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July 22, 2008

Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing In The Shadows?

Well, I didn't intend to go four days without posting, and my thanks to the 3 or 4 diehards who refuse to give up on me (especially my best friend J, who posted the flowerlude - and can we just say how beautiful his flower photos are - and wrote to make sure I wasn't dead).

I'm not dead... but I'm struggling. Some of it is.... well, personal, and I really won't be sharing it here (that's not my way); some of it is also personal, but part of the political scene as well. So I thought that would be as good a place as any to start.

As you might guess, since I talk about being a Starbuckian, my income is not what it once was, or what it needs to be. No disrespect to Howard intended, but it's hard to get by on a small hourly wage and the kindness of strangers (a/k/a tips). What started as a merely interesting moment of feeling somewhat strapped has gone on to a feeling of being generally destitute. And it's hard, not so much because of all the things I can't have or do - in the end, you come to appreciate that unnecessary things are, well, unnecessary - but because writing (when I am writing) is providing so much joy, it's hard to contemplate giving that up to chase extra income.

So Saturday, I didn't write because Jennifer and I were traipsing around my nab, window shopping... which was very nice, as we both try to enjoy a new spirit of "look, but don't buy", and really, that makes for an entertaining afternoon trying on sky-high Ferragamo shoes at Nieman Marcus. It was blazing hot, and eventually, the whole day was lost to travel and meeting people, and when I ultimately got home it was too late to really blog effectively.

Sunday, I worked, and that's where I - and my co-worker - discovered this awful story on the front page of the Times, Gretchen Morgenson's admirable attempt to tie together the corporate interests in the debt crisis with an actual individual story.  That the story itself was incredibly sad (and a little predictable), only made the sense of identification all the more vivid. A single mom who got herself way too deep in debt, it looks as though she will lose everything... and still owe on her debts.

And she's not alone.  I think the story affected me more deeply than I first thought, because the idea of even writing about it stranded me for another day. Until this morning when I saw David Brooks follow up on his "debt culture" column with another, fairly dead-on assessment of the problem:

On the front page of Sunday’s Times, Gretchen Morgenson described Diane McLeod’s spiral into indebtedness, and now a debate has erupted over who is to blame.

Some people emphasize the predatory lenders who seduced her with too-good-to-be-true credit lines and incomprehensible mortgage offers. Here was a single mother made vulnerable by health problems and divorce. Working two jobs and stressed, she found herself barraged by credit card companies offering easy access to money. Mortgage lenders offered her credit on the basis of the supposedly rising value of her house. These lenders had little interest in whether she could pay off her loans. They made most of their money via initial lending fees and then sold off the loans to third parties.

In short, these predatory companies swooped down on a vulnerable woman, took what they could and left her careening toward bankruptcy.

Other people emphasize McLeod’s own responsibility. She is the one who took the credit card offers knowing that debt is a promise that has to be kept. After her divorce, she went on a shopping spree to make herself feel better. After surgery, she sat at home watching the home shopping channels, charging thousands more.

Free societies depend on individual choice and responsibility, those in this camp argue. People have to be held accountable for their indulgences or there is no justice. As McLeod herself admirably told Morgenson: “I regret not dealing with my emotions instead of just shopping.”

If you go to the online comment section affixed to Morgenson’s article, you see advocates of these two positions talking past one another, one side talking the morality of social protection and the other the morality of personal responsibility.

Brooks goes on to argue that there's a third way to look at this: that our culture helped make being in debt seem the norm, made consumption the objective (mass luxury), and changed our decision making and our behaviors.  It';s a way of saying... we all bear some responsibility in this.

I suspect many people will be put off by Brooks - he's already got a passionate set of detractors - but I think this is a moment where he's getting it right: finding the center, and saying that as much as anything, we need to be a better society made up of better people with a better value system. That's going to seem, to many on the left especially, like a moral judgment about people like Diane McLeod. But the point is... we are all like Ms. McLeod.

The problem with the debt and mortgage crisis story, I've thought all along, is that it brings out the distinction makers - "I didn't do that," "that's not me," "those people should have known better." Myself. I think people who amassed massive credit card debt really should have known better, but with mortgages I think many people were swindled by banks and lenders who did not explain in enough detail what these mortgages meant to people who did not understand what they were signing on for. But in any case, what's already happening is that, on the margins, in the shadows... people are starting to lose everything. And if we don't get conscious to the problem soon, we will all be facing it.

