Article by John Derbyshire |
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of the Line "Liberalism
is a philosophy of consolation for the West as it commits suicide." —
James Burnham “Freud
and Marx ... undermined the whole basis of Western European civilization
as no avowedly insurrectionary movement ever has or could, by promoting
the notion of determinism, in the one case in morals, in the other in
history, thereby relieving individual men and women of all responsibility
for their personal and collective behaviour.” —
Malcolm Muggeridge I had an interesting week
visiting Colorado and points west to promote my new book. Met a lot of great people, saw some places I’d never seen
before, had a lot of fun with math fans and NR/NRO readers, got home
safely to Mrs Derb and the little ones.
(Also to hundreds of unread e-mails.
I am sorry if you e-mailed me any time in the past few days.
I’m doing my best.) My
trip included Berkeley and downtown San Francisco.
The bookstore events in these places went fine, and many thanks to
all who showed up. It’s not
the events I want to comment on, though.
It’s the street people. Berkeley was pretty bad, but I
had sort of expected that, having spent time in Ann Arbor last year.
University towns tend to have a lot of street people, for reasons
that don’t take much figuring out.
It was downtown San Francisco that really surprised me.
I wanted to go look at the new Asian Arts Museum, which is in the
old municipal library building, on one side of the city’s main downtown
plaza. Nearby is a spiffy new
library, which cost $137m and was the subject of some scathing comments by
Nicholson
Baker. So there I was in downtown San
Francisco, right after a very successful book-signing event at Stacey’s
in Market Street, making my way between these grand heroic buildings under
the bright California sun. It
wasn’t the afterglow of promotional success, or the magnificence of the
buildings, or the sunlight and the wonderful, warm California air that I
was noticing, though. What
was mostly presenting itself to my eyes, ears and nose was the street
people — platoons, companies, battalions of them.
I have never seen so many street people.
Here a ragged, emaciated woman mumbling to herself and making
complicated hand gestures like a Buddhist priest; there a huge
black-bearded Rasputin of a man in a floor-length heavy overcoat, pushing
a shopping cart piled high with filthy bundles; across the way a little
knot of florid winos arguing loudly and ferociously about something;
sitting on the sidewalk where I passed, a youngish black woman,
gaunt and nearly bald, with some sort of horrid skin disease all over her
face and scalp, croaking something at me I couldn’t understand. Eighteenth-century Londoners
used to amuse themselves with a day out at the Bedlam Asylum, where they
could view the lunatics from a safe distance.
Present-day citizens of San Francisco do not need to put themselves
to so much trouble. Half the
lunatics, drunks and drug addicts in America — in the world, I
wouldn’t be surprised — are right here in the center of their city.
Why?
This is a great puzzle to the city’s irredeemably liberal Board
of Supervisors and their soul-mates in the local press. One of the latter, Ilene Lelchuk of the San Francisco
Chronicle, recently began a sentence thus:
"With San Francisco's homeless population growing despite the
millions of dollars the city spends annually to help its most desperate
residents..." Note that
word “despite.” We
spend more and more on the homeless, and still their numbers increase. How can this be?
What a strange and wonderful thing is the liberal mind! (Recall
the similarly clueless New York Times headline, though this one I
am quoting from memroy: “Prison Population Swells Despite Falling Crime
Levels.”) San Francisco is indeed
generous to street people. A
homeless adult on county welfare gets $395 a month, more than in any
neighboring jurisdiction. There
is no requirement that recipients have any roots in the county, nor is
there any work requirement. I
am willing to bet, though I haven’t found a source, that there is not
even a requirement for U.S. citizenship.
So far as I have been able to discover, there are no requirements
whatsoever. You just quit your job, move to a place with the most
agreeable climate in the world, cease attending to matters of personal
hygiene, get yourself a substance habit, and sign on for a hundred bucks a
week, no questions asked. And
Ms. Lelchuk wonders why the “homeless” population is growing! I suppose the citizens of San
Francisco have got used to the situation by slow degrees, but for a
visitor arriving in the downtown area from some more civilized place —
in my case, Denver — the spectacle is very shocking.
