Category: Life in the Big City
Pre-snow insanity
I really did have to get a few things, so I thought this might be a good morning to go downtown and use my Trader Joe’s gift certificate. Hah! The line waiting out on the street to get into the parking lot was blocking a major intersection. So I decided to go back to my neighborhood ShopRite instead. I drove down Spring Garden Street to get home, and was greeted by GIANT CLOUDS of salt mixed with sand. The salt got into my car vents and made my eyes burn.
At the ShopRite? There was nowhere to park, nowhere at all.
Continue reading “Pre-snow insanity”
Philly fireworks live
The ill logic of the lower classes
It’s the Ninth Day After the Solstice, and I’m back at the shack after checking up on my house, which stopped feeling homey after a tree fell on it last year. Some of my old neighbors are doing OK, judging by the number of houses with Christmas decorations. Some of the those who weren’t doing OK have died. Others — the ones who, because of joblessness or a catastrophe, couldn’t make their mortgage payments — have simply disappeared.
On my way back to the swamp I ran into one of the disappeared — a big, blustery guy who used to remind me of a circus strong man, probably because of the striped tank tops he wore in the summer. Today he was wearing dark glasses and a ratty coat with a big hood, and he seemed about four inches shorter, but I recognized him and said hello as we crossed paths on the sidewalk. He returned my hello but didn’t stop walking. I got the impression he was homeless but I can’t be sure, because I didn’t stop walking either.
When I got back here I asked the swamp rabbit, an amateur shrink as well as a closet bibliophile, why my former neighbor and I had shied away from one another. He spit into the Tinicum swamp and said, “Your ex-neighbor feels like a bum. He’d feel even more like a bum talking to you, because you knew him when he had a house. And I reckon you didn’t want him to know you feel like a bum, too.”
I reminded the rabbit that I’m a fiction writer, not a bum. He asked me what the difference was. It was noon, but he already smelled like he’d finished off a bottle.
I said, “You’ve got a lot of nerve, all you do is drink Wild Turkey and spit in the swamp.”
“Think about it,” he replied. “It ain’t just them hyper-capitalists and their lap dogs in Congress that blame the poors for being poor. The poors blame themselves. They don’t even raise hell when food stamps get cut and unemployment benefits get killed after six months. If they do raise hell, it’s agin each other.”
“You don’t understand the fear, you dumb rodent. Things only get worse when people rock the boat. Demand better wages and you just get fired and disappear. The New Deal is done, the rich have the whip hand until things change again.”
I read him the tail end of a column by Paul Krugman:
Too many Americans currently live in a climate of economic fear. There are many steps that we can take to end that state of affairs, but the most important is to put jobs back on the agenda.
The rabbit twitched his nose and chuckled. “Whose agenda? Jobs are on your agenda if you’re jobless, but they ain’t if you’re in the owner class. The owners don’t need more workers, they’re making bigger profits without them. Who’s gonna make them hire, especially when they know the poors are busy blamin’ themselves for being poor?”
I threw one of his empty bottles at him. I hate it when the varmint makes more sense than that guy in The New York Times.
Everybody knows Miss Jackie
This mural is painted on the wall of the Bridesburg Rec Center.
I don’t know if every neighborhood has a Miss Jackie, but I hope so. This little woman is a powerhouse who’s touched the lives of so many families in our neighborhood.
A very Philly Christmas
A Very Philly Christmas from Cory Popp on Vimeo.
Reunion
I’m a sucker for these stories anyway, but especially at Christmas.
Catching up
It’s been a crazy couple of weeks, folks, but all that hard work is paying off. Traffic over at C&L is through the roof and I’m so happy we’re doing well.
I got to spend my day off with a couple of friends. We went to the holiday craft fair at Greensgrow, my local urban farm, had breakfast at the Memphis Taproom (you might have seen it on the Food Network’s “Diners Drive-Ins and Dives”) and then headed downtown to see the Christmas show at the Comcast Center.
Then we headed over to the annual Christmas Village at the city’s Love Park. (A short walk from Suburban Station, for your suburbanites.) I’m embarrassed to say I’ve driven past it for the ten years or so it’s been around. I just assumed it was junk, so never stopped to check it out. It’s not. It’s a bunch of cool, curated, high-quality stuff with prices ranging from low to out of this world. (I bought myself a nice little laughing Buddha for $4!) There’s a MASSIVE tent of high-quality German Christmas ornaments that’s like nothing I’ve ever seen.
There’s still time to do some shopping, and you can grab some hot chocolate and Belgian waffles while you’re there.
The 1% is offended by the very sight of the bottom tier
So, Greg. You “have no clue” why all those homeless people and junkies are disturbing your pristine view of downtown San Fran? You’re not too smart, are you? You make no connection at all between economic, social, and political influences and their results? What a moron.
Silicon Valley rising star Greg Gopman took to Facebook on Tuesday to rail against poor and homeless residents of San Francisco, inflaming already simmering tensions between the city’s tech industry and low-wage workers.
Gopman, the CEO of the hackathon-organizing startup AngelHack, went on a rant wishing the “crazy, homeless, drug dealers, dropouts, and trash” would segregate themselves and stop marring his experience of San Francisco.
In the comments, Gopman bemoaned how the “degenerates” of San Francisco “gather like hyenas, spit, urinate, taunt you, sell drugs, [and] get rowdy” in an area of town he considers to be off-limits to them. In comparison, he offered a rosy view of more class-segregated cities, where, he says, “the lower part of society keep to themselves. They sell small trinkets, beg coyly, stay quiet, and generally stay out of your way. They realize it’s a privilege to be in the civilized part of town and view themselves as guests.”
Gopman deleted the post and apologized for his diatribe the next morning. “I trivialized the plight of those struggling to get by and I shouldn’t have,” he wrote. “I hope this thread can help start an open discussion on what changes we can make to fix these serious problems.”
The CEO’s comments came just a day after protesters blocked a Google commuter shuttle, decrying tech-driven gentrification and San Francisco’s increasingly unaffordable housing costs. As the uber-rich tech industry migrates north from Silicon Valley the city’s real estate costs have soared, income inequality has worsened, and many long-time San Francisco residents are suddenly being priced out of their neighborhoods.
While Gopman’s post was especially incendiary, he’s not the only one who has expressed the idea that homeless and poor residents are an unsightly burden on the city. Another startup founder, Peter Shih, sparked outrage over the summer by complaining that homeless people were ruining San Francisco for him. This disgust may soon spread past a few insensitive individuals and start influencing actual policy. San Francisco is currently considering criminalizing homelessness by making it illegal to sleep in city parks at night.
Let’s not leave L.A. out of this. Here’s some yuppie scum, making fun of a passed-out homeless man.
Of course there’s a wall between editorial and the publisher!
Oh, I’m so happy that South Jersey Democratic boss George Norcross now has total control of my local news organization!






