by The_Toecutter » Sat 21 Sep 2019, 12:12:01
This article was pretty damned spot on:
https://dailycaller.com/2019/09/03/cities-towns-landscape-despair$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.')..
But what is uniformly overlooked about the current scene is the physical arrangement of daily life on the American landscape, how it affects us in unreckoned ways, and what a tragic fiasco it has become.
I refer to the everyday human habitat known as suburbia, the matrix of single-family home subdivisions, arterial highways and freeways, chain stores, junk food dispensaries, and the ubiquitous wilderness of free parking — the last of these implying just one insidious side-effect of this template for living: mandatory motoring.
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Interestingly, one of suburbia’s biggest defects is the impoverishment of public space, and with it the degradation of the very public arena where ideas are exchanged and vetted for value. Most public space in America is devoted simply to the movement and storage of cars. The highway is a hostile environment for humans and few people seek camaraderie or stimulation in the parking lots. The ambiguous leftover scraps of land, like the woodsy berm between the Walmart and the Best Buy, have no civic value. (That’s where kids go to drink malt-liquor.) Everything else is private space, including the shopping mall, by the way, where you can be arrested for making a speech, or just wearing a T-shirt with a provocative message. Public space per se has been relegated insidiously to TV and the Internet, and neither of these are an adequate replacement for real-live social relations with other human beings in a real place worth caring about.
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The suburban environments of America are endless replications of low quality buildings, devoid of artistry, in poorly arranged relationships with each other on the landscape.
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What you’re seeing out there in all those clownish burger sheds, unvarying Big Box Stores, office “parks,” and boring tract houses is not mere ugliness. It represents something much more profoundly malign. This immersive ugliness is entropy-made-visible. Entropy is the force in the physical universe that drives things toward stasis and death. Entropy is what you want to steer clear of as much as possible. Living in an entropy-saturated environment is not good for you. Your brain processes the message that it sends out — this way toward death! — if perhaps only subliminally… and the mind revolts.
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Being immersed in suburbia, we barely register the pain it inflicts on us. It’s monotonous without being tranquil. The illegible cacophony of signage distresses your neurology. There is no reward in being there. The entire ensemble functions as a kind of uninvited punishment.
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Who even ventures out for a pleasure drive among the strip malls? The normal impulse is to buy whatever you came there for and get out as quickly as possible. But have you ever been tempted to walk down such a highway? To go for an evening stroll among the muffler shops, the Fry-o-later exhaust units, and the roaring traffic? Most highway strips don’t even have sidewalks. There’s no expectation that any normal person would choose to walk in these environments — though the desperately poor and the brain damaged sometimes do. This is how we live.
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There are well-established methods for the design and assembly of human habitats that are worth living in, but you get very little of that in the USA. Even our “best” cities have become demolition derbies. What is especially absent, as I have averred to earlier, is artistry consciously applied to our surroundings. You can lay some of the blame for that on the dogmas of modernism, since the schools of architecture are marinated in it, especially the hatred of ornament, which means we’re forbidden a visual language to communicate our connection to nature (that is, everything in the universe). In fact, modernism has amounted to a campaign to explicitly denature the human project.
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Another big chunk of blame can be assigned to officialdom and its zoning and building codes, which in most jurisdictions tends to absolutely mandate a suburban outcome (e.g. if you want to build a store, the law says you’d better supply twenty parking spaces). From this, an ethos emerges of the human habitat as an administrative abstraction. You end up living in a mere diagram of a place, not a place.
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It's worth reading. He just keeps telling truths that would be uncomfortable or even blasphemous to most of the percentage of those Americans stuck on the consumerist treadmill as well as the central planners that have all but forcibly herded them into that lifestyle in the quest for more growth.
Americans have developed a taste for the bland. They live in homes that look identical to each other because the local HOA and zoning regs force them to appear that way to keep the property values high, which ensures the occupants will be good little debt slaves while paying their taxes to live in them, unwilling to demand better working conditions lest they lose their employment and their lifes' work is ripped away from them. The drive their shitbox CUV/SUV vehicles with their womb-like interiors to their jobs in a cube, wasting their days away clacking keys and pushing paper so that they are allowed permission slips to exist called money, forced to obey the dictates of their employer, no matter how absurd or degrading. They eat their lunch, stripped of all of the things needed to nourish them and replaced with poisons, a nutritionally void semi-edible flotsam pretending to be food, in the name of convenience, because their job demands it of them due to the need to make the most efficient use of precious company time. Then after they've been cooped up in an office during a nice day isolated from any of the remaining the natural world they didn't get to enjoy on that nice day, they drive back home in their vehicles, vehicles designed to eventually fail so that they will later have to replace them on another loan(they never make enough money to buy outright), with the vehicles themselves bland and uniform looking with any concessions to being a pleasure to operate stripped out of them in the name of regulatory compliance and profit, reminiscent of the covered wagons during the days of Manifest Destiny, except the new manifest destiny isn't to conquer indigenous tribes, but nature itself, transforming the world into one giant strip mall littered with McMansions for the privileged, with slums and squalor for everyone else either unwilling to participate in this madness or even simply unable to afford to participate in it. These Americans then use these shitboxes as status symbols to attract mates, living in these uniform neighborhoods designed as sterile nurseries for their potential offspring, in the hopes that their offspring will be "good" citizens and repeat the cycle, endlessly, forever, without any regard to the finite nature of the planet they live on.
As this goes on, there's a class of people controlling the hidden hand of modern vampire Capitalism, making money off of each and every step in the process, and casting aside as refuse to be disposed of or even outright murdering those who disagree that this way of life is desirable or good or who even show active opposition to their resources/wealth/lives being stolen to support it.
Is it really any wonder why there's so many drugged-up, stressed-out, sociopathic/psychopathic people that are constantly on edge in this day and age?
Like him or hate him, Mr. Kunstler sees this truth and has the willingness to speak about it, regardless of what others think. For that, he should be praised.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson