Postcard from the End of
America: Washington D.C.
By Linh Dinh
March 11, 2015 "ICH"
- For nearly four years, I lived just 20
miles from Washington, in Annandale, VA, and
I worked in D.C. for 9 months. From my home
in Philadelphia, I’ve also gone down to
Washington at least a hundred times, so this
metropolis should not be alien to me, and
yet no American city is more off putting,
more unwelcome, more impenetrable, and this,
in spite of its obvious physical
attractiveness, and here, I’m talking mostly
about its Northwest quadrant, the only part
visitors are familiar with, and where
commuters from Virginia and Maryland arrive
daily to work.
Even though it’s the world’s foremost
generator of mayhem, Washington is supremely
tranquil and orderly. With its wide streets,
unusually wide sidewalks, many leafy squares
and the vast, magnificent Mall, D.C. is the
ultimate garden city. It’s greener than
Portland, Oregon. It’s also a showcase for
culture. All of its publicly owned museums
don’t charge admissions, a unique
arrangement not just in the United States
but likely worldwide, thus the unwashed
masses can stream into the National Gallery
to admire the only da Vinci in the Americas,
15 Rembrandts, 12 Titians, four Vermeers and
two Albert Pinkham Ryders. A laid off
factory worker or brain damaged war veteran
can stuff his face with Bonnards, Degas,
Canalettos and Morandis, then pick his
crooked teeth with a Renoir or Cassatt. If
still not sated, he can hobble over to the
Hirshhorn, Freer or National Museum of
American Arts for more artistic nourishment
to heft up his mind and bevel down his rough
edges.
Washington museums feature almost no local
artists, however, for this is a profoundly
uncultured place, paradoxically. Nothing
germinates here but power. (The only D.C.
artists I can think of are Kenneth Noland
and Morris Louis, two innocuous painters
whose canvases are designed for corporate
lobbies.) Unlike in New York, Chicago, Los
Angeles, San Francisco or even Philadelphia,
there are no first rate galleries of
contemporary arts here. The politicians,
lawyers, lobbyists, military types and
spooks who dominate D.C. have loads of
money, but they are all culturally
conservative. Elites everywhere tend to be
that way, sure, but D.C. is a magnet
nonpareil for those who crave power and can
think of nothing else. They are here to gain
and barter influence, not to be distracted
or pestered by arts that haven’t been
curated, many times over, to be palatable to
the status quo. Even arts from many decades
ago can threaten and disturb, and that’s why
the caustic social commentaries of Max
Beckmann or Otto Dix, for example, are
safely kept in storage and rarely dragged
out for public contemplation. As this nation
normalizes legal sadism, Leon Golub’s images
of torture will not be on display. Here, why
don’t you ogle these colorful blobs of
nothing by some garbage painter!
Other capital cities have rich artistic
heritages, but not Washington, for it was
conceived only to be a center of power.
Built up almost entirely from scratch, it’s
the ideal American city, literally, with
just about every aspect of it carefully
calibrated, and almost nothing that’s
organic or spontaneous. Its oldest section,
Georgetown, was a major slave trading
center, as was Alexandria, just across the
Potomac. Providing quaintness, fine dining
and shopping, Georgetown and Alexandria give
tourists a much needed breather from the
oppressive monumentalism of downtown D.C.
After its founding, Washington itself became
a major slave trading center, and one must
remember that Washington, the president,
inherited ten slaves at age eleven, had 50
slaves before he married Martha, and owned
123 slaves when he died. (Martha and her
children from another marriage had 195 more
slaves.) Ben Franklin, by contrast, never
owned more than a handful, so it was much
less painful for him to release his two
slaves, and he only did this at age 79,
three years before his death. For much of
his life, Franklin only objected to slavery
because it was bad, well, for white people,
for it made them arrogant and lazy, he
claimed. Plus, it wasn’t too wise an
investment, and to bring resentful blacks
into your household is a pretty stupid idea,
Franklin pointed out, and here he was
thinking of the domestic slaves common in
the North, not the platoons of field hands
that an oligarch like George Washington
could whip into inhuman productivity in the
South.