July 08, 2008

The GOP Continues to Starve Cities

This article is chock full of infuriating bullsh*t about GOP machinations to stall a much overdue housing relief bill. Congress expected to have it on Bush's desk by now, but now the GOP wants to investigate Dodd's mortgage from Countrywide and the White House has threatened a veto based on $4M in grants to cities to deal with neighborhoods with high foreclosure rates.

Seriously, it's like Bush doesn't even live in this country, or have a basic understanding of our political economy. He claims that banks will benefit and not homeowners, forgetting that many of these neighborhoods have struggling homeowners living alongside - effectively trapped - foreclosed and abandoned properties that can trigger a downward spiral in (often, already struggling) communities. Aid to cities and towns to provide upkeep and oversight of these neighborhoods is a terrific component of these housing bill, and something some municipalities have undertaken already. (Yep, that link is 15 months old, and Bush wants to veto this bill over a paltry, desperately needed $4M. WHAT. AN. ASSHOLE.  Sigh.  Par for the course.)

I hope Barney Frank, MA's righteously awesome, out-and-proud (and Clinton supporting) Representative forces the GOP's hand on this and gets this thing moving, but frankly, I've got little reason to feel optimistic.  How about you?

- Redstar

May 20, 2008

Teh Stupid. It burns.

I heard there's some primaries going on tonight... (I'm about all primaried out after a record-breaking day over at The Hillary 1000.)

So how about a humor break?

I'm stuck in terrible rush hour traffic at the Mass Pike E/Rt. 95 interchange in MA yesterday, after smooth sailing home with the man from an anniversary break in Portsmouth, NH.  We're slowly merging into traffic, cutting off and being cut off by the hordes of road-enraged Massholes all around us.  A Chevy Tahoe rolls up, a woman - gabbing on her cell phone - behind the wheel.  I notice an enormous peace sign sticker stuck on the gas tank.  As we crawl along beside her, I see it says "1.20.09" in small letters. I get it...

This driver is protesting President "National security consequences if we limit oil supply reserves; let's just ask the Saudis for more! more! more! Since murderously plundering another country for their supply seems to be slightly more costly than anticipated" Bush at the gas tank....of her gas-guzzler...

Actually, maybe it's TEH IRONY that burns...it burns!!!!!!

May 15, 2008

Do You Make A Promise... I Do. I Do.

This time I am going to jump in over RedStar, because this is personal: the stunning decision in California to allow same sex marriages has left me floored.

Indeed, when I first heard it on the car radio this afternoon, I didn't entirely comprehend the enormity of it: we now have two states where gays and lesbians will be able to get marriage licenses (and, more cynically... divorces).

For a long time I was very ambivalent about gay marriage; I am old school in my rad fag tendencies, and the "sexual outlaw" aspect of the gay rights movement was something deeply meaningful to me (as a philosophy, oddly, and not a personal manifesto; I have the sexual history of an uptight protestant... because I am one). I believe, still, that out loud and proud gay activism should challenge every aspect of the heteronormative pressures our society puts forth, including the notions of marriage, fidelity and monogamy that are drilled into us day after day (just ask Vito Fossella.  Or Elliott Spitzer.)

Still, that was before, as I've mentioned previously, going to my first gay wedding, where I took pictures for my very good friends, and brought them a lovely Smythson guest sign-in book (again: uptight, and protestant. How many times must I tell you?). Just like a real wedding.  The ceremony, on Martha's Vineyard, in a three day affair, was lovely. Just like a real wedding.

Because it was.

Ultimately, as Red points out, there's a lot of political reasons to be impressed today. But this is personal. This is what Loving vs. Virginia means to me, and to my family. This is, as Mildred Loving said, about love, and families, and the simple, human desire to spend your life with the person you love. And so... if it makes me a little less rad, I'll admit: this marriage thing is pretty cool. And necessary. And I, too, am thrilled to see California move into the modern age.

But remember... it means we can get married. It doesn't mean we have to. :) Because I do... still... want to be one with the freaks, weirdos, and outsiders.

The progressive policy 1-on-1 continues b/w CA & MA

Today the CA Supreme Court ruled that banning same-sex marriage is unconstitutional. Previously, MA was the only state in the nation allowing same-sex marriage, following a similar ruling in 2004.

