Story Archives 2011

DEFENDING AMERIKKKAN DREAM ILLUSIONS AND THE POOR? DO DI-FI, KAMALA HARRIS AND THE CALIFORNIA DEMOWHATZITZ PARTY GET IT?

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Redbeardedguy
Original Body

Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), aka "DiFi", wants California Demowhatzitz to do battle with Republicans and Tea Baggers to "defend the American Dream", the poor, et al. California Attorney General Kamala Harris jumped up and down at the same state party event where DiFi spoke, all happy that Demowhatzitz dominate California's important state offices. She really likes Governor Jerry Brown.

My article about San Francisco and Vallejo ("Government Indifference") left out a recent report in the local news media that the Black and White populations of Oakland are roughly equal after a decade of Black citizenry shrinkage. Why the shrinkage? Government is not a Black person's best friend!

Incompetence, indifference, both, whatever you want to call it, nobody in Oakland did anything substantial to make people feel welcome. Add to that Oscar Grant, other high profile Po'Lice murders, the Po'Lice themselves acting as fear mongers--worried that there aren't enough of them to "protect and serve", when the only people they are meant to protect live in the Oakland Hills.

Who could blame any non-White person for non-enthusiasm for Oakland?

Jerry Brown, the new Governor, earned my nickname "Jerry the Gentrifier of Oakland". Government incompetence, indifference, or unknown status of mentality--I mean, is he Moonbeam or is he a hole in the ozone layer puttin' a smackdown on poor people?

Don't get me wrong, I hope the Demowhatzitz DO SOMETHING, but I have news for DiFi: the so-called American Dream has been under attack at least since Ronnie Raygun Went To Washington. Reagan's War On Poverty had a different flavor altogether than the one L.B.J. dealt with in the 1960's. After Contracts With America, the Bill Clinton Welfare Whammy, and everything that has happened since, one wonders where DiFi has been?

What special rock has she been living under all these years?

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"The Governator": A Review For The Revolution

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Redbeardedguy
Original Body

It is no secret ex-California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has a (distinctly low-brow) sense of humor, but who knew he'd like his it's-a'good-and-a-bad-thing "Governator" nickname so much?

A television cartoon of the same name is to be made (with scripts written by Marvel Comics legend Stan Lee...tell me it ain't so Stan!), to focus on Schwarzenegger's real political life history and to make his post-politics life a superhero fantasy.  Conan the Batman anyone?

There is precedent for this, after all "professional wrestler" Hulk Hogan had a cartoon on tv for two seasons plus a re-run season.  But when you think about such things, what stands out?  Batman, Batman Beyond, Spiderman, Superman, The Fantastic Four, the X-Men (several versions, including a Japanese manga-style tv cartoon), for starters. Then there are the full-movie-length animes like AKIRA, PRINCESS MONONOKE, and others (some that I've seen, like the latter two named...) that get a lot more respect than Hulk Hogan or The Governator ever will.

Superhero comic books, cartoons, movies and series do the same thing tv cop shows do--reinforce the status quo and provide an attractive fantasy of evil beaten, justice triumphant night after night, week after week (or month after month if we're talking 48 pages of four-color goodness...).

It's a good thing super powers are fantasy--I wouldn't be helping out the Avengers or Fantastic Four.

Mass market comic and tv cartoon outfits have never allowed their heroes or villains to change the world permanently.  If you thought the 50's (and beyond) anti-comic book campaigns, and the even harsher criticisms of video games were bad, you ain't seen bad!  Comic books haven't changed much--cellphones, the internet, and video games did generate significant alterations in how many people live their lives and interact with other folks.

Comic book big boys, like Stan Lee, HAVE done messaging about social causes.  That is likely the most powerful impulse driving "The Governator" project.  The belief that there's a Vast Liberal-Bias Conspiracy to corrupt adults and children alike is a favorite screed of conservatives--and we have our own take on who is doing the corrupting and who is the target.

Apparently European television entertainment marketers want "The Governator" (Amerikkkan rights to it haven't been sold yet), though at least one media expert across the pond opined that "the market" would rather see Schwarzenegger do a tv series or action movie. 

For some "The Governator" may be fun to watch.  For me, it would be a big WTF!  The guy who attacked poor single mamaz on welfare over and over gets a cartoon celebrating that?  No thank you.  I'd rather read a "Wild Cards" novel.  SUICIDE KINGS is about super-human child soldiers in Africa.  Message?  Yes.  Obnoxious?  No.  Powerful? Yes.  Beat that Governator!

