Posted on 05/20/2008 8:17:01 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o
Saul Bellows prophetic 1970 novel captured New Yorks unraveling and remains a cautionary tale.
As Bellow understood, the anything goes culture of the 1960s produced an anything goes city, where disorder and crime flourished, as in the Times Square of that era.Fear was a New Yorkers constant companion in the 1970s and 80s. We lived behind doors with triple locks, some like engines of medieval ironmongery. We barred our ground-floor and fire-escape windows with steel grates that made us feel imprisoned. I was thankful for mine, though, when a hatchet turned up on my fire escape, origin unknown. Nearing our building entrances, we held our keys at the ready and looked over our shoulders, as police and street-smart lore advised; our hearts pounded as we tried to shove the heavy doors open and slam them shut before some mugger could push in behind us, standard mugging procedure. Only once was I too slow and lost my money. A neighbor, who worked at a midtown bank, lost his life.
So to read Saul Bellows Mr. Sammlers Planet when it came out in 1970 was like a jolt of electricity. Just when New York had begun to spin out of controlsteadily worsening for over two decades until murders numbered over 2,200 a year, one every four hoursBellows novel described the unraveling with brilliant precision and explained unflinchingly why it was happening. His account shocked readers: some thought it racist and reactionary; others feared it was true but too offensive for a decent person to say. In those days, I felt I should cover my copy with a plain brown wrapper on the subway to veil the obscenity of its political incorrectness.
The book was true, prophetically so. And now that we live in New Yorks second golden agethe age of reborn neighborhoods in every borough, of safe streets bustling with tourists, of $40 million apartments, of filled-to-overflowing private schools and colleges, of urban glamour; the age when the New York Times runs stories that explain how once upon a time there was the age of the mugger and that ask, is new york losing its street smarts?its important to recall that todays peace and prosperity mustnt be taken for granted. Hip young residents of the revived Lower East Side or Williamsburg need to know that its possible to kill a city, that the streets they walk daily were once no-go zones, that within living memory residents and companies were fleeing Gotham, that newsweeklies heralded the rotting of the Big Apple and movies like Taxi Driver and Midnight Cowboy plausibly depicted New York as a nightmare peopled by freaks. Thats why its worth looking back at Mr. Sammler to understand why that decline occurred: we need to make sure it doesnt happen again.
A septuagenarian Holocaust survivor who lives on 90th Street near Riverside Drive (my turf for most of the last 45 years), the novels main character, Artur Sammler, sees disorder and decay wherever he looks. Out in the public realm, vandals have cut the receivers off pay phones and turned the booths into reeking urinals. In the parks, dog waste has killed the grass, and bums are everywhere. In one park, Sammler observes a wino sullenly pissing on newspapers and old leaves, while a homeless woman sleeps on a bench, her sea cows belly rising, legs swollen purple. Even the freshly opened daffodils show smudges of soot on their pure yellow petals. Central Park promenaders who now savor the lush Great Lawn or the sublime Bethesda Fountain should know what a heroic effort of philanthropy and policing it took to reclaim what less than two decades ago was a dusty, sterile, graffiti-marred wasteland where dope dealers and muggers reigned. Nothing you see today is the pure production of nature but springs instead from civic will and vision.
Along with disorder went crime. Sammler knows he cant jog in Riverside Park any more because of the muggers, and he sees in the parks trees and bushes cover for sexual violence, knifepoint robberies, sluggings, and murders. Crime pervades the whole city, even into private sanctuaries. Sammlers niece opens her window to admire a beautiful sunset and then forgets to lock it, allowing burglars to climb in from the roof below, as used to happen routinely. The least of her losses is the financial one. The sentimental value of her lockets, chains, rings, heirlooms was not appreciated by the insurance company. Such things are precious to her because they link her to her dead husband, her dead parents. For such loss, and the loss of her sense of safety in her own home, there can be no recompense.
How wonderful it would be to have the privileges of remoteness that $50,000 a year could buy, Sammler thinksclub membership, taxis, doormen, guarded approaches, all of the insulation that only 17 years later, as Tom Wolfe calculated more lavishly in Bonfire of the Vanities, took an income of $1 million a year. (Since Dickens, our best urbanologists have been our novelists.) But, Bellow points out, even the opulent sections of the city were not immune. You opened a jeweled door into degradation, from hypercivilized Byzantine luxury straight into the state of nature.