In 1987, I worked as a looseleaf filer in
Washington. I had just quit college and was
sleeping on my aunt’s living room’s floor in
Annandale. My daily task was to file
thousands of pages into binders in law
libraries. With a coworker, I would walk
from law firm to law firm, and sometimes
take the Metro to go as far out as Bethesda,
Maryland. Before this job, I didn’t even
know that many of these 13-story buildings
in downtown were law offices. Since no
building in Washington can be higher than
the Capitol, the tallest all have 13 floors.
Due to superstition, however, many elevators
display a “14” button after “12.” Washington
Circle, Dupont Plaza, Logan Circle, Mount
Vernon Square and the White House do make an
inverted pentagram, but that evilness, if
you believe in such things, was part of the
original plan, and has long been enshrined
by concrete, asphalt and tradition.
My job was very low paying yet exact, and we
had to work at breakneck speed. Wearing
rubber finger grips, we had to zero in on
thousands of tiny numbers to make sure no
page was inserted wrongly. Rushing, I ran
into a glass partition once, but the
secretaries, paralegals and lawyers near me
did not laugh. For months, a law librarian
kept calling me “Kim,” and I never bothered
to correct him. I had no time to lose. It
didn’t matter. We were just rushing in and
out and not a part of any firm. Though at
the very bottom of the legal hierarchy,
looseleaf filers still had to look somewhat
professional, and so I bought five polyester
dress shirts and four pairs of old man’s
pants from Sym’s, the discount clothing
store.
Hard as I tried, though, mistakes were
inevitable, for no man is a machine. After
one screw up, my supervisor enunciated to
me, “Here at Bartleby Temp, we don’t
tolerate mediocrity,” and she said the last
word so carefully, drawing out each
syllable, one might think she had just
learnt it herself. The name of the agency is
made up, by the way, for I can no longer
remember it. What I do recall, however, is a
coworker’s dazed face as he emerged from a
book stack. Of course, I had to be equally
stultified. Our eyes had to be equally
glazed.
After work, I socialized with a couple of
guys, but there was no place for us to go,
really, not on our budget. Unlike in
Philadelphia, there were no corner bars
where regular joes in goofy T-shirts and
worn baseball caps could whoop it up. In
downtown D.C., the only taverns catered to
the executive types, and the city has become
even more exclusive since. With a more
bloated federal government, Washington is
even richer now, even as the rest of the
country become destitute. Just about every
expensive house, car, tie, loafer, call
girl, gigolo and martini in D.C. is being
paid for, one way or another, by joe
sixpacks from across this nation. Elected
officials come here to feast on illicit
money, for you must be daft to assume
American graft is limited to campaign
contributions. They legalize some corruption
to trick you into thinking that’s all there
is. In any case, the only other American
oasis that’s similarly thriving is
Manhattan, for that’s where our
banksters and prestitutes dwell.
Everybody else is going to hell.
As a looseleaf filer, I belonged to that
servant class in D.C. that helped it to
function without knowing hardly anything
about it, and there was absolutely no
hobnobbing with the higher ups, for with
their conservative haircut, perfect teeth,
gym finessed body and expensive, carefully
coordinated outfits, not to mention a
confident, upright bearing and honking
voice, I’m not kidding, they knew exactly
who they were and who they cared to
associate with.
One of my coworkers was a tall, black guy
who was having the time of his life,
however. During lunch, I asked Bill what he
did that weekend, and the mellow, soft
spoken man closed his eyes and sighed, “I
had sex. Lots of it. There are so many good
looking guys here. They must be busing them
in. I’ve never had so much sex in my life.
I’m getting a little tired of it, actually.”
Hearing that, I felt anguished and
embarrassed, for I had gotten nothing in
months, but looking defeated is no way to
hook up with any woman, and I had never felt
worse in my life. I was socially displaced.
