Postcard
from the End of America: Center City,
Philadelphia
By Linh Dinh
February 27, 2015 "ICH"
- Ah, to be in perfect health, good looking,
with all the possibilities in the world
spread out like an extravagant buffet,
begging for your attention! Should I become
a recording star, the next Obama (or
Hillary) or precocious billionaire? Maybe
I’ll marry a rich yet good looking one and
see the world before I turn 22? These days,
though, a young person’s daydream must meet
the sick reality of an economy sinking into
quicksand as weighted down by a bloated and
criminal government. War is constant though
distant, for now, and the media, dominated
by a fistful of puppeteers, purvey nothing
but lies and idiocy. “No Bra, No Problem:
Beyonce Wears a Completely Unbuttoned Shirt
to Lunch.” A government that ignores not
just international laws but its own legal
foundation is a rogue regime, but as long as
its abject subjects can’t peel their pupils
from FaceBook, boxscores and pixelated
genitals, all is good.
Though the most visible homeless are still
the old and middle-aged, they are becoming
younger and younger, and the other day, I
met 30-year-old
Stephanie sitting behind a plastic cup
with a sign, “HOMELESS AND HUNGRY / ANYTHING
HELPS / THANK YOU.” Born in New Jersey, she
was a waitress in Delran, Palmyra and
Cinnaminson, mostly white, working class
towns just across the river from
Philadelphia. Losing her apartment six
months ago, Stephanie had to come to Philly
to beg, so there she was in two pairs of
ugly pants and a scruffy, oversized men’s
jacket, her teeth chattering. It was 27
degrees. Behind Stephanie was a recycling
receptacle, but she herself, like so many
redundant workers, risks becoming
unrecyclable in our increasingly ruthless
society. How many Americans are thinking,
Maybe I’ll never get another job?
A block away, I ran into
Angel, aged 21 and homeless for three
weeks. Also from New Jersey, Angel came to
Philly two years ago and found work as a
bartender at Beau Monde, an upscale French
restaurant that's particularly popular among
the gay crowd. Above Beau Monde is L'etage,
a dance club with the same owner. With
business rather slow at Beau Monde, there
weren’t much tips, so Angel moved to Cantina
Los Caballitos. Starting as a hostess, she
eventually became one of four managers. Her
peak salary was $1,600 a month, but that's
before tax. With rents so high in Philly,
Angel opted to pay $350 for a room in a
house she shared with six people, "All of my
co-workers were paying around $500 a month,
but none of them had their own space. They
were all sharing."
I told Angel that twenty years ago, I had my
own apartment in Center City for just $350 a
month. Her eyes widened, “That’s
unbelievable!” The bank-inflated housing
bubble made housing unaffordable for many
poor people.
At Cantina Los Caballitos, workplace
politics was very complicated, Angel said,
because managers, bartenders and servers
slept with each other, “If a bartender was
sleeping with a server, a female manager
would get pissed off and try to get even.”
“Because she wanted to sleep with him?”
“Yeah, because she wanted to sleep with him.
There was a lot of corruption there,”
meaning sexual harassment or retaliation.
The most insidious abuse of power, however,
was how employees were discarded, “In the
bar and restaurant business, they will
overhire, then get rid of whoever they don’t
like, but without firing them. If they find
someone that they like more than you,
they’ll keep it hush hush and find ways to
push you out, and they will do this with any
position. It’s not just with a server or
kitchen worker, they will also do this with
a manager.
They do not want to give fired employees
unemployment. They will find any way of
going around paying people unemployment. So
if they want to do a mass firing, they’ll
cut people’s schedules. They’ll cut their
hours. For people they want to get rid of,
they’ll just give them one or two shifts a
week. This usually forces people to quit,
because they’re so broke. This way, they
don’t have to fire ten people and pay
unemployment.”