The novels personification of all that crime is a tall, powerfully built thief whom Sammler sees several times working the Riverside Drive bus, a dandified black man sporting a camels-hair coat, homburg, and Dior sunglasses. Sammler, slightly taller, can watch him over the heads of the other standees as he skillfully snaps open the handbags and methodically empties the purses of his unaware victims. One day, shielded from the other passengers by his broad, well-tailored back, the thief robs a weak old man with red-lidded eyes of sea-mucus blue, cowering in the buss back corner, his false teeth dropping from his upper gums in his terror. The thief pulls open the mans jacket with its ragged lining, takes out his plastic wallet, and methodically rifles through the contents, pocketing the money and the Social Security check, while dropping the family photos like so much trash. Then, in a gesture of ironic contempt, he jerks the knot of the old mans tie approximately, but only approximately, into place.
So much, in other words, for the old mans claim, through the symbol of his otherwise useless necktie, of membership in a civilized community, where civility and forbearance govern our relations with one another and family bonds matter. And so much for his social security in the literal sense, if the state cant even secure him from invasion and violation in public and in broad daylight. Its the ultimate satire: the state that promises you the security of an old-age pension cant even provide you the security to keep itthe primary purpose of a state. Its almost as bad as todays Britain, where the welfare state provides for your welfare not by stopping omnipresent thugs from beating you senseless but by sewing you up afterward for free.
As a Holocaust survivor, Sammler views this fraying of the social order with special unease. Like many people who had seen the world collapse once, Mr. Sammler entertained the possibility it might collapse twice. He knows firsthand the evil of which men are capable. Clubbed in Poland into a mass grave, he alone survives and crawls out through the blood-slick bodies of the innocent dead, among whom lies his wife. Fighting alongside the partisans in the Polish forests, hunted like a rat, he learns the evil he himself can dowith pleasure in the doing. He surprises a Nazi soldier, makes him throw his rifle into the snow and strip off his warm clothes, which Sammler, himself nearly a corpse, badly wants. Dont shoot, the scared young man cries, I have children. But Sammler, his human compassion dried up, puts two bullets into the young mans head. Bone burst. Matter flew out. And Sammler felt joy, felt bliss. His heart was lined with brilliant, rapturous satin. And now, in New York, Bellow remarks, this civil margin once removed, Mr. Sammler would never trust the restoration totally.
Out of understandable anxiety for the social order, Sammler phones the police twice to have the bus thief arrested. They go through the motions with bored cynicism. If they will post a cop on the bus, Sammler says, hell point out the pickpocket. We dont have enough manpower, the desk officer replies; youll have to get on our waiting list. A waiting list? Sammler objects. This man is going to rob more people, but you arent going to do anything about it. Is that right? The confirmatory answer is silencethe contempt-edged passivity that anyone who called the cops in the seventies and eighties, when, as Bellow remarks, the police were never around when you needed them, will remember well.
Obsessed with the thief, in whose evil actions there is illumination of normally hidden potentialities within human nature, Sammler watches for him on the bus. Like most law-abiding citizens in those days, he pretends not to see malefactors in the midst of their doings, lest his look be construed as a challengea continual experience of self-abasement, as I remember well. A dry, a neat, a prim face declared that one had not crossed anyones boundary; one was satisfied with ones own business. But the robber notices Sammler watching him and follows him home into the lobby of his building. Holding him against the wall with his forearm, speaking no more than a puma would, the robber calmly unbuttons his camels-hair coat, opens his fly, and displays to Sammler his penis, a large tan-and-purple uncircumcised thing like a snake or an elephants trunk, along with his great oval testicles. The thing was shown with mystifying certitude as a prominent and separate object intended to communicate authority. Then the thief returns it to his trousers. Quod erat demonstrandum. He releases Sammler, concluding the session, the lesson, the warning, the encounter, the transmission.
No reader of Sammler has ever forgotten this scene, and even the novels characters cant stop talking about it. Was it sixteen, eighteen inches? a wide-eyed nephew asks Sammler. Would you guess it weighed two pounds, three pounds, four? And indeed, it is the books central moment: in it come together Bellows key themes of crime, race, the sexual revolution, and the fragility of the social order.