Once, a female coworker, a native of
Ethiopia, freaked out at a reception desk
because she felt disrespected, but I was
right there and saw nothing. I don’t blame
her, though, not at all, for it was all too
easy to feel intimidated or paranoid. Like
much of Northwest D.C., these swank law
firms are designed to exude authority.
Earlier this month, I was in D.C. for a day
and decided to check out Arlington, just
across the Potomac from Georgetown. As a
teenager, I had gone there to watch kung fu
movies, and during my filing clerk days, I’d
eaten at a Vietnamese restaurant near the
courthouse. It was a rather seedy, five
table affair at the back of a grocery store.
Its wallpaper showed a snow-capped mountain
and waterfall. Pointing to it, a middle-aged
white guy shouted, “Don’t drink the water!”
He looked as if he was about to sob. The
other eaters ignored him. Smiling, the
waiter informed me in Vietnamese, “He comes
here all the time. He fought.”
Arlington used to have these rather grim
apartment buildings, cheap motels and the
businesses that catered to such residents,
but now it is all spiffed up and gentrified.
All the tacky shops on Wilson Boulevard are
gone. Its funk purged away, Arlington has
become as sterile as downtown D.C. The same
process has been repeated all over the area.
The smug bubble has enlarged itself. In
downtown, there was Scholl’s Colonial
Cafeteria at 20th and K, and in the 80’s I’d
go there for its cheap prices and humble
atmosphere. Once I even took Bill, the sex
machine. At Scholl’s, the emphasis was on
comfort food, with meat loafs, breaded fish,
overcooked spaghetti, soft green beans, soft
carrots and mushy spinach, and an assortment
of pies, that kind of stuff. With its many
elderly diners, Scholl’s had to be mindful
of their false teeth and receding gums, not
too mention their mournful and exhausted
jaws. Anything too hard, such as fresh piece
of celery, might just lay them out on the
floor. Scholl’s was so cheap, even the
homeless ate there. At each table, there was
a prayer card and on the walls, framed
photos of the Pope. Most of the servers
appeared to be immigrants from Central
America. In the 40’s, Scholl’s was one of
the first D.C. eateries to serve whites and
blacks equally. Alas, Scholl’s is no more,
and it was finally put of business by the
dip in tourism after September 11th of 2001.
Even without that incident, I don’t think it
would survive to this day anyway.
Seeing next to nothing in Arlington, I got
on the Metro and headed to Southeast
Washington. Crossing the Anacostia River,
you enter another D.C. altogether. Almost
everyone here is black, and Washington
itself is still half black. Just a few
decades ago, it was 70% black, however. Back
then, Washington had the highest murder rate
in the entire country, and its basketball
team was called, appropriately enough, The
Bullets. D.C. hoopsters have been
rechristianed The Wizards, but a more
appropriate name would be The Missiles or
The Drones, methinks.
Frederick Douglass spent 18 years in
Anacostia, and this was also where
disgruntled WWI veterans and their families
set up a shanty town as they demanded to be
paid, early, their promised bonuses. This
was during the height of the Depression and
they were starving. Responding to their
pitiful pleas, the federal government sent
in General McArthur with troops, cops and
six tanks to chase them all out and burn
down their encampment. During various
clashes around D.C., four protesters were
killed and over a thousand wounded. On the
government side, 69 cops were hurt.
One must remember that Washington itself was
founded after the U.S. government had
stiffed its own soldiers even before the War
of Independence, its very first war, was
over. In 1783, roughly 500 troops besieged
Congress, then based in Philadelphia, to
demand to be paid. A bunch of weasels even
then, the Congressmen delegated youngish
Alexander Hamilton to schmooze and jive with
the angry soldiers. Just give us some time
to hash this out, he begged them, but these
Congressmen then tried to arrange for troops
to come in to snuff out the mutiny. Had they
succeeded, you would have American soldiers
firing on American soldiers, which was
exactly what happened later in D.C. Leery of
more incidents like this, the weasels
slithered South to erect their ideal city.