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A BUNCH OF CROWS SCREAMING BLOODY MURDER (OF OSAMA BIN LADIN)

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Redbeardedguy
Original Body

A gang of crows woke me up, screaming the news that Osama bin Ladin is dead.

"Ah! Ah! Ah! The SEALS got that bad boy!"

I yelled out my window: "Shut Up! I'm tryin' to sleep!"

"Ah! Ah! Why such a grouch!?!" one of them shrieked on my window ledge. It cocked it's head left and right, looking like an anorexic Groucho Marx (and he was a thin dude too...) getting ready to put a verbal smack-down on and I was just the right doodyhead to take the medicine.

"Why should I care about some dead rich Arab 10,000 miles away?" I asked, "do I get some of his money? I'm still on Welfare. Lots of folks I know are too. I could use it..."

"Ah! Ah! Ask a question, get an answer!" the crow, you know, said it loud: "NO! YOU! DON'T!"

"That's what I thought", I muttered, sticking ear thingies in as deep as they would go. I started playing Paradise Jahfree Love's "I Love Everything About You...But You!"

I do want the truth to wake me up. It's better than coffee or energy drinks. I didn't get the crows' names. I knew they'd be back to tell me more.

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Osama bin Ladin is dead?

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Redbeardedguy
Original Body

Osama bin Ladin is dead?

Osama bin Ladin is dead,
my next door neighbor
asks if I am red
(communist)

I am just telling it
like it is, I say,
suggesting he is too
easily led
(and, no, I am some
sort of anarchist, I
say, in the deep
privacy of my head)

Foreclosures, poverty,
hunger, slavery, war,
rape, oil theft, and
more, you see--
why should Osama
bin Ladin's death
mean much to me?

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RYME- Revolutionary Youth Media Education

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

RYME- Revolutionary Youth Media Education for youth 12-19 years old.

The RYME program includes radio, video and on-line journalism (blog) production as well as poetry, performance and theatre, organizing and consciousness on poverty, racism, migration, police brutality and liberation

All classes are taught bi-lingually and include lunch

Full scholarship and stipends offerred to low-income youth.

Program begins June 7th-Space is limited. Registration deadline is May 15th.

Applications can be downloaded here

For more information contact us by email at deeandtny@poormagazine.org

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Ocama…. Ocama – Ocama.. Pachamama (Listen, Listen, Listen Mother Earth)

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

 

Ocama…. Ocama – Ocama.. Pachamama

 

For all Taino of Borike'n, Haiti, Dominican Republic and Beyond

 

Ocama… mama

 

Ripped of skin

Blood and kin

 

Spirits and medicine

Called a sin

By kkkolonizers with guns and poison

 

Land and elders destroyed

Then told that we had met our end

 

Filled with love for Creator

And Pachamama

Innocent to kkkolonizers tricks and drama

 

Hands, Songs and spirits

Stolen and cut

Removed, displaced and shut

 

Our medicine is love

Which is why we could be shoved and kicked and

Hated and then missed

 

Until our ancestors moved through us – their descendents

To Resist the Anthro-pologists Wrong-ness

The philanthro-pimped funded theft of gangsters

With papers defining them as legitimate

 

Putting our stolen art and souls in ornate prisons named

After alien beings like

De Young and Carnegie

 

It is time Taino to take the herstory back

Wayyy back

So we can deconstruct the un-justice

And reconstruct our liberation based in

Love

 

Ocama mama….

 

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For Mama Solteras (Single Mamas) in poverty and my Mama Dee...

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Thank-u mama(s)
fo feeding me healthy to run fast and always see clear

without any money near

 

for dreaming always of mo betta even tho

u were filled wit so much sorrow

 

for living through evictions and endless poverty

and never giving up the dedication

to something u saw in me

 

fo saving me from pedophile glances

and teaching me all your ritmo and carrying my soul  through so many dances

 

for loving me no matter what

and yet never letting me give up

for living alone cuz u were always scared

as the daughter of another mama who barely dared to speak

up when u were being abused - used -like she wanted you to lose

"she wanted me to die , lisa, you used to say

and you were right -

 

my confused and abused grandmother was filled with shame at her mixed race daughter born out of wedlock

hoped she wouldnt make it- but she did and so did i

 

dear mama- tupac was right - dont know how u did what u did

and again here i am

with a boy who hasn't suffered like u or me had - but he has your deep and full heart and so much love

