Time to examine inequality
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It is enormously difficult to write about what suddenly seem trivial
matters when our house and hearts are filled with those dreadful
images from New Orleans.
I watch the agony there and hear the anger of the victims and the
o7mea culpasf7 of the people who could have prevented much of this
and who should have responded -- and didn’t -- at a level the tragedy
demanded when it happened, and I find myself thinking back over
similar national tragedies in this country in my lifetime.
And the one that comes most to mind is the Great Depression of the
1930s.
Although the Depression was triggered by the stock market crash of
1929, it took many months for the dimensions of the tragedy to
manifest themselves -- unlike Hurricane Katrina, which struck in a
few hours and left devastation almost immediately behind. But we will
be discovering in the weeks and months ahead the full dimensions of
the Katrina tragedy, and it occurs to me that some of the lessons of
the Great Depression could be instructive in that dismal process.
I was 10 when my father lost his retail business and finally our
home in a few months of inability to meet call loans that destroyed
both his spirit and his business. He never fully regained either one,
although he finally settled into a sales job in a department store
that provided a modest livelihood.
In the 10 years before the beginning of World War II marked the
end of the Depression, I watched this country -- like my parents --
deal with hunger and joblessness and despair frontally and with
determination and compassion that carried us through the war years
that followed.
Admittedly, I viewed -- and now recall -- these events from the
perspective of a WASP (white Anglo-Saxon Protestant) kid raised in a
heartland Midwestern city. The social problems that were very much
present in this country and would surface in violence in the years
following the war were mostly out of my view. And to some extent,
they were out of the nation’s view too because the Depression -- like
Katrina -- didn’t choose its victims. We were pretty much all in it
together.
I read about the looting and violence and racial anger in New
Orleans, and I have quite different recollections of the 1930s.
I remember the dozens -- maybe hundreds -- of embarrassed knocks
at our back door and the transients who stood there asking for food
and offering to work in payment. My mother always fed them, and there
was never any distinguishing of skin color.
I remember the forlorn piles of furniture on the street of people
whose homes had been foreclosed and had no place to go. And the long
bread lines, bending around blocks, quiet, orderly, despairing, a
random mix of folks, all with a desperate need to feed their families
that brought them together far more than the division of skin color
might have separated them.
I remember neighborhood grocers who risked failure to run up long
lines of credit for good customers who paid whatever they could, when
they could, in the constant hope of finding a job -- or another that
paid a living wage. And I remember a friend and neighbor who was
about to lose his house and took out a life insurance policy, then
hung himself so his family could pay off their mortgage and have a
place to live.
I remember the primary means of transportation for those of us who
couldn’t afford to buy tickets was hitch-hiking. I got around the
United States almost exclusively that way, right up to the time I
enlisted in the Navy. Hitch-hiking characterized that period for me.
It required a good deal of trust in fellow humans, both in the person
seeking the ride and the drivers who picked them up. And it was done
in the spirit of those times: that in the final analysis, we’re all
in this together.
And, finally, there was the role of government in our lives.
The stock market crash and its aftermath came at a time when the
people running our government believed firmly that it should
concentrate on aid to business rather than public works and relief
for the growing army of unemployed. President Hoover said in 1931
that he wanted “to solve great problems outside of government
action.”
Small wonder, then, that Franklin Roosevelt came into our lives
almost as a saint. He provided instant visible leadership, then
turned the power of the government into dozens of creative measures
to address the agony and poverty and despair of the Great Depression.
We had hope once again. And we had social programs that have
served us well for half a century, some of them now under attack.
So how does this speak to the tragedy of New Orleans?
First and foremost, it stresses the role of government in
providing leadership and action. The psychological impact of the
president wading through the flooded streets of New Orleans the day
after the storm hit to assure victims that help was on the way could
have calmed the anger and signaled his sense of urgency in getting
immediate federal help to the scene. Far as I know, nobody from
Washington got their feet wet for four days -- if ever.
Second, this is no time to debate the role of the federal
government in our lives. It’s a time for action, for creative
programs to address the needs of the hundreds of thousands of
dislocated people. The president could lead the way by throwing open
the gates of his Texas ranch to a busload of New Orleans refugees.
And third, the near absence of white faces in those montages of
suffering people enduring the Superdome and the New Orleans
convention center speaks loudly to our most lacerating domestic
problem: the growing gap between the haves and have-nots in our
society. Both literally and symbolically, most of the white folk were
able to get out of New Orleans ahead of the carnage, and most of the
black folk weren’t.
In the Depression years, most of us were in the same boat, working
to the same ends, helping one another. That isn’t true today -- in
Newport-Mesa or in the United States -- and it needs to be addressed.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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