While Bellow was writing Mr. Sammlers Planet, not only were the criminals who preyed on the city overwhelmingly black (as is still true in New York), but much worse black violence threatened to destroy urban America in a latterday version of the European upheaval that nearly killed Sammler. Race was the social problem. In 1965, riots raged for six days in Los Angeless Watts ghetto, leaving over 30 dead and whole blocks in ashes; in 1967, over 40 died in the Detroit ghetto riots before the National Guard, with army reinforcements, restored order; and over 25 died in the Newark riots, in which the looters, shooters, and arsonists left $10 million of property in ruins. A year later, after Martin Luther Kings assassination, rioting raged in black neighborhoods for days in over 100 cities. Meanwhile, black radicalsmost notably, the weapons-toting, cop-killing Black Pantherswere calling for armed revolution.
The year Sammler appeared, Tom Wolfe jeered at the white elites embrace of the Panthers in his hilarious essay Radical Chic, describing a party Leonard Bernstein had thrown to introduce the paramilitary-garbed black-power group to such friends as Richard Avedon, Lillian Hellman, Robert Silvers, and Barbara Walters in his Park Avenue duplex. But for Bellow, despite his keen sense of the absurd, such antics were no laughing matter. They were part of the reason why New York was falling apart.
Since the nineteenth century, bohemians, writers, and intellectuals have toyed with the romance of the outlaw, as Sammler puts it. He thought often what a tremendous appeal crime had made to the children of bourgeois civilization. Whether as revolutionists, as supermen, as saints, Knights of Faith, even the best teased and tested themselves with thoughts of knife or gun. Lawless Raskolnikovs. But in Sammlers New York, and in elite culture generally in the sixties, that romance of the outlaw focused primarily on blacks, whose status as social victims and outcasts transformed their criminal acts (ex officio, so to speak) into manly, quasi-heroic revolts against oppression, however inchoate. Another of Sammlers nieces, a rich, pretty Sarah Lawrence grad, embodies this prevailing worldview: she regularly sends money to defense funds for black murderers and rapists. Her uncle has no patience with this attitude. You cant excuse a crime by saying it has been committed by a victim. To whom would this not apply, if you start to say poor creature? he dryly objects.
But though this exculpatory impulse springs partly from a widespread wish to make amends for centuries of racial injustice and to see the unity of the different races affirmed, its roots go deeper than that. The American elite, Bellow saw, had lost confidence in its core values. The labor of Puritanism was now ending; the Puritan outlook that had guided America for three and a half centuries, the bourgeois outlook that formerly was believed, trusted, was now bitterly circled in black irony. Without faith in their core bourgeois values and in the social order that rested on those values, the old elite had ceased to believe in its own legitimacy. Not surprisingly, Mr. Sammler was testy with White Protestant America for not keeping better order. Cowardly surrender. Not a strong ruling class. Eager in a secret humiliating way to come down and mingle with all the minority mobs, and scream against themselves.
Perhaps he had in mind Johnson-administration attorney general Ramsey Clark, son of Supreme Court justice Tom Clark, who was asserting at that moment that white Americas racism and oppression (rather than black criminals) were responsible for black crime and that evil America was the worlds chief perpetrator of crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. (In later years, he became a defender of Saddam Hussein and the blind terrorist sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman.) Or perhaps he had in mind Mayflower descendant William Sloane Coffin, son of a Metropolitan Museum board president, who as Yales chaplain and then as minister of Riverside Church went from being a civil rights Freedom Rider to becoming the countrys leading Vietnam War protester, draft-resistance advocate (for whom civil disobedience seemed to be his creeds main sacrament), and denouncer of Americas lack of social justice. Or hundreds like them, including New Yorks then-mayor John Lindsay, whose Dutch ancestors arrived in Manhattan in the seventeenth century.
Americas elites, at least the most vocal among them, no longer believed in the importance or legitimacy of policing their own streetsor the world. As we only later came to grasp clearly, all the resultant disorder that Bellow catalogedpublic spaces despoiled by drunks, drug dealers, addicts, and madmen; unchecked vandalism; the stench of human and canine waste everywhere; the sordid parade of prostitutes of all genders around Times Square (whose modern romanticizers either werent there or else have a rarefied taste for the squalid and perverse)all these so-called victimless crimes turned out to be the great incubator of serious crime. Potential wrongdoers accurately concluded from the lack of order-keeping policing that the authorities didnt care, so they could rob, mug, steal cars, and so on with impunity, right up to a gang of black 14-year-olds shooting another kid to death, as Sammlers nephew casually reports. To the elites, in fact, all the victimless disorder wasnt just harmless but healthy: drugs were mind-expanding, madmen were marching to the beat of a different drummer, blasting boomboxes were the exuberant expression of what we hadnt yet learned to call multiculturalism, and restraint was oppression. As Bellow understood, social disorder flowed from cultural change.
