Postcard from the End
of America: Bridesburg, Philadelphia
By Linh Dinh
February 08, 2015 "ICH"
- Wait till you hear this one. So an
Italian, a Pole and an Irish woman were
sitting in a bar when a Vietnamese walked
in.
“There he is!” the bartender, also Irish,
yelled.
Ignoring the strange greeting, the
Vietnamese guy sat down two stools from the
cheerful Italian, “We knew he’d come!”
Grinning somewhat uneasily, the Vietnamese
merely said, “Uh, I’d like a pint of Rolling
Rock.”
Acting surprised, the bartender blurted,
“He’d like a beer too!”
With the entire bar looking at him, the
Vietnamese finally asked, “Who did you think
I was?”
“The guy who sells DVDs,” the Irish woman
jumped in. “We’ve been sitting here talking
about ‘American Sniper,’ you know, the new
movie, so when we saw you walk in with that
bag, we thought you had DVDs to sell.”
“No, no.”
All over Philadelphia, there are itinerant
peddlers who enter bars to sell pirated
movies. In Frankford, one neighborhood over,
I’d seen a Chinese woman do this. That day,
I was in Bridesburg for the first time.
Triangular, it’s hemmed in by a river, a
creek and a freeway, so Bridesburg’s rather
cut off from the rest of the city. You can
easily live in Philadelphia for decades
without ever straying into this poor yet
very neatly kept, graffiti-free and nearly
all-white neighborhood. Neither the elevated
train nor the subway stops there.
From afar, a metropolis is always reduced to
its iconic skyline downtown, but close-up,
every city is a city of neighborhoods. There
is nothing distinctive about this claim. If
Philadelphia is a city of neighborhoods, so
is Boston, Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco
and even Atlanta. A city dweller, then, is
one who merely inhabits a village or town
within a city. It is on this much more
intimate scale that humans can truly feel a
sense of belonging, if at all.
In Bridesburg, all the houses have two
stories and few are detached. Most have no
lawns, only a concrete porch, if that.
Aluminum awnings shade doorways and windows.
Flags droop here and there, including from
utility poles. On Richmond Street is the
second Veterans of Foreign War post in the
entire country. Here, the bars are called
What’s Its Name, Post Office, Ozzie’s,
O’Rourke’s, Bridesburg Pub and Blue Moon,
which was the one I stumbled into, and
weaved out of. It doesn’t even have a sign.
Bridesburg’s motto, “A Family First
Community.” On a door, “FREE SNOW. HELP
YOURSELF.” The Real Life Café has gone out
of business.
The bartender turned out to be 42-year-old
Matt, “I hadn’t seen a movie in a theater in
15 years, but I couldn’t wait to see this
one. I was outside at 8:30AM on the first
day!”
“What time was the show?”
“9:30.”
“So how was it?”
“Excellent!”
Chris Hedges writes of this record-breaking
box office hit by Clint Eastwood, “‘American
Sniper’ lionizes the most despicable aspects
of U.S. society—the gun culture, the blind
adoration of the military, the belief that
we have an innate right as a ‘Christian’
nation to exterminate the ‘lesser breeds’ of
the earth, a grotesque hypermasculinity that
banishes compassion and pity, a denial of
inconvenient facts and historical truth, and
a belittling of critical thinking and
artistic expression.” Ah, if only Hedges
could be at the Blue Moon to watch this
American classic with the locals! I’ll bring
the DVD.
One of the oldest white settlements in the
Philadelphia area, this bend in the river
was populated by Swedes, Germans then Poles,
who came in the early 20th century to work
in the tannery. It was shit work, literally,
for dog shit was used to cure hides. Rohm
and Hass and AlliedSignal, two chemical
companies, then moved in to add cancers and
birth defects to the stomach turning aroma.
In fact, for several years Bridesburg was
ranked as the most toxic zip code in all of
Pennsylvania. Locals could also make bullets
or forge steel for a living. Mike, a
57-year-old Pole, recounted the good old
days, “With the Arsenal, Rohm and Hass and
the Foundry, you didn’t have to leave the
neighborhood to work. You could walk to
work!”
