Too poor for pop culture

newarkhiphop

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Miss Sheryl, Dontay, Bucket-Head and I compiled our loose change for a fifth of vodka. I’m the only driver, so I went to get it. On the way back I laughed at the local radio stations going on and on and on, still buzzing about Obama taking a selfie at Nelson Mandela’s funeral. Who cares?

No really, who? Especially since the funeral was weeks ago.


I arrived, fifth of Black Watch clenched close to me like a newborn with three red cold-cups covering the top. We play spades over at Miss Sheryl’s place in Douglass Housing Projects every few weeks. (Actually, Miss Sheryl’s name isn’t really Miss Sheryl. But I changed some names here, because I’m not into embarrassing my friends.) Her court is semi-boarded up, third world and looks like an ad for “The Wire.” Even though her complex is disgustingly unfit, it’s still overpopulated with tilting dope fiends, barefoot children, pregnant smokers, grandmas with diabetes, tattoo-faced tenants and a diverse collection of Zimmermans made up of street dudes and housing police, looking itchy to shoot anyone young and black and in Nike.

Two taps on the door, it opened and the gang was all there — four disenfranchised African-Americans posted up in a 9 x 11 prison-size tenement, one of those spots where you enter the front door, take a half-step and land in the yard. I call us disenfranchised, because Obama’s selfie with some random lady or the whole selfie movement in general is more important than us and the conditions where we dwell.

Surprisingly, as tight as Miss Sheryl’s unit may be, it’s still more than enough space for us to receive affordable joy from a box of 50-cent cards and a rail bottle.

“A yo, Michelle was gonna beat on Barack for taking dat selfie with dat chick at the Mandela wake! Whateva da fuk a selfie is! What’s a selfie, some type of bailout?” yelled Dontay from the kitchen, dumping Utz chips into a cracked flowery bowl. I was placing cubes into all of our cups and equally distributing the vodka like, “Some for you and some for you …”

“What the fukk is a selfie?” said Miss Sheryl.

“When a stupid person with a smartphone flicks themselves and looks at it,” I said to the room. She replied with a raised eyebrow, “Oh?”

It’s amazing how the news seems so instant to most from my generation with our iPhones, Wi-Fi, tablets and iPads, but actually it isn’t. The idea of information being class-based as well became evident to me when I watched my friends talk about a weeks-old story as if it happened yesterday.

Miss Sheryl doesn’t have a computer and definitely wouldn’t know what a selfie is. Her cell runs on minutes and doesn’t have a camera. Like many of us, she’s too poor to participate in pop culture. She’s on public assistance living in public housing and scrambles for odd jobs to survive.

Sheryl lost her job as a cook moments after she lost her daughter to heroin, her son Meaty to crack and her kidneys to soul food. It took 15 to 20 unanswered applications a week for over a year for her to realize that no company wants to employ a woman on dialysis. Sometimes Bucket-Head and I chip in and buy groceries for her and her grandson Lil Kevin who has severe lead-paint poisoning, but was diagnosed late and is too old to receive a check.

Bucket-Head is a convicted felon but not really. He was charged with a crime that he didn’t commit. I know this because my late cousin did the shooting and our whole neighborhood watched. Bucket was in the wrong place at the wrong time and as many know, we are products of a “No Snitching” culture.

As a result, the only work Bucket can find after 10 years of false imprisonment is that of laborer with the Mexicans who post up in front of 7-Eleven, or as a freelance dishwasher. Bucket’s no angel, but he’s also not a felon and doesn’t deserve to be excluded from pop culture no more than Miss Sheryl or Dontay, who represents the definition of redemption to me.

I placed our cups at the table and the bottle in the center. “Me and Miss Sheryl are gonna whip ass tonight, hurry up, Dontay!” I yelled.

Dontay cleans nonstop. Roaches sleeping in the fridge, roaches relay racing out of the cabinets carrying cereal boxes, purchasing homes, building families, slipping through cracks for fun and weaving in and out of death — Dontay bleaches them all. Dontay doesn’t take handouts from us and won’t go on government assistance. He couldn’t contribute to the chips and vodka that week so he’s cleaned for Miss Sheryl and would clean for Miss Sheryl even if there were no chips and vodka.

“Boy we ready to play the cards. Stop acting selfie and sit yo ass at the table!” yelled Miss Sheryl from another room. We all laugh. Miss Sheryl’s rooms are separated by white sheets; they look like a soiled ghost at night when the wind blows. Her son Meaty stole and sold her doors years ago and housing never replaced them.

Dontay joined us at the table. “Takin forever, boy, wit dem big ass feet!” yelled a happy Bucket. Dontay was wearing my old shoes. They are 13’s and busting at the seams but Dontay’s a size 8 and his foot is digging through the side. His arms are chunked and wrapped in healed sores from years of drug abuse. He’s eight years clean off of the hard stuff now, but I met him way back when I was 13, in his wild days.

