Death of a Neighborhood
Another neighborhood dies. Gentrification Genocide, a whole population
of people have been wiped out. This is one of those topics I can go on
and on rambling endlessly about. What does it mean when the local
newspapers start writing about gentrification on a daily basis? I
remember in the Lower East Side, now called the East Village in the
late 80's early 90's that there were squatters living in the abandoned
buildings in the neighborhood and there were riots at Tompkins Square
park for housing rights, the cry was: Stop warehousing apartments,
rehabilitate the abandoned buildings and create housing, and the
slogans "Die Yuppie Scum" to ward off the impending gentrification and
"No Housing, No Peace!" were to be found on t-shirts and sidewalks
everywhere. And now today the cries are: save the gardens, save the
dirt, save the sidewalk. Now what does it mean that those very same
people the Yuppies, (Young Urban Professionals) are quadrupled up in
apartments in order to survive and appealing for help now because they
can no longer afford to live in the neighborhoods themselves? New York
has now become Disneyfied, one big New York University campus
playground and one big chain store strip mall. Now you are either rich
or poor and there's no middle class in between anymore in New York. Did
the closing of CBGB's and other mom and pop stores and businesses
before and after it mark the end of it all? I do not mind the streets
that used to be infested with dealers and hustlers here in the East
Village but the gardens, squats and the cafe and club culture has
gotten destroyed with it. The city is for sale and the neighborhoods
are changing. I went out to eat in the overwhelmingly populated shi shi
East Village the other day and all the conversations at the surrounding
tables consisted of "I just purchased my house this and I just signed
the contract on my apartment that." I went to a party later that
evening in the West Village on some beautiful rooftop garden and the
conversation with guests were much the same, "So where do you live and
how much rent do you pay?" Walking down the street past Urban
Outfitters department store I see connotations of real estate reflected
in fashion, worn, faded, torn jeans and hippy fashions that were once
scorned upon now selling for outrageous prices. This being very similar
to those wooden porch houses of the poor in the South that were once
frowned upon by the wealthy as a slum and the lofts of Soho that were
once warehouses and offices that are now a stylish trend promoted by
New Urbanists and urban planners as culture preserving measures. And
does New York's housing crisis reflect the rest of the world? Is Urban
Warfare/Urban Renewal/Urban Removal/Urban Sprawl and the re
invigoration of the inner cities,suburbs and rural areas everywhere in
the world now. In there no cheap place to live anywhere anymore? Is the
quality of life campaign killing off affordable housing everywhere? Is
New York reflecting the changing demographics of America and the
population overgrowth and where to build housing when there is nowhere
else left to build? In New York in the 60's I hear the rents were so
cheap everyone could afford to move once a month, then in the 70's
landlords torched their buildings and removed people by force, then in
the 80's all the buildings were abandoned, and the 90's and now, over
development. New York, New York, big city of dreams, what's ahead for
the next decade? Long Live the Lower East Side. And what does this have
to do with a No Police State? Have a great day.




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