With all of its factories gone, the people
of Bridesburg now toss pizza dough, sling
beer, become cops or join the military. Law
and order is big here.
At the Recreational Center, there’s a large
mural of Gary Skerski, a 16-year police
veteran who was shot and killed at age 46 by
a robber.
Not feeling adequately safe with the regular
police and Neighborhood Watch, Bridesburg
even hired a private security firm, with
each house chipping in $20 per year. These
keystone cops didn’t even last a month,
however. Bridesburg’s siege mentality is
understandable if you consider that it’s
squeezed by two high crime neighborhoods,
Frankford and Port Richmond, with
Kensington, Philly’s heroin bazaar, just two
miles away.
Mike, “We’re friendly to everybody, as long
as you’re a low life!”
“But you have to be the right kind of low
life!” I suggested.
“Yeah, if you take care of your kids and
your house and don’t cause trouble, you’re
welcome. Basically, we don’t like niggas,”
and he did say “a” and not “er,” a
distinction Raychel Jeantel once took pain
to explain to Piers Morgan.
It’s clearly no endearment for Mike,
however, “In Germantown and Upper Darby, you
have decent black people. Notice I’m not
calling them no niggas. It’s the niggas we
don’t like, and anybody can be a nigga. You
can have black niggas, white niggas, chink
niggas and pollock niggas. It’s the niggas
we don’t like. Before we had Section 8
Housing in Bridesburg, kids could leave
their bikes out, but as soon as the niggas
moved in, they all got stolen!”
After a black woman moved into a Bridesburg
apartment in 1995, someone broke her
windows. Whites taunted her on the streets
with racial slurs and her teenaged sister
was even roughed up by a white. Though she
appealed to the cops for help, for law and
order, her sister’s assailant was never
found. As for the slurs and hostile looks,
there was nothing they could do, frankly,
for social attitudes cannot be regulated. A
mugger or rapist can be arrested, indicted
and found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,
but not someone who mutters a slur or spits
on the ground as he walks by you. After six
months of Bridesburg hell, the woman moved
out.
In the early 90’s, I’d occasionally stop by
this breakfast joint because it had great
scrapple, but the white waitress always gave
me the coldest service, tight lipped and
brusque. The first time this happened, I
simply thought, maybe I’m catching this
woman on her worst day, for as a minority,
you can’t assume racism each time or you
will lose your mind. Finally, I stopped
going to that stupid place, though, twenty
plus years later, I still remember exactly
where it is, for a person is wired to
register, very deeply, all acts of
irrational hostility against him. Self
preservation demands this. Believe me, I’ve
experienced much, much worse. I’m bringing
this up merely to show that it doesn’t take
a whole lot to convey to someone that he’s
not welcome.
To bypass racial aggravation, many people
simply retreat into their own ethnic orbit
whenever possible, with whites hanging with
whites, blacks with blacks and Asians with
Asians, etc. Beyond these divisions, there’s
also an infinity of sub groupings, moreover,
because many people can only love
themselves, that’s all. Any sort of
intolerance, then, is just an expression of
narcissism.
In 1996, another black woman, 32-year-old
Bridget Ward, rented a rowhouse in
Bridesburg for $650. On her first morning
there, the registered nurse woke up to find
“nigger” spray painted on her door. Ketchup
and some brown liquid, resembling blood,
were also splattered onto her front and back
walls. After news got out, some white
residents did send her welcome cards and
Easter candies, but a letter also arrived
that threatened to kill her two daughters,
aged 3 and 9. That was the last straw.
Needing to spare her kids from such a miasma
of hatred, Ward moved out after only five
weeks, “I don’t want them to grow up mean
and hateful. I don’t want them to feel that
it has to be like this. I don’t want them to
hate anyone.”
News reports from that time mention a
Bridesburg man who unfurled a confederate
flag at his house to greet Ward’s arrival,
and snooping around the neighborhood 18
years later, I discovered this flag was
still there. Although the Southern banner
can’t be reduced to a single idea, here it’s
clearly meant as an anti-black talisman.
Ignoring the bad publicity, this man and
others like him are determined to keep
Bridesburg as white as possible, and though
a handful of blacks have managed to move in
eventually, it’s still the whitest working
class neighborhood in the entire region.