 

tears of the deepest river flow down my cheek as i try to hold your sorrow

it is sometimes way too deep

but every mama's day from turtle island, Borik'n to Mexico

 

I call out your name at the altar-into the sky - at the moon-and into yemoja's waves

 

te amo mama- i love u mama and i always will and i dream that u are finally feeling better on your spirit ride

than you ever did in  this loca vida/crazy lyfe

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Estamos Hasta La Madre/ We are Sick Of It

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Muteado
Original Body

For English Scroll Down

"Ya Estamos Hasta La Madre"

El primero de Mayo, donde diferentes protestas y demostraciones se llevaron acabo en Los Estados Unidos de America contra las deportaciones y la criminilizacion de los migrantes indocumentados y a favor de los Derechos de los trabajadores . Hubo un incidente donde un grupo de protestantes que organizaron una protesta contra el partido Democrata, no dejo que Dolores Huerta defendiera y hablara sobre que el enemigo son los Republicanos y no el partido Democrata, las personas empezaron a Gritar "Vendida" y "Obama escucha estamos en la Lucha", dando entender que el partido Democrata es parte del problema y no la solucion. En una corta investigacion, de lo que a hecho la administracion de Oabama en su tiempo en la casa Blanca sobre la inmigracion... - 400,000 "Migrantes indocumentados" han sido deportados cada 12 meses. -ICE a deportado 279,035 migrantes en 2010 comparado a 254,763 que ban este ano entrante. -En este momento hay mas de 1,000 deportaciones al dia. Es dificil darle a entender al pueblo "migrante indocumentado" de que apoye a los Democratas, viendo y viviendo la realidad en la que la gente vive, deportaciones, familias separadas, que te quiten el carro por no tener lincencia de conducir, es dificil entender esto si no haz vivido en carne propia, no importa cuantas historias te han contado o haz leido. "El pueblo indocumentado esta cansado de promesas que se las lleva el viento"

En conversaciones que he tenido con gente "indocumentada" tienen el mismo sentimiento de perder la fe y esperanza de la gente que supuestamente esta para luchar por derechos de los migrantes. Yo entiendo mucha de la fustracion de los paisanos por la realidad que vivimos, y entiendo que si NO vivieramos esta vida de Perros no actuarimos como perros.

Engles Sigue

"We are sick of it".  Scores of protests and demonstrations took place throughout the United States on May 1st denouncing  the deportation and criminalization of undocumented migrants and to support the rights of workers.  One such protest was organized to speak out against the democratic party's immigration policies.  Farm Labor activist/organizer Dolores Huerta attempted to speak.  "The enemy are the Republicans and not the Democrats" said Huerta.  The crowd responded by shouting "sell out" and "Obama, we are in the struggle", in an attempt to articulate the sentiment that the  "Democrats are part of the problem, not the solution".  

An analysis of the Obama administration's immigration policy shows the following: 400,000 "undocumented Migrants" are deported every year.  ICE(Immigration and Customs Enforcement) has deported 279,035 immigrants in 2010 compared to 254,763 at this time last year.  There are over 1,000 deportations a day in the United States. It is difficult to convince "Undocumented migrants" to support the Democrats while living in fear of deportations, separated families and having your vehicle impounded for not having a driver license.  If you have not experienced this first hand, no matter how many stories people have told you or what you have read, you have no idea what it feels like. The "undocumented" are tired of promises that are gone with the wind.

In conversations I have had with "undocumented" paisanos, the overriding feeling is that of a community that is losing faith in the people who supposedly struggle for migrants rights. I do understand the frustration of the Paisanos and the reality they live. I understand the frustration of being treated less than human. 

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Stars and Gripes: Pacquiao vs. Mosley

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Stars and Gripes: Thoughts on Pacquiao vs. Mosley

 

Seeing this past weekend’s world title fight between WBO welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao and Shane Mosley brought to mind a quote I’d read somewhere: “The bell that tolls for all in boxing belongs to a cash register”.  After reading about and watching commercials for the fight, I gave my tithe to the church of pugilism (AKA the local cable company)—54 dollars and change—hard earned money from my Uncle Tom job as a doorman at an upscale (when I speak of upscale, I speak of the residents) apartment complex. 