Long time employees also expect periodic
raises, so by forcing them out, owners save
money. It’s very passive aggressive, these
tactics, “They will give you the shittiest
shifts or they can cite you for every little
mistake, every little thing that you do that
they can make into an issue. What they did
to me was, they’d suddenly email me and say,
‘You’re not in charge of that anymore. Why
don’t you do this,’ then they’d give me
these very childish tasks, these very boring
tasks, and I was like, ‘Why am I doing this
if I’m the manager?’ They’d email me and
say, ‘Oh, you don’t have to come in today.’
They phrased it in such a way that you’re
like, am I being rewarded with some time
off? They kind of fucked with your head a
little bit, so you’d think, maybe I’m being
rewarded here, but at the end of the month,
you’re like, holy shit, I hardly worked at
all. So they push you off. Holy shit, you
know, they basically fired me, but they
didn’t do it outright, but only in the most
passive aggressive way.”
From talking to workers at other restaurants
and bars, Angel found out these nasty
practices are very common, “This is
definitely going on, but no one talks about
it.”
As long as there is a surfeit of workers,
these abuses will continue, I’m afraid, and
it will only get much worse, since the
economy isn’t getting any better. Among
Angel’s coworkers were people who had been
in law schools.
Next evening, I found Angel sitting across
the street from her previous spot. Since her
face was hidden by a furry hood, I could
only identify Angel by her large, heart
shaped glasses and the “god bless” on her
sign. With much better eyesight than mine,
she recognized me immediately and even
remembered my name. Across Broad Street was
the Bellevue-Stratford, and half a block
away, The Union Club. There, Philly’s blue
bloods congregate to play arcane board
games, kick the help down the stairs and
worship Satan, most likely.
Behind Angel was Robinson Luggage, an
upscale store that closed in 2013 after 29
years. Though in a prime spot, this space is
still unoccupied. When I was a housecleaner,
a woman I worked for took me there so I
could carry her new suitcases from store to
taxi, then from the taxi to her apartment,
two flights up. Never comfortable in a nice
anything, I stood outside as she shopped.
“Angel, why do they kick you out of the
shelter at 5AM? Why can’t they let you stay
until 8 or something? It doesn't make any
sense.”
“No, it doesn't,” she answered. “There is no
reason for it. It's still dark and very cold
out, but that's what they do, they wake us
up at 5AM.”
“And you're expected to be out by when?”
“5:10.”
“What about people who have trouble getting
up at that hour? Like the really old and
weak?”
“It doesn't matter. They come round and clap
in your face really loud and shout, 'It's
time to wake up! It's time to wake up!' It’s
the most annoying sound. There are three
counselors and they rush the shit out of
you. I swear, when I'm 80-years-old, if I
ever hear someone say the words, ‘It’s time
to wake up!’ I'm going to, like, have a
seizure, because just the memory of hearing
it over and over again, and being clapped
at, like, in my ears, it’s going to haunt me
forever. It’s terrible.”
Angel's shelter is Broad Street Ministry,
“Many of these shelters are closed down
churches. Each night, they’ll only let up to
75 people in. If it’s below freezing, if
it’s 20 below, I think they let up to 80 or
even 100 in. They can easily fit 100 people
in there. We all sleep on the floor and
there’s enough space. They can even fit 300
people in there. There are two floors, but
the second floor, the bigger one, is only
used for meal time. At 7 O’clock, they serve
dinner, and at 10PM, they let people in who
want to stay for the night.”
“So that’s two separate shifts?”
“Yes. I feel that a lot of normal people who
have jobs and places to stay, they go in
there for free meals as well, which is
really strange, so they reserve the second
floor just for the meals, instead of filling
it up with homeless people who just want
some place warm to sleep for the night.
You line up outside, and at 10 O’clock, they
open the door. There is a priority list.
Apparently, you have to have been going
there every night for at least six months to
get on the priority list, so most people
aren’t on this priority list. It’s mostly
elderly women that I see on the priority
list, and they line up at the right door.
That means that if there are 75 on the
priority list, the rest of the people
standing outside the left door will be
turned away. It doesn’t matter how early
they got there, or how many there are.”
“How often does this happen?”