He was huddled over his girlfriend in the alley behind my house. I watched moments before as she performed an abortion on herself with a twisted coat hanger. She screamed like the sirens we hear all day. I couldn’t stop looking at her. He gazed too, in and out of a nod and then signaled me for help. I joined them. Together we dragged her to Johns Hopkins Hospital, which was under a mile away. Blood scabbed and dried on my hands, Nikes and hooping shorts; she lived until she OD’d months later. I’ve been cool with Dontay ever since.

I dealt the first hand. Miss Sheryl reminded me to deal to the left. “Always deal to the left, boy, the rule don’t change!” she said. She has the widest jaws in the history of wide and jaws, thicker than both of her bloated caramel arms, which are thigh-size. I collected the cards, reshuffled and dealt to the left. And there we were — my job-hungry unemployed old heads and me the overworked college professor.

College professor?

Not the kind of professor that makes hundreds of thousands of dollars for teaching one class a year but a broke-ass adjunct who makes hundreds of dollars for teaching thousands of classes a year. The other day I read an article about an adjunct who died in a homeless shelter and I wasn’t surprised; panhandlers make triple, and trust me, I’ve done the research, I should be looking for a corner to set up shop.

I have a little more than my friends but still feel their pain. My equation for survival is teaching at three colleges, substituting, freelance Web designing, freelance graphic designing, rap video director, wedding photographer and tutor — the proceeds from all of these are swallowed by my mortgage, cigarettes, rail vodka and Ramen noodles. I used to eat only free-range organic shyt, I used to live in Whole Foods, I used to drink top shelf — I used to be able to afford pop culture.


But long gone are the days when I pumped crack into the very neighborhood where we hold our card game. Eons since I had to stay up all night counting money until my fingers cramped. Since I had to lie on my back to kick my safe closed and I wore and treated Gucci like Hanes and drove Mercedes CL’s and gave X5 beamers to my girlfriends — my good ole days.

Eventually the mass death of my close friends caused me to leave the drug game in search of a better life. Ten-plus years and three college degrees later, I’m back where I started, just like my card-playing friends: too poor to participate in pop culture. Too poor to give a fukk about a selfie or what Kanye said or Beyoncé’s new album and the 17 videos it came with.

“Put me on that Obamacare when you can, college boy!” Sheryl says to me as I contemplate the number of books I can make out of my shytty hand. We all laugh. I am the only one in the room with the skill set to figure it out, but we all really see Obamacare as another bill and from what I hear, the website is as broke as we are. We love Barack, Michelle, their lovely daughters and his dog Bo as much as any African-American family, but not like in 2008.


The Obama feeling in 2008 isn’t the same as the Obama feeling in 2014. Obama had us dream chasing in 2008. My friends and I wanted him to be our dad and best friend and mentor and favorite uncle. shyt, I wanted to take selfies with him. He was a biracial swirl of black and white Jesus sent to deliver us. To bless people stuck under the slums like Sheryl, Bucket, Dontay and I with jobs, access to the definition of words like selfie and hope — REAL HOPE.

But in 2014 it feels the same as Bush, or Clinton, or any other president. The rich are copping new boats and we still are using the oven to heat up our houses in the winter, while eating our cereal with forks to preserve milk. America still feels like America, a place where you have to pay to play, any and everywhere even here at our broke-ass card game.

1 a.m. rolls around and we’re faded, everyone but Miss Sheryl, that is, because dialysis prohibits her from drinking. My kidney pounds, her 2008 Obama for Pres T-shirt stares back at me all stretched out of shape, making Barack look like Sinbad. No one knows who won because really, we all lost. Dontay is asleep because I saw the roaches creeping back and Bucket staggered out.

I looked at Miss Sheryl, “We could take a late night selfie now but I swapped my iPhone for a boost mobile, $30 payment!

She laughed and said, “Baby, what’s a selfie again?”



http://www.salon.com/2014/02/05/too_poor_for_pop_culture/

dicuss
 

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Beautiful description of poverty and the lofty promises of politicians that
rarely reach those living in it.
What I found even more dope is that he's a former drug
dealer turned College Professor, yeah he isn't exactly
some tenured professor at a big university who makes tons
of cash but still, he turned his life around that's something to
give him props for.
 

151_Pr00f

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This article reminds me of an excerpt from the book Who Stole the American Dream ......


The “Two Americas” report explained the dissonance in people’s experience, such as my own puzzlement at reading newspaper accounts of 15 million Americans being unemployed and 6.7 million families being foreclosed out of their homes, then seeing suburban restaurants jammed with people on a night out, spending as if the economy were strong.