It feels like CA comes up again and again here in MA as our #1 competitor for health, energy, and civil rights policy. Sh*t! CA passed legislation funding stem-cell research! We've got to get on that, and hell, we'll actually make it work! (Ah, the beauty of second-mover advantage...hopefully it will work out as well as we follow their lead in adopting their low-carbon fuel standards...)

While we're at it, why don't we legislate universal health insurance and ensure that our infertility coverage is arguably the best in the nation?

Still, I hear CA is one of the best places for gays/lesbians to adopt. Their second-parent adoption laws are strong, and there's some deal about the use of the word "partner" on birth certificates, if I remember correctly. Though I think we did create some precedent setting law here.

Anyone else want to give a shout-out for their state's progressive policies, or add to this non-random, partial list? Thanks for joining my nerdy celebration of this historic and wonderful ruling in California today!!


May 14, 2008

A World of Disaster

And I'm not just talking about for Sen. Obama in W.VA last night.

For those who didn't read my old blog, I study urban inequality and have worked with non-profit responders to Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, and with survivors of September 11 in Lower Manhattan.  I don't consider myself a disaster specialist, but I've certainly seen my own small devastating share in this century.  I'm floored by the tragedies that befell our country on 9/11/01 (almost 3,000 killed and hundreds of thousands personally impacted as survivors/witnesses of the attack, or as relatives of the lost) and beginning on August 29, 2005 (when Katrina made landfall and worked its way across the region, followed by almost a week of flooding in the city of New Orleans and months of water removal.  Almost 2,000 dead, half a million temporarily or permanently displaced, and 300,000 homes damaged or destroyed).  But they PALE in comparison to what we're witnessing in China and Burma right now (and these are only 2 natural disasters of countless across the globe this century).

At least 12,000 dead in China, and rescue efforts compromised and delayed because the damage is so unstable.  I think that's roughly the student body here at MIT.  Over 30,000 dead and almost as many missing after a cyclone in Burma, with a government that won't let in international aid.  The town I grew up in had about 35,000 people in it.  Effectively, my hometown and current school have just been destroyed.

Continue reading "A World of Disaster" »

April 29, 2008

One of those weeks

Firefox just crashed as I was working on a closing sentence for a post chock full of link goodness - sort of, as it was actually full of depressing, infuriating, outrageous shit like the rape epidemic in the Congo; rising gas/food prices and housing instability and Bush's insolence, unpopularity and insulation from all the f***ing problems he helped create in the last seven years; voter suppression and pay inequity and veteran exploitation and enough already of the GOP and Bushie McSame; and the utter fiasco of fresh wounds of racism and oppression in the feminist blogosphere.  F*ck, f*ck, f*ck.

Links were my easy way out of dealing with all this sh*t I've been studiously ignoring.  I'm overdue on my tuition, struggling to find work and feeling the weight of my housing expenses in the chronic tension in my hunched shoulders and neck, and stymied by the overwhelming crises we face in this world, my inability to process much of it, my hiding out in election coverage in response, and the dismay I feel at what seems like the implosion of Obama's campaign, delivered in no shortage due to his own strategic errors, but also because of our country's racism. That's such a blunt statement that I need to expand on it, but see Rev. Wright, the media, the GOP, and the (white) American public, generally, to begin.  ALSO, SIGN HERE TO PROTEST THE NC GOP SMEAR CAMPAIGN AGAINST OBAMA.

Seriously, this rare PC crash is just the icing on the cake, and an obvious sign that I need to check out - AGAIN - from the 'sphere and get my f***ing house and life in order.

Sometimes life just sucks, don't it?

For all the gory details, I recommend Racialicious, Firedoglake, Hullabaloo, Feministe, Problem Chylde, Sudy, Fetchmyaxe, the Field Negro, Shakesville, MyDD, Diary of an Anxious Black Woman, and Pizza Diavola.  They should all be in your blogroll anyway.

At least I still have this link open - and it offends me.  No more taking one for the team, for christ's sake!!

- Redstar

April 23, 2008

A Moratorium On "Elitist"

A while back, Red suggested a moratorium on the use of "hope", something I found both amusing and accurate.  The "Politics Of Hope" coursing through this year's race has been one of its least edifying features (all of you looking for a politics of hopelessness? Yeah, you in the back... siddown).

I'd like to make a similar case for "elitism" and "elitist."

