Posted on 07/03/2018 11:19:46 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
New York has been my home for more than forty years, from the year after the citys supposed nadir in 1975, when it nearly went bankrupt. I have seen all the periods of boom and bust since, almost all of them related to the paper economy of finance and real estate speculation that took over the city long before it did the rest of the nation. But I have never seen what is going on now: the systematic, wholesale transformation of New York into a reserve of the obscenely wealthy and the barely herea place increasingly devoid of the idiosyncrasy, the complexity, the opportunity, and the roiling excitement that make a city great.
As New York enters the third decade of the twenty-first century, it is in imminent danger of becoming something it has never been before: unremarkable. It is approaching a state where it is no longer a significant cultural entity but the worlds largest gated community, with a few cupcake shops here and there. For the first time in its history, New York is, well, boring.
This is not some new phenomenon but a cancer thats been metastasizing on the city for decades now. And whats happening to New York nowwhats already happened to most of Manhattan, its coreis happening in every affluent American city. San Francisco is overrun by tech conjurers who are rapidly annihilating its remarkable diversity; they swarm in and out of the metropolis in specially chartered buses to work in Silicon Valley, using the city itself as a gigantic bed-and-breakfast. Boston, which used to be a city of a thousand nooks and crannies, back-alley restaurants and shops, dive bars and ice cream parlors hidden under its elevated, is now one long, monotonous wall of modern skyscraper.
(Excerpt) Read more at harpers.org ...
Yes, the Catholic schools were sought after by many wasps and jews in the cities as well for the high-quality education.
Today, the DailyMail is running this fantastic article about the photographer Jay Maisel, who lived and photographed in the Bowery, NYC. The text echoes the article we all commented on above, about the changing character of NYC neighborhoods, and how all the mom’n’pop stores and local color is being driven out by corporatism.
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