Seen as a village, Bridesburg harks back to
a time when nearly everyone within the
community was of the same race, if not
related by blood, and as a foundation and
model for what a community is, the village
was always exclusive. Normally, you weren’t
allowed to move in, but even when you could,
it took forever for your surly neighbors to
warm up to your annoyingly alien presence.
In a traditional Vietnamese village, an
outside family had to live there for three
generations before the locals granted it
partial citizenship. In southern Europe,
innumerable villages and towns were built
like fortresses on top of hills to defend
themselves against people from nearby
settlements. Assisi and Perugia, for
example, attacked each other constantly. It
was like Bloods vs. Crips, only more
vicious.
One village vs. another, town vs. town,
these local allegiances and conflicts find
modern expression in organized sports. At
the high school level, the athletes are
really local, but it is much less so with
college teams and not at all with the
professional squads that somehow provide
civic pride and sense of community to the
socially adrift city dwellers. The growth of
professional sports coincided with rapid
urbanization worldwide. Uprooted from
villages and towns, those who have lost
their organic and enduring ties to other
people and this very earth must find
consolation in purchasing over-priced cap,
jersey, pennant, pajamas and blanket of the
right colors and logo. On selected days,
they can scream, curse or even weep, in joy
or despair, at a television. Whereas the
professional athletes are merely grafted
onto a city, its gang members are truly
grass roots, however, for they arise from
its various communities.
When civilization declines, warbands
proliferate as economic and security
solutions. They also appear wherever central
authority is weak or lacks legitimacy. In
slums across America, warbands already
operate, though we merely call them gangs.
As the economy sinks, our social fabric will
turn to shreds and crimes will explode
because hungry, desperate and angry people
won’t equivocate too much before they blow
your brains out, especially if you’re alien
to them, or seen as the enemy, for whatever
reason. Even with foodstamps, violent
muggings are daily occurrences in each
American city, so imagine what will happen
when our bankrupt government can no longer
maintain its already inadequate Access Card
soup kitchen?
War breaks out when there’s scarcity, and
this is true not just between rival nations
but gangs or warbands in your city, and
remember, nearly all gangs are racially or
ethnically homogeneous. There are no
pan-Asian gangs but Chinese, Vietnamese,
Cambodian or Hmong ones, and even when
people speak the same language, the gangs
are either Mexican, El Salvadorian or
Columbian, etc. Yes, the Latin Kings
includes a number of Hispanic groups, but
it’s essentially Puerto Rican or Mexican,
depending on the factions. As for whites and
Jews, they share leadership in a most
sadistic gang called the United States of
America. Their foot soldiers are of every
color, however, so that’s a heart warming
triumph of integration and multiculturalism.
Absolutely anyone can die for them, even
you. Their current spokesman is also half
black. If you think about it, the job of
White House Press Secretary is totally
redundant, since our so-called President is
already a White House Press Secretary.
When all is well, racial differences can be
somewhat ignored, though many people
struggle to do just that, but with tension
or disagreement, much less life-and-death
competition, the tribal angle comes out.
Notice how often insults are prefixed by a
racial or ethnic signifier. It’s not enough
to call someone a “piece of shit,” you must
brand him a Polish, Italian, Jewish, black
or Korean piece of shit. Responding to one
of my articles, a commenter writes, “Long
Duck Dong or whatever his name is, can go
suck a bag of hot dicks.” The truth is, all
differences are registered, stored away and
used as bullets if needed, for we define
ourselves oppositionally.
During the Occupy protests, the “99%” became
a rallying cry for the supposedly unified
masses, but there is no such 99%, not when
Americans are rabidly divided between North
and South, urban and rural, Democrats and
Republicans, liberals and conservatives,
etc. As Paul Craig Roberts points out, “The
great mass of people cannot evaluate what is
said or written without first classifying it
into a prevailing ideological box. If what
is said fits their box, it is correct. If
not, it is wrong.”