Of all the Puritan restraints, sexual restraint was Number One on the elites hit list. The opposite of a virtue, it was now deemed harmful, malignant. As the ascendant psychotherapeutic worldview had it, Sammler caustically notes, the bad puritanical attitudes from the sick past . . . have damaged civilization so much. In the 1960s, the elites wanted the final triumph of the EnlightenmentLiberty, Fraternity, Equality, Adultery! With the struggles of three revolutionary centuries finally won and the constraints of church and family cast off, the American elites demanded one ultimate liberation. They clamored for the privileges of aristocracy, . . . especially the libidinous privileges, the right to be uninhibited, spontaneous, urinating, defecating, belching, coupling in all positions, tripling, quadrupling, polymorphous, noble in being natural, primitive, combining the leisure and luxurious inventiveness of Versailles with the hibiscus-covered erotic ease of Samoa.
Because black Americans, as elite culture saw it, already enjoyed this sought-for sexual freedom, white Americans, Bellow says, had formed an idea of the corrupting disease of being white and the healing power of black. They saw blacks as the mythical noble savages, free from hypercivilized inhibition, their natural potency unimpaired. From the black side, Bellow writes in Sammler, strong currents were sweeping over everyone. Child, black, redskinthe unspoiled Seminole against the horrible Whiteman. Millions of civilized people wanted oceanic, boundless, primitive, neckfree nobility, experienced a strange release of galloping impulses, and acquired the peculiar aim of sexual niggerhood for everyone. Hence, as Sammlers pretty niece tells him after a few drinks, A Jew brain, a black cock, a Nordic beauty is what a woman wants. And men have similar ambitions, Sammler muses. Did not LBJ, according to an apocryphal but plausible story, expose himself to reporters, demanding to know whether a man so well hung could not be trusted to lead his country?
Trouble was, Americans wanted two mutually exclusive things, Sammler observes. They sought the privileges, and the free ways of barbarism, under the protection of civilized order, property rights, refined technological organization, and so on. But you can have only one or the other. That is the meaning of the camels-hair-clad robbers self-display. Yes, here is the big black member that everyone wants; but it is attached to a criminal. Its freedom, power, and authority are lawless, ready to make use of anyone, barbaric, bestial. Throughout, Bellow describes the robber as an elegant brute with the effrontery of a big animal. He is an African prince or great black beast . . . seeking whom he might devouras Saint Peter described that incarnation of evil, the devil. His gesture expresses to Sammler that he has the power and the will to devour him if need be. President Johnson might claim the authority to rule the world; the robber claims the alpha males authority to rule the jungle, the state of nature, by force and violence.
As the classical political philosophers held, the civilized order that protects our lives and property rests on restraint. We curb our freedom of aggressive impulse to ensure the safety of all, ourselves included. The resultant freedom to go about our cities unmolested and to channel our energies into the civilized arts and sciences that generate human progress is a higher freedom than the liberty we relinquish. We limit our sexual freedom in order to form stable families that teach children to internalize civilizations self-restraint and make it part of their character, a process that turns the raw material of nature into human beings. I thought everybody was born human, Sammlers pretty niece tells him. He replies, with this civilizing process in mind: It is not a natural gift at all. Only the capacity is natural.
All the old impulses persist in all of us, of course, which requires a perpetual effort of restraint from both the individual and the society. When the curbs break down enough, whether within the individuals conscience or the order-keeping activity of society at large, what results is the elegant brute of a robber or the 14-year-old murderers or the black urban underclass that was forming at the very moment Bellow was writinga subgroup of blacks whose sexual freedom produced skyrocketing illegitimacy rates and weak families whose children crowded into the ranks of robbers and murderers. For many middle-class people, like Sammlers pretty niece, a sexual adventurer who has done it in too many ways with too many men, the result was an epidemic of divorce that left a generation of wounded children, determined either never to get divorced and inflict the same pain on their own children or else never to get married in the first place. Bellow himself, who had five wives, plus affairs and one-night stands beyond enumeration, came to judge the sexual revolution a thirty-year disaster.