 I wanted to watch Pacquiao because I have neglected him.  He is Pilipino, I am Pilipino-American and have not followed his career—a career that can only be described as brilliant.  My gripe is that the quality of the sport has receded due to a dearth of great fighters.   Fighters I watched growing up—Ali, Frazier, Arguello, Duran, Monzon, Hagler, Leonard, Sanchez, Hearns and Duran—were all active in the same generation—all future hall of famers.  My father collected boxing magazines while I collected Marvel and DC comics.  I graduated to collecting Ring and Boxing Illustrated Magazines, amassing an impressive stack under the bed.

I had first seen Pacquiao in 2002 on the undercard of the Mike Tyson/Lennox Lewis heavyweight title fight.  Pacquiao was vying for the IBF featherweight title but my main focus was Tyson.  I wanted him to beat Lewis.  I didn’t give Pacquiao much thought although he was obviously a terrific puncher with good defensive skills and intensity cut from the same cloth as one of my heroes, Roberto Duran.  But my narrow-mindedness did not allow me to foresee the potential greatness of Manny Pacquaio.  I focused on Tyson because I didn’t like Lewis.  Lennox didn’t sound like a heavyweight champion; heavyweight champions had names like Muhammad, Joe, Rocky--or Mike.  That night Tyson got knocked out.  The champion’s name was Lennox (not Linux).  Pacquiao won that night too.

Fight night—clips of Pacquiao and Mosley’s fights are shown, footage of the two fighters training, posing for cameras and clips of Pacquiao at work as a congressman in the Philippines.  The announcer talks about Pacquiao’s humble beginnings prior to his boxing career, about his drive and perseverance which resulted in an unprecedented feat--the first fighter to win world titles in 8 different weight classes.  When asked about his political career, Pacquaio says that prior to being elected as Congressman, he saw the problems in the Philippines as being this big, illustrating the size with the space between his thumb and forefinger.  He then added that the problems are this big, spreading his arms wide.  Members of the press corps often referred to Pacquiao is being the smaller fighter, a distinction Mosley respectfully corrected--"He is the shorter man" Mosley said.

The weigh-in was shown and I became somewhat depressed.  As I approach the mid stage of life--along with millions of other sedentary members of my gender-- I watch these athletes and realize I will never achieve six pack abs.  I look at the body of 39 year old Mosley and remember his fight against Oscar De La Hoya in 2000.  He won that fight with speed.  I wondered how much he had left at age 39.  The prelim bouts begin and I drop to the floor, attempt a set of crunches when a text message from my friend Ezekiel--"Zeak" for short--the boxing fan, comes through.

 

Zeak:  You watching the fight?

Me: Yeah

Zeak: I think Pac’s gonna knock him out in 9

Me: How many crunches can you do?

Zeak: ?

 

I give up my crunches, jog to the kitchen and back, hitting the couch in  time for the main event. I sit. Mosley enters first with his team led by LL Cool J on the mic doing “Mama said knock you out”.  It was decent but I preferred the music video.  Leading the Pacquaio contingent is Jimi Jamison—of the group “Survivor”---singing “Eye of the Tiger” from the movie “Rocky III”.  I get another text:

 

Zeak: Pac should have sung that song himself.  He has the voice.

Me: LL Cool J looks like he could give Pac a good fight

Zeak: Jamison looks like he should be carrying the bucket

Me: I know

 

Both national anthems are sung; the Philippine first, beautifully sung by Charice (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KW7UrZ5WveI) followed by the US anthem sung by Tyrese.  Somehow I don’t hear the words that Tyrese sings.  I keep thinking of his role in “Baby Boy”, in the python-like choke hold of Ving Rhames who whispers in his ear: Jody…little Jody before slapping his shiny head(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VywoZ8t2LyM&feature=related).  I wonder how Ving Rhames would sound singing the national anthem. 

I looked at the Philippine flag hanging stoically amidst the thousands of fans, moving slightly under the hum of lights and above the ocean of anticipation.  I thought about myself as a Filipino-American.  It felt good hearing the Philippine anthem.  I wanted to join in but didn’t know the words.  After Tyrese’s rendition of the Star Spangled Banner, Jamie Fox was introduced and segued into “America the Beautiful”.  Another text:

 

Zeak: Fox is taking this Ray Charles thing serious, huh?

Me: I like Ray

 

I wondered why the extra portion of patriotism was being doled out and it came to me via yet another text:

 

Zeak: It’s a dig on the Bin Laden Folk.  It’s code for:  WE GOT ‘EM

Me: Also a dig at Pacquiao.  It's the US saying, you might be the best fighter in the world, but ours is the best COUNTRY in the world.   It makes 'em feel better.