Though many Americans fancy themselves
independent thinkers, most are merely
slavish adherents of some cartoon version of
a political philosophy they haven’t bothered
to research, for why read history when a
slogan or two is good enough? Recently, when
I voiced my objection to “Communism, of the
dictatorship of the proletariat variety,” a
reader responded, “Ah maybe Linh Dinh is
revealing some of his middle class baggage
here […] Why did u leave Vietnam Linh? Did
you’re family not want to pull its weight
and help with the revolution?” Ignoring my
objection to “dictatorship,” this person is
framing me as somehow a bourgeoisie who’s
antagonistic to the proletariat! Judging
from his millennial orthography, my accuser
has many decades ahead of him, so perhaps he
can take a few days to slowly read 1984.
Studying Orwell’s frightful expose of any
totalitarian system, whether left or right,
perhaps he can reflect on how often a
revolution betrays its most selfless, ardent
or idealistic supporters, not to mention the
lowly proles. Though fiction, the ruthless
strategies depicted have been repeatedly
confirmed by history, and since many
millions have suffered, one shouldn’t so
blithely endorse what killed or shackled
them.
In many parts of the world, people still
have fresh memories of traumatic societal
upheavals, but Americans have never been
subjected to nonstop terror from an alien
control apparatus, sent to hard labor or
reeducation camps, or made so desperate,
they head for the open sea in flimsy crafts,
knowing they might drown, starve to death or
be raped or killed by pirates. Having no
experience of totalitarianism, not quite
yet, Americans can glibly wear it as a
conceit. Also, there is a Western tradition
of militant evangelism that stems from an
arrogant conviction that whatever you
supremely believe in, or just kinda like,
sort of, must be the guiding light for the
rest of the world, so if it’s not Communism,
then it’s Catholicism, Capitalism,
Neo-Liberalism and so on, all Western belief
systems. If a nominally Communist country
like China has been able to revive itself,
it’s due to its people’ deeply ingrained
qualities of tremendous industry, single
mindedness, stoicism, eagerness to learn and
shrewdness in business. From Singapore to
San Francisco, Chinese everywhere have these
traits.
Any global solution requires global policing
and enforcement, so enough, already, with
universal diktats, for in their names,
villages everywhere have been devastated. To
globalize you, they’ll make you
unrecognizable to yourself if not turn you
into a slave. It’s fine if you disagree, for
that only proves that humans tend to differ,
just as groups of people will always remain
distinctive. Born different, we also live
differently.
In The Chronicles of Bustos Domecq,
co-authored by Jorge Luis Borges and Adolfo
Bioy-Casares, there’s an account of the
“Brotherhood Movements.” Mankind, it is
explained, is made up of an infinity of
secret brotherhoods, and here I quote from
Norman Thomas di Giovanni’s translation,
“Some of these societies are more enduring
than others--for example, the society of
individuals sporting Catalan surnames, or
surnames that begin with the letter G.
Others, inversely, quickly fade--the society
of those who, at this very moment, in Brazil
or Africa, are inhaling the odor of jasmine
or, more culture-minded and studious,
reading a bus ticket.” These brotherhoods
are constantly in flux, since “the most
trifling act--striking a match or blowing it
out--expels us from one group and lodges us
in another.” With so many commingling
cliques, conflicts are inevitable, thus “the
person wielding a spoon is the adversary of
he who brandishes a fork, but very soon both
are at one over the use of the napkin, only
to split again over their Postum or Sanka.”
Just as in real life, small differences can
turn deadly, “the man getting off a train
will pull a switchblade on the man who
boards; the incognizant buyer of gumdrops
will try to strangle the master hand who
dispenses them.”
Telescoping both distance and time, oil have
shrunk the world and create a crude illusion
of a global hamlet. As the age of petroleum
winds down, however, the local will make a
fierce come back, and it may take a warband
just to reach the next village.
Since we’re not yet there, I had managed to
breach, all by my lonesome self, the
considerable defense of Bridesburg, and
sitting in Blue Moon, I could hear Matt
recount his recent troubles, “After I lost
110 lbs, my wife became paranoid. She
thought I was having an affair! She called
up Verizon for my phone record and picked
fights with me all the time. We’re getting a
divorce.”