“A lot! Sometimes I go there at 9:30, to try
get a good spot in line, and I still get
turned away at times. One lady who works
there, her name is Shelly, she’s really
nice. If she’s working, she’ll let you come
inside even if you’ve been turned away, and
she’ll tell everyone, ‘I can call outreach
to get you placed in another shelter,’ but
if you don’t want this to happen, you can go
back outside and figure it out, you know.
Other shelters around the city are
dangerous, though. Broad Street Ministry is
the only one that’s kind of clean, and kind
of safe. Although I did get my phone stolen
in there, there are no rapes. Broad Street
Ministry is also coed. Most of them only
allow just men, just women, or just women
with children. There are maybe two or three
shelters in the city that are coed. An issue
that a lot of people have, and that I have,
is that I’m out here with my boyfriend, my
fiance. A lot of people are out here with
their husbands. If outreach picks you up,
they will separate you. Normal people have
this misconception about outreach as this
great thing, but so many times, I’m just
sitting out here with my boyfriend, trying
to earn enough money to eat, but a police
officer or a normal person will call
outreach. You can think of outreach as the
homeless police. That’s basically what
they’re out here for. They’ll come up to you
and they’ll tell you, ‘You know, you can’t
sit here.’ If it’s below 32 degrees,
outreach will scour the city for every
homeless person and harass them. It’s called
Code Blue. Basically, you can be outside and
freeze to death, as long as you’re not
trying to make money. They’ll tell you, ‘Get
up, I can either take you to a shelter or
you can move, but you can’t sit here.’”
Granted, if it’s zero degree or so, Code
Blue can save lives, but 32 is nothing to
most homeless people. For the last two
weeks, it’s been well below freezing nearly
each day, so outreach had a pretext to sweep
many people like Angel off the streets even
if they’d rather be left alone, “If you go
to these shelters, you lose control. You
don’t control whether you end up in
Bumblefuck, North Philadelphia, where you
don’t want to be, and then you’ll also have
to figure out how to get back to Center City
or wherever you want to be, wherever you
feel safe. It’s not like they drop you off
in North Philly and give you five tokens
[for public transit], so it’s like, OK, I
can sleep inside and be warm in this shitty,
dingy shelter for a night, but in the
morning, how am I going to get back here?”
Shelters are often in the worst
neighborhoods, obviously, since middle or
upper class people, even super liberal ones,
don’t want poor folks, much less the
homeless, anywhere near them. Though they
may mouth fair wage, fair trade or even
absolute egalitarianism, they keep
themselves way clear of anyone with bad
teeth and worse shoes. Orwell wrote,
“Sometimes I look at a Socialist—the
intellectual, tract-writing type of
Socialist, with his pullover, his fuzzy
hair, and his Marxian quotation—and wonder
what the devil his motive really is. It is
often difficult to believe that it is a love
of anybody, especially of the working class,
from whom he is of all people the furthest
removed. The underlying motive of many
Socialists, I believe, is simply a
hypertrophied sense of order. The present
state of affairs offends them not because it
causes misery, still less because it makes
freedom impossible, but because it is
untidy; what they desire, basically, is to
reduce the world to something resembling a
chessboard.” Harsh statements like that have
made Orwell a perennial target for many
mojito sipping, armchair revolutionaries.
For the last year or so, I’ve been hounded
by a cyber heckler who’s determined to prove
that I’m a slumming bourgeoisie who actually
hate the people I talk to and write about.
Though I’ve tried to ignore this gentleman,
I must admit that it wounds, tickles and
saddens me to be so denounced. I don’t
consider myself above anyone and, short of
the homeless, I’m as poor or even more
pinched than most of the people I mingle
with, and it’s not like I enjoy having my
checks bounced or going to bed dressed like
I’m hiking up a mountain. Always scratching
lottery tickets, the empty pocketed dream of
becoming millionaires, and if I saw a few
bucks lying on the gum-blotched sidewalk,
I’d knock you out of the way, too. Finders,
keepers! Though I don’t festishize poverty
nor idealize brokeasses, I will continue to
grind out these Postcards that no one has
commissioned simply because I need to make
sense out of what’s happening to people who
resemble me in so many ways. Crammed into
this nauseating steerage, we exhale our
cheap beer breath on each other. Another
commenter even suggested I should depict
perfumy places like Nantucket, to balance
out the picture. Sure, buddy, I’ll book a
room there for a week, but first, I need to
get over my fidgeting over whether to order
a $1.12 cup of coffee from McDonald’s, and
that’s before tax.