The street people leer at you, yell at you, sometimes harass you.
If you are a woman, they make lewd remarks at you.
Near the entrance to the Asian Art Museum (which, by the way, is
lovely, with a $10 admission fee to keep out undesirables — unlike the
new library opposite, which, I am told, the street people have totally
colonized), they are as dense as shoppers in a street market, and you have
to pick your way carefully through them. Acts of violence are common — a young man was shot dead in
Market Street a few days ago, a block or two from the tony bookstore where
I had done my book signing. Stabbings
are frequent. And of course, the street
people stink. Even in
the open spaces downtown, you can’t avoid the stink.
It is probably worse than it used to be before the UN Plaza
fountain was fenced off in March, as the street people had been taking
baths in the fountain. They had also been urinating, defecating, and discarding drug
paraphernalia there — the last to such a degree that the water was
dangerous with chemical contaminants, even if you could bring yourself to
ignore the waste products. The
city used to do a daily clean-up, fishing out the needles, the turds, and
the Muscatel bottles, but at last they got fed up and erected a chain-link
fence round the
whole thing in the teeth of, it goes without saying,
vehement protests from “advocates for the homeless.” By last year the larger
situation had already got so bad that city voters were presented with a
November ballot initiative, Proposition N, under whose terms that $395
monthly cash handout to the winos would be reduced to $59, the balance
being replaced by city-provided food and shelter.
This “Care not Cash” initiative was passed, with 60 percent of
voters in favor of it. That
of course outraged the city’s lefty activists, who immediately
challenged the vote in court. On
May 8 Superior Court Judge Ronald Quidachay ruled that only the Board of
Supervisors can set city welfare policy, and that the ballot initiative
was therefore invalid. The hundred-dollars-a-week handouts to anyone that shows up
will continue — in a city that is looking at a $350m deficit this year. When you cross the United
States from the east coast, San Francisco is the end of the line, the last
stop on the long cross-country trail.
It is also the end point of liberalism, as foreseen by Rudyard
Kipling: the point at which “all men are paid for existing and no
man must pay for his sins.” You
can’t go any further than this geographically without falling into the
ocean; you can’t go any further than San Francisco has gone in yielding
to the “rights” of people who acknowledge no balancing duties, no
responsibility whatsoever to their fellow citizens, nor even to their own
persons. This United States of America
was founded on the notion of self-support, of people taking care of their
families, joining with neighbors to solve common problems in a humane and
sensible way. Those common
problems would include the occasional citizen, like Huckleberry Finn’s
pap, who could not, or stubbornly would not, look after himself, and for
whom some public provision should be made.
When a person “came upon the town,” the town would give him
some minimal aid, while of course private citizens, if they felt inclined,
could exercise the virtue of private charity to any degree they wished.
The recipient was, however, expected to defer to community
standards. If he persistently
committed gross violations of those standards — pooping in the town
fountain would certainly have counted — he was locked up or
institutionalized. This was a sound system, widely admired outside our borders.
Listen to the most American of American presidents, Calvin
Coolidge. "The principle of service
is not to be confused with a weak and impractical sentimentalism." "Self-government means
self support." "The normal must care for
themselves." "I have no respect for
anybody who cannot take care of himself." It would be very easy to deal
with the “homeless problem”: enact,
or re-enact, vagrancy laws, sweep the bums, junkies and lunatics off the
streets, incarcerate them in well-supervised but spartan facilities until
they showed some inclination to cease being a nuisance, an embarrassment
and a danger to their fellow citizens.
Those facilities should be open to the press.
Perhaps they should even be open to the general public, since
apparently 40 percent of San Franciscans enjoy the company of stinking
winos. Was Bedlam such a bad idea, after all? But that, of course, would never do. The “homeless” have “rights” that must be respected — the right to crap in public fountains, for instance, the right to shoot themselves up with deadly drugs in public squares, the right to shriek gibberish at passers-by, and the right to expose themselves to female office workers heading for the subway station. If we didn’t respect those rights — why, we wouldn’t be America, would we? |
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