I walked a couple miles through Anacostia
and saw a handful of take out eateries
selling Chinese, chicken or fried fish. One
was named “Chicken, Beans
and Bones.” Geez, I wonder how much they
charge for a whole skeleton? I poked my head
into a Korean-owned
dry cleaner and noticed the bulletproof
plexiglass had vertical slits just wide
enough for articles of clothing to be handed
in or out. I passed Union Town Tavern, which
looked surprisingly chichi for this rather
dismal hood. It turns out they have new
owners, for the previous is in the slammer
for possessing 65 kilograms of cocaine.
That’s enough to coat several Christmas
plays! Enterprising Natasha Dasher was just
36 at the time of her arrest. Though
Anacostia has more than 50,000 people, Union
Town is its only full service restaurant or
sit down bar. Folks here just go to the
liquor store for a tall can or 40-ounce
bottle.
Many of the businesses on Martin Luther King
Boulevard, Anacostia’s main drag, had small
posters commemorating the late
Marion Barry, a popular black mayor who
was busted for smoking crack. Jailed for
just six months, Barry still managed to make
the news when he was charged with having a
woman sucking him in the prison waiting
room. After release, Barry was elected to
City Council, then became mayor again. A
folk hero, at least to D.C.’s black
community, Barry is the only Washington
mayor to serve four terms, or 16 years,
doubling his nearest rivals, so he must have
done some things right.
Historically, blacks gravitated towards
Washington because federal hiring practices
were much less discriminatory than in the
private sector, then when Affirmative Action
kicked in, blacks became favored in getting
not just government jobs, but contracts, and
there are more of those in D.C. than
anywhere else. (A side consequence of such
wrong headed racial redress is that a
recently arrived tycoon from Nigeria or,
hell, even China, can now be certified as a
minority contractor, and the requirement
that one must be at least 25% non-white also
sends many whites to dig up their Cherokee,
Sioux or Navajo ancestors.) With number came
political power, but local politics or
demographics have no influence on what
really runs D.C., for here is the dark, evil
heart of an empire with an unprecedented
global reach. In spite of our current,
half-black President, blacks are the tiniest
cogs of this sinister machinery, but so are
most of us. Blacks may be hired as cops and
firemen, but they can’t touch the biggest
criminals and pyromaniacs that huddle daily
on Capitol Hill.
In any case, the black underclass that
perform menial tasks downtown live in
neighborhoods like Anacostia. They don’t
drink in downtown bars either, and I doubt
many of them go to the museums, not unless
they work there. In 1990, there was an
Albert Pinkham Ryder retrospective at the
National Museum of American Arts, which is
off the Mall and not often visited. Having
all of these galleries practically to
myself, I kept studying a magnificent Ryder
that had not just one but four cows.
Squinting, I kept moving closer, then back,
closer, then back, and often I had to tilt
my head a certain way to avoid the glint off
Ryder’s thickly layered linseed oil. After
nearly a century, hairline cracks spider
webbed across the canvas. If man could live
off minutely modulated ultramarine blue,
burnt sienna and olive green, I’d have
ballooned to about 600 pounds, but that was
then. I’ve stopped going to museums.
Everywhere I go now, I simply roam the
streets.
“Why are you taking so long to look at
that?” It was the security guard, a smiling
black lady of about 32.
“Um, it’s very rare to see all of this guy’s
paintings in one place. I may never get a
chance to look at this painting again. I
came all the way down from Philadelphia to
see this.”
“That’s a painting?”
“What do you mean?”
“You said painting. That’s a painting?”
“Uh, yes, it’s an oil painting.”
“I thought is was just some picture.”
“No, no, this is an oil painting, and it’s
old too. There’s only one of this.”
“Really?!”
“Yeah, and this guy is good. He’s a very
good artist.”