 

Round one.  Both fighters are jabbing and moving, respectful of each other’s power.  No damage done.  I score the round even.  That was as close as it got.  I had Pacquiao winning every round thereafter.  He used his jab and applied constant pressure, landing hard shots that took the steam from Mosley within a few rounds.  Mosley’s signature speed and pinpoint counter punching that had been brilliant in fights against De La Hoya, Forrest and Mayorga was not present.

Mosley seemed to age as the rounds progressed.  It was as if his mind knew what to do but was betrayed by an uncooperative body.  I was reminded of Sugar Ray Leonard, in one of his last fights, against Jr. Middleweight Champion Terry Norris.  Leonard absorbed a beating, taking punches he would have avoided in his prime.  Mosley, like Leonard, was past his prime.  Both fighters had much respect for each other—at times seeming too respectful—touching gloves before every round and in various times in between.  Prior to the fight, Mosley expressed resentment at being the underdog. Having been thrown off his rhythm by Pacquiao's power and speed, Mosley seemed to have left any resentment he had in his dressing room. 

 

During the fight cameras cut to each fighter’s respective Wife/partner; their faces etched with anxiety, concern, worry.  I get another text message:

 

Zeak: Who you thinks hotter, Pac’s wife or Mosley’s girl?

Me:  They're both beautiful...like models

Zeak: Come on, you got to have a preference

Me: It has nothing to do with the fight

Zeak: Hell, the way the fight’s going, I’d rather see the ladies go at it

Me: You got a point

 

At the final bell I had Pacquiao winning every round except the first, which I scored even.  Pacquiao was simply too fast and possessed too much power for Mosley to overcome with his famed counterpunching that made him one of the best pound for pound fighters in boxing for much of the past decade.  The unanimous decision verdict was anti-climatic.  Both fighters showed respect for each other during the post fight interview. “You’re the pound for pound king” said Mosley to Pacquiao through swollen but still handsome features.  Pacquiao nodded silently. 

 

The post-fight text message:

 

Zeak: Who’s hotter, Mrs. Pacquiao or Mosley’s girlfriend?

 (The 54 dollar question)

 

 

 

© 2011 RWS

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IS HOARDING AN AMERIKKKAN MENTAL ILLNESS OR A SYMPTOM OF HOW DEEPLY CAPITALISM GETS INTO OUR HEADS?

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Redbeardedguy
Original Body

In 2009 Tiny aka Lisa Gray-Robles asked me to write about Hoarding/Cluttering.  That article went where the Sock Gods take their prey from washers and dryers.

As I was saying, the San Francisco Bay Guardian just published ("Evicting Hoarders", May 4th-10th 2011) a good--though shallow--overview of Hoarding/Cluttering in general and in specific as it relates to the lives of the approximately 25,000 people classified with this particular brand of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) in San Francisco.  Being a Hoarder/Clutterer can get you evicted from your apartment and most certainly from your SRO (Single Room Occupancy) hotel--aka Poor People Housing--room.

Is Hoarding a mental illness or the logical result of Capitalism run amuck in peoples' heads?  There is a vast economic chasm between the rich and the rest of us in Amerikkka today.  The gap between rich and poor wasn't quite so stupendously ridiculous in centuries past, and you could argue things weren't you-know-what as recently as 1980.

Many have become obsessed with being famous, becoming American Idols, sports stars, whatever floats your boat and gets you and your family out of poverty (or, well, obscurity...).  If you have little or nothing and everyone around seems to be conspicuously consuming stuff and owning lots of STUFF...well, Capitalism all by its bad little self can be as mind-bending as being a war veteran bit by PTSD, being a survivor of abuse, rape, or any other outrage to the body and soul.

I told Tiny once, when I was getting to know POOR Magazine better in late 2008, that I wished I'd become part of the family when poormag was founded in the late 90's.  I was not in a good state of mind.  I'd gone from being burned out on Activism 101 in 1989 to trying to figure out how to fit in with "The Real World" (TRW) to feeling like TRW wasn't my friend.  But the feeling wasn't strong enough to get me to really think about what was going on.

People getting on MUNI busses were hoarding or jumping their place in line to get on the bus (it's worse now with the evil Clipper Card and people getting on front, center and back doors while you're trying to get off the bus...), the number of people selling stuff on sidewalks seemed to be increasing like bunny rabbits...having too much fun.

