russians!

30 06 2010

So, America just arrested a bunch of unregistered Russian spies who lived in New Jersey and suchlike places, but can’t charge them with anything cos they (so far) haven’t seemed to have disseminated any state secrets. Super-subtle operation? A legacy of a communist payroll? Wheels within wheels? Publicity ploy? Who knows? But the Cold War is certainly not as hot as it used to be. Also, “sleeper spies” who refused to go home cos they “felt they had become Americans” is just hilarious. Is this just New York Times humor? Or would it really happen?

The New York Times Presents:
How to turn your Cold War enemies into Americans 101:

1) stop threatening to bomb them
2) let them live in your country
3) put them in suburbia
4) give them the SUV and the white picket fence
5) taadaa, hearts and minds!

too good to be true?

Here’s my little Beatles Music Video about present-day Russia:

Back In the U.S.S.R. from JHu on Vimeo.





Oprah for Senator?

28 06 2010

Photo from Wikipedia

I’d think she’d be overqualified….

Speculative article here.





You are the Weakest Link. Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.

26 06 2010

Oh Kevin! You were so cute, and Bill Gatesy, and I liked your apology to the Native Australians. Also John Howard was not all that likable for all his fiscal responsibility. But you spent all our surplus and put us in deficit, and were doling out all our resources boom to various random causes (including, and I don’t even know how this was ever a good idea – giving the largest car manufacturer in the world a subsidy to invent a car that had already been invented!)!

Watch this amazing video!





Also, Australia has a female PM. And Kevin Rudd is Out.

26 06 2010

Her name is Julia Gillard, and from what I’ve seen on TV, she’s pretty impressive. Watch out, world.

America, you’ve really got some catching up  to do now.

from Wikipedia:

Julia Eileen Gillard (born 29 September 1961) is the 27th Prime Minister of Australia.

Gillard became the Leader of the Australian Labor Party at the 2010 Australian Labor Party leadership election on 24 June 2010 and was sworn in as prime minister later that day. She had previously served as Deputy Prime Minister of Australia under Kevin Rudd. On 11 December 2007, she became the first woman in Australia’s history to assume the prime ministerial role when she was the acting prime minister while Rudd attended the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bali.[2]

Of Australian prime ministers, Gillard is the first woman, the first foreign-born since Billy Hughes,[3] and the first who has never married.[4]

Gillard has been a Labor Party member of the House of Representatives since the 1998 federal election. She represents the Division of Lalor, west of Melbourne.

Here is an article about her

Photo from Wikipedia. Photograph by Adam Carr; Cropped by Orangemonkey.








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