OK, enough of that interruption. Sorry. I
asked Angel, “Do they feed you at these
shelters?”
“Not always, and if they do give you dinner,
then they won’t give you breakfast. It’s
usually just one meal.”
By this time, a young man had come to sit
down next to Angel. He was her boyfriend,
Seth, a 30-year-old from north Jersey. Like
Angel, Seth was a bartender, but in Jersey
City.
“How did you two meet?” I asked Seth.
“At her bar. I was a customer.”
“You could afford to drink at Cantina!”
“Yeah, man, I had money then.”
“Yeah, we had money,” Angel jumped in. “We
went out.”
“So did you lose your job in Jersey City?” I
asked Seth.
“No, I lost my apartment. I had my job, but
I was jumping around all over the place, and
it wasn’t working out. That’s why I came
down here.”
Unlike Angel, who spoke in a clear, emphatic
voice, Seth was murmuring, and he mostly
avoided eye contact. I don’t know if this is
just how Seth is, or being on the streets
for just more than a month had subdued this
tallish, trim man. He had a very oblique
presence. Unlike Angel, who spent two
semesters in college with an aim of studying
psychology, Seth had only finished high
school.
“With Seth, it happened in reverse,” Angel
explained. “He lost his housing, then his
job, whereas I lost my job, then my
apartment.”
Hoboken,
West New York and
Jersey City used to be affordable if you
wanted to be near NYC, but with the housing
bubble, they became yuppified. Opening in
2004, the 42-story Goldman Sachs Tower lords
over the Jersey City riverfront. The rise in
housing price is used as an indicator of the
economy’s health, but like so many other
things, what benefits the moneyed hurts the
poor. I’d love to see housing price collapse
completely so I can rent an apartment for
less than $500! The poor live in terror of
seeing their rents raised. A bump of just
$50 or so can mean skipped meals. Angel
spoke of the strangeness of seeing people
with jobs and apartments eating at her soup
kitchen, but that has become the new normal
for many poor Americans.
What’s meant by poor varies greatly from
country to country, obviously. Each year, I
get paid $200 to write an article
in Vietnamese for a California journal’s
Tet issue. Even people inside Vietnam read
Viet Bao. I translate a passage, “Poverty in
the US is much different from destitution in
Vietnam because in the US, even the poorest
have something to stuff into their mouths.
In Kensington, a neighborhood in North
Philly, more than 350 people eat dinner each
day at Saint Francis. After 5PM, you can see
them lined up outside the gate. Slovenly and
smelly or neatly dressed, they are the
homeless, the old, the young and mothers
pushing strollers. In the US, the biggest
worry is the monthly rent or mortgage.
Unable to pay, roughly 1.5 million people
must sleep in their cars or outside at least
a few days a year. Every American city has
hundreds if not thousands of homeless. In
some places, they take over an entire
neighborhood, as with San Francisco’s
Tenderloin or Los Angeles’ Skid Row.”
Orwell wrote that an Indian or Japanese
coolie “can live on rice and onions,” and in
Vietnam today, there are those whose normal
meal is just the cheapest rice fried up with
some MSG. In downtown Saigon, however, there
is a buffet that charges $130 a head, and
another that docks you a mere Ben Franklin.
[And no, my inquisitor, I haven’t crashed
into either one, so don’t get your boxers
all bunched up!] At each, you can feast on
tapas, prosciutto, lobsters and steaks, and
guess who frequent such haunts? Foreigners,
of course, but also the nouveau riche and
high ranking Communist Party officials.
Most “Communists,” from a police captain and
certain college professors on up, can get
fat on graft alone, but the most powerful
Party members also own multiple villas, send
their kids to study in London, Paris or
Berkeley, and vacation in Dubai. The most
opulent nightclubs in Saigon and Hanoi are
also owned by Communists, and the ones that
aren’t must pay off a raft of cynical,
cognac swilling Reds to stay in business.
