Who says that Canada wants to be annexed??

arthur

-----Original Message-----
From: Karen Watters Cole [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 21, 2003 8:52 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Tanya Campbell
Subject: RE: [Futurework] The District of Colour Bar


Yes, Tanya this was a good read, part humor part dirty facts.  If it weren't
for the fact that the seat of government takes up so much of it's real
estate, Washington DC would be just another urban renewal project in some
ways.  But hey, they've got great real estate and the Smithsonian, too.

Guess it should be noted that the lost margin keeps getting smaller on
legislation to give DC residents their own reps in Congress.  As soon as
there is a change in majorityship, this effort might just succeed after many
attempts, another example of dogged democracy, if not fluid democracy.

I would at least hope that DC gets official recognition before we annex
Canada and incorporate Israel.

Karen Watters Cole
East of Portland, West of Mt Hood
Outgoing mail scanned by NAV 2002

A great piece in the Guardian this morning on Washington DC's racism and
contradictions/hipocracy surrounding it as the center of democracy.

It also touches on something that is often missed when talking about the US
and that is the state capitals, centres of where democracy is to be
practiced are not often much more than manmade suburbs at their best (DC is
an extreme example of this). And from this structure, the vocal
minority in those capitals and surrounding often have more ability to drown
out the voice of those in cities.

(I humbly await pro-suburb criticism.)

Regards,
Tanya Campbell

---------------------------------------------------------
The District of Colour Bar

Engel in America

Matthew Engel
Tuesday January 21, 2003
The Guardian

It is commonplace in the media to use the names of capital cities as
shorthand for the opinions of a country: "Washington thinks this";
"London agrees"; "Paris doesn't". And so on. It is an odd formulation in
any case, especially when you're talking about Washington. What is
Washington? Even the leading citizens have some trouble grasping that.
It is possible to read books with Washington in the title that make you
imagine the entire city is given over to cocktail parties with senators
dropping confidentialities under the chandeliers. Indeed, it is possible
to live here for years and believe that.

For this could be the most racially segregated city in the world. It is
certainly the most segregated I have seen since Johannesburg circa 1976.
Of course, all cities are economically stratified in a manner that
produces de facto segregation. But in Washington this takes on extreme
form. The whites live in the north-western sliver of the city: a wealthy
corridor stretching down to the city centre. The rest of the place, with
small (though, it is true, growing) exceptions, is overwhelmingly black.


Guidebooks always warn first-time visitors about the quirks of
Washington's grid system. The city is divided into four quadrants, and
every address is repeated four times. So if you have to go to the corner
of, say, 21st and K Streets, it is necessary to specify whether you mean
the NW, NE, SW or SE quadrant. But if a white visitor gets into a taxi,
the driver just drives straight to the north-western version. Why the
hell would you be going anywhere else?

The second oddity is that this is the least democratic city in any
allegedly free country. The District of Columbia was never given the
same rights as the states: in the early days of the republic, the
federal government, uncertain of its status, wanted a small patch to
call its own, which at the time was probably fair enough.

As the city grew, it became absurd, indeed outrageous. The population
grew to 800,000 (it is under 600,000 now), but since they were mainly
black people or white liberals and thus staunchly Democratic rather than
Republican, logic and justice went out of the window. In 1961, when the
US was a mere 185 years old, the city finally gained the right to vote
for president. A form of home rule followed, though Congress still has
unique rights in bossing the place about. Since for many years DC was
run by the ridiculous Mayor Marion Barry, there was a case for
maintaining those rights.

Barry has gone; the city is now quite well-run. But in fact DC voters
have been losing rights. They are not allowed any senators (if they
were, the Republicans would lose their majority) and the "delegate" to
Congress had her limited voting rights taken away when the Republicans
gained control there in 1995. Bill Clinton, in a Clintonian gesture, put
the city's campaigning licence plate, "Taxation without Representation",
on the presidential limousine; George W Bush took it off again.

The third point about Washington is its status as reputed murder capital
of the world. There were 482 murders in 1991, which was one way of
maintaining population decline. Over the past decade, that figure has
halved - more cops, fewer young males thanks to demographic trends, less
crack cocaine, more prosperity. But in 2002, it rose again to 262, the
worst figure since 1997.

It is expected to keep going up, due to another population spike (the
grandchildren of the post-war baby boomers) and the scheduled release
from prison of some old-time baddies. Cities as big as Boston have a
tiny fraction of those rates. There are seven police districts in DC: in
a typical year, two or three of the murders take place in the second
district, which covers the north-west.

Yet it is only a short drive from supermarkets selling Roquefort and
organic granola to those selling plantains and yams, and from banks
willing to throw cheap money at home-owners to the Check 'n Go, which
will loan you $50 for 14 days at an annualised rate of 547.5%. Some of
these areas are pleasant, laughing neighbourhoods; some are flat-out
murderous.

Some are now getting very mixed, like U Street, where white gays,
dinkies and singles are taking over. Part of the attraction is Ben's
Chili Bowl, an institution whose "chili half-smokes" knock the pants off
the canapés at the more fashionable salons. Nizam Ali, the original
Ben's son, helps run a group called NoMurdersDC - not fewer murders,
note, but none at all.

It is a splendidly ambitious idea: making the point that these are not
faceless statistics being killed, worth their two paragraphs in the
Post, but real people who matter. At one of their meetings a 17-year-old
girl got up and said 12 of her friends had been killed. "I've been to
more funerals than birthday parties," she said. A few months ago, the
world became obsessed by the sniper. These are daily snipes, happening
all the time, about three miles from the White House.

But Washington's votes don't count, and its people are largely
invisible.

Now where were we? Democracy in Iraq, was it?

Tanya Campbell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
+44 (0)7810 562209



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