The Enlightenment, emphasizing reason, liberation, and dreams of human perfectibility, lost sight of these fundamental truths about human nature and the social order. It expelled the old worlds demons, Bellow saysthose imaginary embodiments of the human evil that everyone once knew existed. But the heirs of the Enlightenment notables who freed mankind from superstition and vassalage now threaten to bring the demons back through sheer ignorance of the reality they represented. Sammler wonders whether the worst enemies of civilization might not prove to be its petted intellectuals who attacked it at its weakest momentsattacked it in the name of proletarian revolution, in the name of reason, and in the name of irrationality, in the name of visceral depth, in the name of sex, in the name of perfect instantaneous freedom. Ignorant of what they are doing, they hack away at the basic conditions of the civilized order by which they live.
When Sammler, who between the wars was the London correspondent for several Warsaw magazines, gives an informal talk at Columbia about his acquaintanceship with such luminaries as H. G. Wells, J. M. Keynes, and John Strachey, a bearded listener rudely interrupts. How dare Sammler quote George Orwells statement that British radicals were protected by the Royal Navy? . . . Thats a lot of shit, the man splutters. Orwell was a fink. He was a sick counterrevolutionary. Its good he died when he did. The Levis-clad man has no use for the notions that an anti-Communist (though still a leftist) like Orwell could be great and that radicals were free to spout their revolutionary nostrums not only because liberal England gladly tolerated diversity of opinion but also because it guarded its liberal freedom with the very military might the radicals despised. The audience shouldnt listen to Sammler, this effete old shit, the young man continues. His balls are dry. Hes dead. He cant come. The young man, in other words, subscribes to the philosophy of the thief in the camels-hair coat: all authority resides in the genitals, beside which Sammlers wide erudition and the Western culture over which he ranges so widely throughout the novel count as nothing.
The mans last charge comes almost verbatim from an outburst during a lecture Bellow gave at radical San Francisco State. He resisted his initial impulse to say, OLets choose a young lady from the audience for a trial heat and see about this,Ë he reported in a letter. But in Sammler, he changed the heckler from the creative-writing instructor he actually was to a poor mans Jean Genet who wrote a book about homosexuals in prison. . . . Buggery behind bars. Or being a pure Christian angel because you commit murder and have beautiful male love affairs.
He made him, in other words, a representative of the emerging academic culture that was turning against the Western tradition it was entrusted to transmit: ignorant, coarse-minded, anti-intellectual, irrational, hyper-ideological, sex-crazed, substituting sloganeering and invective for argument, obsessed with the marginal and the oppressed as evidence of Western societys fundamental, inexpiable injustice.
The professors were turning against Western culture because, with religion weakened among the elites, culture was the last authoritative bastion of Thou Shalt Nots, the repository of the great thinkers conclusions about what kind of life and behavior is best for man, what makes our existence meaningful and human, what allows us to fulfill our highest potentialitiesand what leads to strife and sorrow. This final push for liberation on campus, including a liberation from Enlightenment reason itself, didnt want to hear about the right life or the wrong. Every kind of experiment in livingcoupling in all positions, tripling, quadrupling, polymorphouswas fine in elite cultures united effort to conquer disgust. The eras artists and playwrights turned against culture, too: Bellow mentions the painting of Andy Warhol, with its fey, arch insistence that theres no difference between the higher accomplishments and the lower, or among art, commerce, and celebrity; and he mentions the Performance Groups famous production of Dionysus in 69, whose naked actors evidently had missed Nietzsches caution that art needs the shaping, ordering Apollonian element to contain the frenzy, sexual license, and intoxication of the Dionysian, which, left to itself, ends in murder. For the elites, it was Dionysus all the way.