These are the pigs depicted in Orwell’s
Animal Farm, but they weren’t born pigs,
however, but became pigs through
totalitarianism.
Which comes first, though, the power or the
pig? First of, there’s a latent pig inside
each of us, no matter how meek our current
station. This means anyone can morph into a
pig at any time. A lifelong sheep, dove,
butterfly or microbe can suddenly become a
pig on his death bed. With power, though, a
pig can balloon to any size and become even
larger than the earth itself, so the trick
is not to outlaw piggishness, since it is
merely a state of mind and always lurking,
but to limit the amount of power any
individual or entity may have over anything,
and that’s true of a media company as much
as a political party.
The point and attraction of having power is
to collect blings and kick asses, so if you
consolidate power in fewer hands, you will
increase suffering for a greater number of
people, but that’s exactly the world we’re
living in. Nationally, Washington has more
power over an American life than ever, and
internationally, this earth is divided into
a few major blocks dominated by a handful of
power centers. The windfalls of cheap oil
have cushioned and masked the true state of
our global oppression and inequity, however,
though millions have simply been blown to
bits in that ruthless scramble for cheap
oil.
With resource depletion of all kinds across
this blighted earth, war will likely rain on
your head, specifically, but eventually, the
power centers will lose their grip on the
local, though each remaining oasis, if
there’s any, will also be deprived of all
the miraculous perks we’ve come to expect.
No more plastic and polyester for you, dude,
and no more food that’s fertilized, farmed,
refrigerated and shipped via petroleum. No
more 500 channels. No more gadgets. Instead
of that nice, smooth ride down the endless
highway of prosperity, we will travel back
in time, if we’re very lucky.
I only believe in what’s fair and sane, and
have never identified myself as a
“progressive,” for in the name of progress,
so much destruction has been unleashed, and
so many innocents slaughtered. Fascists and
Communists declared themselves progressives,
and before them, European Colonialists
looted and killed in the name of progress.
During Mao’s Cultural Revolution, a
staggering number of ancient temples, tombs,
statues, books and other antiquities were
destroyed, but China’s core beliefs and
aesthetics could not be wiped out, and as
soon as the boot was lifted from the
people’s faces, they reverted to old
customs. Confucius was attacked as an
advocate and symbol of the slave owning
class, and yet, his tenets continued to
guide and inspire, so now, the Party has
rewritten history to claim that Communism is
but an extension of Confucianism, and all
over the world, it has set up Confucius
Institutes to represent China. In Russia,
traditional beliefs and values have also
made a fierce come back. To cherish one’s
heritage doesn’t mean that one must hate all
changes, obviously. As Putin said recently,
“our priorities are healthy families and a
healthy nation, the traditional values which
we inherited from our forefathers, combined
with a focus on the future, stability as a
vital condition of development and
progress.” It’s a question of balance.
The foundation of the United States isn’t
some guy caricatured in fortune cookies but
the Constitution, and now that it’s used to
wipe the asses of the president and all
members of congress several times a day,
each day, what’s left of this country,
really? Just about nothing is right, but
with so much vehement hatred between
liberals and conservatives, there is little
hope of forming a coalition to challenge our
common enemy. As we spit venom at each
other, the war profiteers and banking cartel
will continue to destroy our lives through
their unctuous lackeys inside the Beltway.
As rage builds up, however, there’s bound to
be lone wolf attacks against symbols of
power, and anticipating this, our rulers
have repeatedly warned against domestic
terrorism. When it finally happens, for real
and not as false flags, hundreds of
innocents will also be rounded up as the
population froth, bay and cheer.
Totalitarianism makes the stupid even more
imbecilic, the wise cynical and the brave
dead. The next chapter of our history has
already been written by our masters.
Linh Dinh
is the author of two books of stories, five
of poems, and a novel,
Love Like
Hate.
He’s tracking our deteriorating socialscape
through his frequently updated photo blog,
Postcards
from the End of America.
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