“Listen, come here,” and she led me to a
small fountain that had been set up just for
this exhibit. In the small pool were four
fish.
“See that one,” she continued. “Can you see
that his colors are slightly different than
the others?”
“Now that you’ve said it, yeah, I do see it.
He looks a little bit different than the
other three fish.”
“You damn right he does!” she laughed, “and
those fish know it too, and that’s why
they’ve been attacking him all day long.”
“Oh, man.”
“Yeah, I have to do something about this.
Soon as my shift is over, I’ll tell them to
get that fish out of here. I don’t want to
see him dead.”
“It’s great you noticed that.”
“How can I not notice it? I stand right here
all day!”
Indifferent to pictures on walls, that lady
was sensitive to many other things and
realms, and the fish drama she saw was, to
her, an all-too-familiar allegory. Most of
us, though, can only bend our neck a certain
way, so will only notice what we’re
determined to see.
It was dark by the time I headed to Union
Station, but on the way there, I happened to
catch a group of
people, mostly
Jews,
protesting
Netanyahu.
Bibi was inside the Convention Center to
give a speech to the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee. Though he was schedule to
address Congress the next day, many of our
Senators and Congressmen also showed up for
this event to earn extra asskissing points.
Protesters are a regular feature of D.C. and
the locals barely see them. In front of the
White House, sometimes you see two unrelated
protests marching within sight of each
other. Oddballs also appear, such as a man
who protested supermarket coupons. D.C.’s
most unusual protester, however, is
Concepcion
Picciotto, for she’s been living in a
tiny
tent, directly across from the White
House, for 34 years now. Born in 1945, this
diminutive native of Spain’s main targets
are the innumerable war crimes of the United
States and Israel, which she calls Israhell.
Picciotto is the first, last and ultimate
Occupier.
A much more recent addition to the
streetscape just outside 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue is Yusef, a beefy, red bearded Muslim
with “NO GOD EXCEPT ALLAH MUHAMMED A
MESSENGER ALLAH”
painted in white on the back of his
black polyester coat. In
2011, I had seen him in a sort of
flasher’s overcoat and no visible pants,
but earlier this day, he had on a beige
pair, though with the legs cut off to expose
his ankles.
Yusef isn’t objecting to American atrocities
against Muslims, but the various deviations,
according to him, from true Islam. Thus, his
denunciations of vaccines, tunnels (because
they block sunlight), movies, television,
“picture makers” (which I take to mean
painters and photographers) and even
electricity. This didn’t prevent him from
asking me, in accented English, what time it
was. As we talked, a middle-aged, female
tourist pushing a stroller glared at him,
but when I inquired if people had given him
trouble, Yusef merely said, “I’d rather not
talk about it.”
Even more than Concepcion Picciotto,
Washington’s many homeless are its most
damning and enduring protesters against this
city’s parasitic affluence, smug criminality
and vapid culture of faux refinement.
Numbering more than 7,000 as of May 2014,
very few beg openly, thanks to D.C.’s severe
law against panhandling, but they are
visible
enough even during
the
day. To escape the cold wind, some sit
or sleep, all wrapped up, in the entrance of
the McPherson Square Metro Station, just
three blocks from the White House. Keeping
reasonably inconspicuous, they rest at the
many
squares and
parks.
At night, though, when the daytripping
tourists and commuting workers are all gone,
they
emerge to claim their
sleeping spots all over downtown,
including up and down Pennsylvania
Avenue, the capital’s grand boulevard.
They lie on church steps, grass strips, in
doorways and behind hedges, some with
crutches or a wheelchair next to them.
Rolled up in whatever will hold body heat,
including gray packing blankets, they curl
up within sight of the Smithsonian
museums and the
Capitol. Inside the National Gallery,
there’s Hieronymus Bosch. Outside, there’s
this!