We are literally Two Americas, remarkably out of touch with each other—the fortunate living the American Dream but lacking any practical comprehension of how the other half are suffering, month in and month out, unaware of the enervating toll of economic despair on the unfortunate half, many of whom just two or three years before had counted themselves among the fortunate.
 

theworldismine13

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Yeah, if only these people lived in rented shotgun shocks with barely any plumbing or electricity it would inspire them to change to change their culture and become hip-hop John Galts!

government policy should focus on expanding private property

private property is the foundation of the american system by government creating a vast system of public housing they created a system that prevented people from participating in the capitalism and moving up

the public housing system is probably one of the worst policy ideas the government has come up with
 

Dusty Bake Activate

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government policy should focus on expanding private property

private property is the foundation of the american system by government creating a vast system of public housing they created a system that prevented people from participating in the capitalism and moving up

the public housing system is probably one of the worst policy ideas the government has come up with
Nice empty talking points, but to read that article and say the only point you draw from it is public housing is bad as opposed to a structural critique of our economic system is the epitome of simple mindedness.

Access to jobs and education is the underlying issue here, not what form of housing people live in. If they weren't living in housing projects, they'd be still be living in moldy, roach and rat-infested pieces of shyt with the same problems, just under private slumlords instead of government housing authorities.

Do you know what metropolitan housing was like before housing projects? It was shotgun shacks and decrepit shantytowns, often without electricity and plumbing, and horribly unsanitary conditions rented out by slumlords. Housing projects were created because the conditions were so deplorable.

Granted housing projects have gone to shyt for a myriad of reasons, and they've outlived their usefulness, so I do support phasing them out and replacing them with mixed income housing and vouchers, reluctantly, because we can't seem to get the right macroeconomic reforms that would allow a viable public housing system like many others countries in the industrialized world have. But the notion that public housing is the primary causative factor in the conditions described in the article as opposed to overall structural macroeconomic policy that left a vacuum of jobs, decent schools, and a tax base is pure ignorance and ideological myopia.
 

theworldismine13

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Nice empty talking points, but to read that article and say the only point you draw from it is public housing is bad as opposed to a structural critique of our economic system is the epitome of simple mindedness.

Access to jobs and education is the underlying issue here, not what form of housing people live in. If they weren't living in housing projects, they'd be still be living in moldy, roach and rat-infested pieces of shyt with the same problems, just under private slumlords instead of government housing authorities.

Do you know what metropolitan housing was like before housing projects? It was shotgun shacks and decrepit shantytowns, often without electricity and plumbing, and horribly unsanitary conditions rented out by slumlords. Housing projects were created because the conditions were so deplorable.

Granted housing projects have gone to shyt for a myriad of reasons, and they've outlived their usefulness, so I do support phasing them out and replacing them with mixed income housing and vouchers, reluctantly, because we can't seem to get the right macroeconomic reforms that would allow a viable public housing system like many others countries in the industrialized world have. But the notion that public housing is the primary causative factor in the conditions described in the article as opposed to overall structural macroeconomic policy that left a vacuum of jobs, decent schools, and a tax base is pure ignorance and ideological myopia.

how is criticizing federal housing policy not a critique of the economic system?

is typing a couple of paragraphs spouting some leftist gibberish suppose to be a thorough critic of economic policy?

im aware of the condition of housing in some parts before public housing, and im aware of the condition of housing after public housing, which is why i made a critique of public housing, what is your point?

i never made any extreme statements so stop putting them in my mouth, the way you get jobs, decent schools and a tax base is by focusing on individual property ownership, that is the foundation of the american economic system and that is what federal housing policy should focus on, not on band aid policies like public housing
 

Camile.Bidan

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Public Policy doesn't fix innate bestial tendencies. The people that live in those types of conditions in America are there for a reason. It's not a question of choice or environment. It's a question of ability. What is this person's skill level? What is this person absolute potential ( what could they achieve in the perfect up bringing) ? These are the questions that we need to be asking.

These types of people live in these types of conditions because they were birthed by the wrong parents. It's not our job as a society to examine every embryo, every gamete, and every ovary. We only have three choices as I see it:

1) Allow these types of negative GDP humans to live off the state and just accept that they will ruin our productivity numbers. They will take in more resources than they can produce, but that is just the way it will be. We also need to accept the fact their children will we have these Negative GDP traits, and they will probably out-breed more productive lineages since they have nothing else productive to do with their time. We will see a decline in culture and productivity, but we will have a somehow more "just" society.

2) Continue on the current path and hope for the best. Use these degenerate fukk-ups as a disincentive example to the youth, and hope that illusion of choice will somehow steer the young into the path of productivity.

3) Allow the free market to rid society of these types people by banishing them into to poverty, and making them unable to support families. Within a generation, we will start to see a decline in poverty and in crime. The races will all be more or less equal, as the laggards of all races will have been weeded out by the capitalist system.



However, there is definitely a fourth choice.


4) China just completed a CrispR Gene modification experiment on monkeys, and the results were spectacular. They were able to modify genes at precision level thought to be impossible only a few years ago. China is at the forefront GWAS and gene modification. I think China is going to roll-out with Engineered Humans in the next 20 to 30 years. The Technocratic state is funding it, and the Chinese parents demand it. You will find that China's Human Engineering projects will, surprisingly, remedy many of today's social ills that remain unsolved. I am willing to bet the bank on that.
 
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