Matt married at 18 and, after graduating
from Drexel with a business degree, managed
to find a job with a medical supplies
company. He bought a spacious home in
suburban Montgomery County, had three
daughters and everything was fine until he
decided to shed a few stones. As his
marriage imploded, Matt also lost his
$125,000 a year job through downsizing, so
now the local boy is back in the hood to
tend bar six nights a week at Blue Moon and
Ozzie’s.
“I remember exactly the day of our last
fight, because the Bears were playing on
Thursday Night Football. As I was just
getting ready to watch the game, the bitch
gave me shit again, and I was like, ‘Can’t I
just watch the damn game?!’ Since she
wouldn’t stop, I went to the bar to watch it
with my buddies. When I came home around
2:30, she was already asleep, so I got into
bed, thinking everything was OK, but as soon
as my wife got up in the morning, she
started again, and out of the blue, she
called 911 and said I had a gun to her
head!”
“She could have gotten you killed!”
“She sure could have. I walked outside in my
swimming trunks, because that’s how I sleep,
and when all the cop cars came, sirens
blaring, I just stood in my driveway and
raised my hands. There were about six cops
pointing guns at me!”
“Why was your wife so paranoid? Did you ever
cheat on her?”
“No.”
“Seriously?” I grinned.
“Absolutely!”
“Not once?”
“Never!” Then, “Since we separated, I’ve had
about fifty women, though, and I have a
girlfriend now.”
Let’s see, the Bears played the Giants on
Thursday, October 10th, 2013, and I talked
to Matt on January 28th, 2015, so what’s
that, a woman every five seconds? In any
case, with his American dream blown to
smithereens, Matt had to crawl back to his
native village because that’s his most
enduring support system. It’s archetypical,
this trajectory. Perched to my left,
56-year-old Tommy, the Italian guy, had
heard all this before, so paid no attention.
Deciding he wanted no more Coors Lite, Tommy
roared, “I’m going to go home now and beat
up my wife!”
“No, you’re not!” The Irish woman protested.
“Yes, I am. I’ve had enough!”
Talking to Matt, I found out we actually had
one mutual acquaintance. Also a bartender,
Melissa works in Kensington five days a
week, though business can be so dead, she
often has to close early. Thirty-years-old,
she’s divorced, lives with her mom and has
12-year-old twin sons. Melissa’s sister is
an officer in the Marines, and both of her
kids plan on joining the military. Last
Christmas, Melissa spent $700 on presents
for Mike and Doug, which I thought
astronomical, but she scowled, “No, it’s
not! I love my kids!” Melissa’s own father,
a Japanese junkie, was never around when she
grew up. Her mom’s Irish. Soon after Melissa
turned 21, her dad called to beg for money.
She's not pissed off at him. “I’ve gotten
over it. It's not worth it.” To prove that
she was really half Japanese, Melissa pulled
up a photo of herself at seven-years-old
wearing a kimono. In Bridesburg, people go
into a bar bathroom to do coke, she said,
whereas in Kensington, they shoot up, so
that’s another point in Bridesburg’s favor.
To protect herself, Melissa carries a large
folding knife, keeps a baseball bat behind
the bar and, thanks to frequent trips to the
gun range when she was dating a cop, can
surely zap anything moving from half a block
away. Seeing many photos of her kids always
looking so happy and calm, I said to
Melissa, “You must be a great mom.”
In every family, there are sweet, loving
individuals as well as nosy, domineering,
judgmental or backstabbing assholes, and so
it is with each village or neighborhood,
though in an urban setting, you can more
easily avoid just about any meaningful human
contact even as you’re swarmed by bodies and
voices. Though Americans evoke community
fairly often, their actions betray them.
Regularly moving away and breaking up, many
prefer, clearly, to be left alone.
Politically, this means that there’s not
even a unified 1% in opposition to the
status quo, much less 99%. (During our last
Presidential Election, the Green Party got
0.36% of the votes, and the Libertarian
0.99%.) Alone we eat, sleep and have sex,
and alone we will confront the machine. Some
of us, though, will save ourselves by
organizing or joining a warband. We few, we
dismal few, we band of brothers!
Linh Dinh
http://linhdinhphotos.blogspot.com
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