Non-profits were working hard to get more corporate in their attitudes to money and the handling thereof.  I worked for the Alameda County Red Cross and heard a lecture on the subject at my first all-Bay-Area-staff gathering, and then came Bob Dole's Wife, appointed new national head of the Red Cross, who said the RC couldn't do AIDS awareness training, which generated considerable angst in my and others' workplaces. 

There were other reasons why I felt like a refugee in my own country, including being just as good at hoarding as anyone else.  Books, magazines, and newspapers float my boat just fine.  Not having the room to go all-out simply means occasionally getting rid of stuff and then adding more.  I hate getting rid of books, even if I haven't read a bunch I snagged several years after I snagged them!

My tv is dead now, but I've watched a few episodes of Martha Stewart.  She is, in my opinion, a PROFESSIONAL hoarder/clutterer.  I remember an episode where the camera lovingly moved around a room crammed with iron and stone furniture that looked like it would happily bite chunks out of you re THE AMITYVILLE HORROR movie--and maybe move in and eat the rest of you.  How anyone could enjoy a room like that I could not calculate.

What happens to rich people who collect lots of art, cars, motorcycles, whatever?  They are (if they haven't gone completely Capitalistically status-mad like the current soon-to-be-ex owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers Major League Baseball team) celebrated on "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous" tv shows, written up in other style and architectural magazines--they add a certain toxic pizzazz to The Spectacle of Life in the 20th/21st Centuries and they mess with our minds real bad unless we are strong enough not to buy into their crap.

I was well on my way into The Valley of I-Got-Mines, The Valley of Get A Good Job and Get Some Plastic and Buy! Buy! Buy! at the time POOR Magazine came along, but I never got where I thought I wanted to be.  Too much work.  Saved by non-enthusiasm for the rat race fast lane?

It is odd that there isn't even a hint of my kind of analysis of Hoarding/Cluttering in the SF Bay Guardian's article.  I don't expect them to write like I do, they kick ass often and their ass-kickin' boots go pretty deep into many of their targets.   Also, their article stays firmly American.

I've been an Oprah fan too.  One of her shows on how people live elsewhere in the world included a tour of an apartment somewhere in the Scandinavian world.  A small family with one or two kids.  They weren't into materialism.  Not a lot of stuff.

Their kitchen looked clean enough to eat off the floor and was so well designed you couldn't tell where to find anything unless you, well, lived there.  There were a few toys on the floor of the kidspace, but not as many as you'd expect an American child to have--or what I expect after being a Goodwill donation attendant!  Every holiday Goodwill donation attendants expect to get lots of donations because people with real money get rid of their old STUFF to make room for new STUFF.

Serial Hoarding/Cluttering!

I wanted to live in that apartment, but it was so clean and well organized and...not full of stuff I had a hard time believing anyone could actually be happy in it.  That's what excessive Capitalism gets you.

I hate to mention Japan.  Kick somebody when they're down!  But Japan and China can make us look like wimpo-Capitalists.  Until recently I had two copies of books about useless Japanese inventions.  I actually got rid of them, couldn't read them...the useless stuff was so...useless.

Japan is where the next big techno-thing goes to be born.  The movie LOST IN TRANSLATION has a scene where the American female lead watches a young Japanese man brutally (or is it desperately?) kick video game ass in an arcade.  The translated-to-English noir novel OUT (I loved it, and if you like murder mysteries and noir, read it...) has one of its doomed female characters long-infected by the buy-on-credit-get-hosed-by-huge-personal-debt bug.  In the realm of fictional hoarder/clutterers there is also a minor character in Ursula K. LeGuin's 1974 still-amazing-after-all-these-years utopian/dystopian science fiction novel THE DISPOSSESSED, a member of a semi-utopian anarchist society exiled to the moon of their homeworld, afflicted with hoarder/clutterer compulsion in a society where you wouldn't expect to find it.  Some psychic wounds bleed forever.

We ain't the only hoarder/clutterer folks around, but we're told so often we're the greatest country since pre-sliced cheese I think it gets easy to ignore them thar folks who don't live here (unless they cross the border "illegally").  Or the opposite can bite just as hard--them thar folks is just so much more economically and mentally healthier than we is why look outside the borders for other examples and what-not? 

Why not?  Other people may have other ideas and methods for fighting the problem if all you want to do is cover the scab.

But that's a wound that can't heal unless we do something about how we live and treat each other.  If the rich and the super-rich won't stop HOARDING and CLUTTERING wealth and influencing the ever-shrinking size of the crumbs grudgingly given to the poor, the status quo won't ante anywhere but up for them and down for the rest of us.

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