At Union Station, this nation’s most regal
train and bus depot, they lie on the
circular stone bench around the handsome
fountain outside, while during the day,
they wander in to embarrass travelers with
their grimy, smelly clothes and sometimes
delirious monologs. They don’t pull wheeled
luggage but, limping in, cradle trash bags
with both arms. Like zombies, hoboes or war
refugees, they peer into shops with names
like Jois Fragrance, L’Occitante en Provence
and Oynce. Signs on Union Station’s large,
platform like seats, “THANK YOU FOR NOT
RECLINING.”
Wearing a leopard print dress, with much of
her face covered by a cappuccino-colored
shawl, a slim black woman in her late 40’s
rocked back and forth as she unleashed an
incontinent stream of invectives against
unseen foes. Her hands could not be more
beautiful. She reeked of urine. “You
betrayed me, you betrayed God, you betrayed
this government. That’s not the right
protocol! You can’t treat people like that.
Turn in your badge, you’re a threat to
national security! I’m going to have a heart
attack if you don’t do so by morning. The
heart has to be right place for socialism!
You think you can just kill everybody but
you yourself will be bombed! You’re nothing
but a traitorous person. There’s no effort
or sincerity, there’s just treason! You’re
all bad people here. You ain’t got no
evidence. You can’t do that to me! It’s
perjury you committed. I command you to turn
in your badge. We’re going to meet in
court!” Every five or ten seconds, she
punctuated her litany with a five-note riff
of scatting, “Toot too too too too.”
Washington was designed to be a perfect
square, and it was until Alexandria broke
away. When the Interstates were built, “The
Beltway” was added to encircle D.C. What you
have, then, is a broken square surrounded by
a near perfect circle. Flying in, most
visitors land at Dulles or Ronald Reagan
airports, so from their rented car or hotel
shuttle, all they will see coming in is an
elegantly manicured, dignified and affluent
landscape. In D.C. itself, they will be
lavished with magnificent monuments and
arts, much of it free of charge, and just
about every turn of the neck is rewarded
with a grand vista. If this is their only
exposure to the United States, then this
country is truly a utopia of handsome,
well-dressed people who cherish arts, fine
dining and well made cocktails. The grit,
squalor and menace of Washington are well
off the beaten tracks and hardly exist,
really, compared to other American cities,
and even during its bloodiest years, the
bullets didn’t fly in downtown D.C. As for
the homeless, they’re shooed away from
tourist attractions and don’t really assert
their presence until nightfall.
All capitals strive to be showcases, sure,
but very few, or perhaps none, is as
successful at blocking out its nation’s true
ugliness and failures. This sleight of hand,
though, also works on many of the residents
of this near perfect square inside a near
perfect circle. The hell they’ve created
keeps seeping in, however, and soon enough,
it will overwhelm, if not explode, this
Potemkin village of a city. This smug bubble
will burst.
Addendum: Returning from D.C. a week
ago, I meant to start this Postcard right
away, but couldn’t, since my computer was
struck by a bunch of very nasty viruses, and
this happened as I was in the middle of
uploading photos of
AIPAC
members
leaving the Convention Center after
Netanyahu’s speech. While wasting five days
trying to fix my computer, and it’s only
half functional as of this writing, I
processed and posted photos from my laptop,
but this too was struck with a virus. This
second attack was quickly neutralized,
however. In all my years of using computers,
I’ve never had two infected with viruses
within the same week, and I don’t claim to
know what happened exactly, but it was
surely a reminder that I, like everybody
else these days, am completely dependent on
various systems that can be cut off at any
time, for any reason. Each of us can have
our computer, phone, bank card or even car
shut down at any moment, and don’t think it
won’t happen to at least some of us in the
future. What if, suddenly, you won’t be able
to withdraw any money, or email or call
anyone? Very meekly, we’ve already accepted
that we can be prevented from flying without
any explanation. As for viruses, these
aren’t just used by governments as weapons
against each other, but also as a way to
punish, or at least warn, individuals.
Linh Dinh
is tracking our deteriorating social scape
through his frequently updated photo blog,
Postcards from the End of America .
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