It was natural, I think, that the upshot of Obama's game-changing "bitter/cling" comments would be a charge of "elitism."  Obama's Ivy-League background, and the financially successful life he and Michelle Obama have created, became part of the discussion early and never quite went away.  It was to be expected that, especially among conservatives - who have been living the "elite meme" in reference to the left - that when an opportunity arose to tie the Obamas to the intellectual and economic elite, they would jump at it.

The mistake of course is that the discussion of "elitism" overwhelmed any meaningful attempt to try and get the question of voter "bitterness" into a context.  That was deeply damaging to the Obama camp (indeed, as I said earlier this morning, I think it's a big body blow to his overall campaign message). But it also overwhelmed the discussion we need, badly in this country: examining our class differences, and making sense of the use and abuse of "elite"

Continue reading "A Moratorium On "Elitist"" »

April 22, 2008

The Latest In A Series Of Super Tuesdays

I'm sorry I neglected to mention my vacation; I sort of assumed I'd post more, but frankly, I'm tired and needed a rest. Lucky for me, the addition of co-contributors means I get back to see two interesting posts from my pals.

So here I sit in my favorite cafe in Maine, sipping cappucino and eating a small piece of apple tart, catching up on the web. My mom is reading her latest Swedish mystery, something my Aunt recommended.

I am in the heart of Obama country here - aside from Obama's fairly commanding win of the Maine caucuses, my Aunt is a hardy Obama supporter, more so than my Mom, though both for similar reasons. After a day of shoring up my strength with Red, I am in the lions den, looking, well, like a cartoon bull.

My Aunt, like most of humanity (or at least, most of America), has full cable, so my Mom and I have been overwhelmed catching up on the cable news shows we never see.  I have to admit, from their cracked lens, this race is much different than the one I know on the web, or in real life. And that's before I get started on Chris Matthews.

I get the impression that tonight's results will be what many of us expected all along: Clinton appears on track to win, probably by 5-9, though I think it's 10 or better. Obama and his people seem to have essentially conceded it (he's heading to Indiana before the vote's over), and now we're arguing if close only counts in hand grenades and horseshoes.

Myself, as a Clintonite, natch, says winning and winning and losing is not.  Obama spent money like water to battle himself to a slightly less losing proposition than he had when he started 6 weeks ago.  All the excuse making - and the none too subtle suggestions of racism, fearmongering, and stupidity in PA's electorate - can't hide the fact that Obama's appeal to working class folk looks completely unsuccessful.  If it's by as much as I suspect it might be, this loss doesn't just make a case for Clinton staying in, it is indeed the case of asking, finally, why Obama can't close the deal with voters he needs. I don't take any pleasure in saying that, despite what Obama supporters might think; talking to my family's matriarchs, we are closer together than further apart, and we all want a Democrat in the White House. What I don't want, and what concerns me, still, is an Obama candidacy that can't relate to the needs and politics of working class voters in a successful way.

In the end, I don't think today changes all that much; not for the candidates. And not for the Democratic Party. Barring an incredible surprise, we will be, as with other Tuesdays, right back where we were, only in Indiana. And for me, personally, it's just another quiet evening in the country, possibly with some of the best ice cream I've ever had, and the company of family I care about. That's a pretty Super Tuesday, any way you slice it.

-- Weboy

April 16, 2008

In Memoriam

It's the one year anniversary of the shootings at VA Tech.  This story floored and deeply saddened me when it broke; I blogged about it for awhile after.  I've spent about two-thirds of my adult life on university campuses, my mom works in mental health, and I had a serious Korean boyfriend who battled his own demons when he was Seung-Hui Cho's, the shooter, age, but grew up to be a healthy and happy man.

I woke up this morning to coverage of the campus, town, families and students as they move on and continue to grapple with this tragedy.  My heart and my thoughts are with them today and everyday as they recover from the tremendous loss and disruption of the massacre in their lives.

Links to updates on gun legislation in VA here, and university mental health policies here.

- Redstar

Weboy adds:

Like Red, I was stunned by VA Tech, slow to comprehend what we were watching, but ultimately moved to write this and this about how we don't think about, or deal well with mental illness.

Of the 32 people who died, 17 were teachers or students in the department of Foreign Languages and Literature (2 instructors were killed while teaching, and 15 in their classes). The Chair of the department spoke to NPR this afternoon. And yet again, I wept.