Thats what worried Bellow most about the radical professors and their elite allies. You dont found universities in order to destroy culture, he wrote after the fracas at San Francisco State. For that you want a Nazi party. Who could tell where the professors overturning of the Thou Shalt Nots would end, now that sexual restraint had evaporated? They claimed they wanted a revolution, and they hailed the Black Panther revolutionaries and black radicals who brandished rifles at Cornell in 1969. Sammler, for his part, cant help recalling that almost all modern revolutions, from the Jacobins to the Nazis and the Communists, have ended with the streets running with blood, because murder has been at their heart, rather than an incidental means to an end. For revolutionary leaders like Stalin, the really great prize of power was unobstructed enjoyment of murder, while the revolutionary masses in turn loved the man strong enough to take blood guilt on himself. For them an elite must prove itself in this ability to murder.
Each modern revolution (the American one alone excepted) overturned civilizations ultimate restraint and became a conspiracy against the sacredness of life. So while Sammler understands the violence of the camels-hair-clad robber as a brutish reversion to the state of nature when society fails to keep order, he knows from experience that when a revolutionary elite calls for the overturning of restraints and the trashing of culture, it can end in something still worsein the elites seizing control of the government and unleashing against some of its own citizens the very same murderous violence that government theoretically exists to curb. And such elites have done so even with the genius of the Nazis, who learned how to abolish conscience and how to get the curse out of murder by making it look ordinary, boring, or trite.
Even in the sixties and seventies, New Yorkers didnt expect to hear jackboots marching up Riverside Drive, however, and for all his dark thoughts, Sammler doesnt believe, as a few refugee friends do, that Nazisms second coming is inevitable. But at that time, we certainly understood Sammlers weary resignation that hed have to give up the Riverside bus and use the subway instead, which he hated. We were giving up so much of our citywalking in certain neighborhoods, coming home very late (or even going out after dark for milk or bread) unless absolutely essential. We came to wonder if New York was a place that stunted human possibility instead of expanding it. I remember coming back from London in the mid-seventies and seeing Gotham with new eyes, as one does after an absencethe potholed streets and broken sidewalks; the graffiti smeared everywhere, as if punks had defaced the whole city; the dirt and litter; the shabby, ill-tended buildings; the thugs and bums; the rumpled, stoop-shouldered, careworn pedestrians, even on Fifth Avenue. It looked like a second-class town, trending downward toward insignificance, with the whimper of disorder and crime. Or toward death, with the bang of race riots.
Many of us felt with Sammler that liberal beliefs [in the classical sense] didnt seem capable of self-defense, and you could smell decay. Could it be that the radical assault on culture would succeed and that a whole generation of new mutants, in critic Leslie Fiedlers term, would grow up not understanding the traditional virtues and vices, and blind to lifes nobler possibilities? Already you could see that some of the professorial radicals students, the hippie flower children pursuing their bliss, would crumble under the dangers the world holds for everyone. Innocent, devoid of aggression, opting out, much like Ferdinand the Bull, Sammler muses of them. How similar also to the Eloi of H. G. Wells fantasy The Time Machine. Lovely young human cattle herded by the cannibalistic Morlocks who lived a subterranean life and feared light and fire. Or prey at least for the muggers and seducers all around themand in for the rude surprise that the world would demand more than sex, drugs, and rock and roll. God forbid that jackboots ever did goose-step up Riverside Driveor need to be halted under some distant palm or pine by the likes of these.
But neither the death of New York nor the death of conscience ever happened. Like most Americans, the majority of New Yorkers (chiefly in the outer boroughs rather than Manhattan) were pragmatic folk, capable of learning from experience. They didnt want to lose their town, and they elected Rudy Giuliani to clean it up. And all over the country, kids turned against the way their baby-boomer, sexual-revolutionary parents had brought them up, and resolved to do something different. They understood there was a better way to live.
How did they know it? A residue of the old culture, too strong to die? A pragmatic or instinctive understanding that there is a right and a wrong life for man, which some of the old philosophers called Natural Law? From page one of Mr. Sammlers Planet, Bellow himself insists that, beyond the explanations we construct through Enlightenment reason, the soul has its own natural knowledge. We all have a sense of the mystic potency of humankind and an inclination to believe in archetypes of goodness. A desire for virtue was no accident. We all know that we must try to live with a civil heart. With disinterested charity. We must live a life conditioned by other human beings. We must try to meet the terms of the contract life sets us, as Sammler says in the astonishing affirmation with which Bellow ends his book. The terms which, in his inmost heart, each man knows. . . . As all know. For that is the truth of itthat we all know, God, that we know, that we know, we know, we know.
Myron Magnet is the author of The Dream and the Nightmare: The Sixties Legacy to the Underclass. He is City Journals editor-at-large and was its editor from 1994 through 2006.
Saul Bellow's novel told the strict truth: NYC almost went went out with the sewage, due to (largely) black crime and white liberal elite "toleration." I didn't and still wouldn't support Rudy Giulinai for POTUS, but still admire the way he, and others like him, saved this great city for civilization.
Thought you might be interested. I’d love to hear your comments.
Envision this when you hear people talk about how wonderful it would be to do away with all guns. Especially in places like Chicago, if you get my drift.
I remember for years that I never wanted to go to NYC. Then my wife dragged me up there with her brother as a guide - he doesn't live there but knows his way around - during the Giulinai era. I was shocked at how pleasant it was. We also went up once to see the Rocketts - part of a MWR bus package. We walked a few blocks up the road from our hotel to the Garden and then back down. Nothing happened to us. Ate a fine restaurant around the corner from our hotel. An excellent meal. A couple years later we took our grandsons up there. No problem. Is it still that way or with Bloomberg, has it started to slide back down?
Of course the fact that I am a white male saying this will forever brand me as a racist, but I'm too old to give a damn anymore.
Mayor Bloomberg is enjoying the fruits of Rudy’s legacy.
Something well said that needed to be said, but ultimately sterile until people, like Rudy, found the courage to act against the thugs and their enablers.
Great observation. I'm not at all surprised to see this article in the "City Journal," which publishes Theodore Dalrymple.
Magnificent article. I fled Manhattan (East Village) in 1971 after armed black thugs entered a Polish bar in the next building and, without any reason other than hatred and anger, opened fire and murdered the owner, his wife and three patrons.
We found a refuge in New Jersey for many years and I am horrified that Corzine, an ultra liberal NJSC (The Mount Laurel decision) and the Council on Affordable Housing want to place low income projects with their crime, negative effect on property values and general blight in my town and every town in this state.
Everyone in NYC in 1978 was tough, you had to be.
I'd say in general terms, what almost killed off NYC were years and decades of growing liberalism. Liberal policy that created dependency on government and allowed good neighborhoods to become ghettos and slums. While crime was a huge problem, it didn't directly effect all parts of the city. Not everyone was being mugged, robbed or raped on the F-train.
Mayor Giuliani may have cleaned up NYC, but it remains a liberal bastion to this day. Everyone I grew up with has moved away from NYC. Some ran to south Jersey or Long Island. Some moved to places like Tennessee, Florida, Montana and Colorado.
After 30+ years away from my old hometown, I can honestly say I miss the some of the culture, like the restaurants and the beaches. Having said that, NYC is more liberal today then it ever was. I'll visit NYC and the surrounding areas from time to time. Otherwise, I say no thanks.
Carolyn
We just returned from a long weekend in NYC. We stayed on W. 79th St., and enjoyed wonderful, reasonably priced dinners on two consecutive nights at a couple of local Italian restaurants. What was most remarkable to me was the transformation of the area around Columbia University, in Morningside Heights (116th St. between Broadway and Amsterdam). (I spent two days at a conference there.) This area (at least the Broadway side) is completely gentrified. The street scene there is almost identical to that of Broadway in the lower 80’s. This is a major change from 15-20 years ago.
We felt completely safe everywhere we went at night in Manhattan, from 8th St. through SoHo and the Village, Times Square, and up to the mid 80’s. Judging from what we saw from the taxi en route to LaGuardia on Sunday morning, however, I wouldn't recommend venturing on the upper East side along Madison Ave. above 110th St. That part of town won't change until the city demolishes the large housing-project towers in that area.
this is what I have been trying to scream at the top of my lungs.....you can't condone public indecency or "allow" perversions to be legalized and expect our society to remain lawful....actions have consequences..(naked barristtas ping)
just a little off topic but you being born and raised in NYC I have to tell it.....my brother meets all kinds of people thru his sales....once, he was with a client in NYC, Jewish guy, and this Jewish guy says to my brother....that he was the best kind of Jew...oh, what kind of Jew is that? my brother asks....”a NYC Jew”! the fellow said emphatically....lol
bump for later when I have that kind of time
Thanks for posting this. It’s one of the finest literary essays I’ve read in quite some time.
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