Ain’t that America

This Saturday I parked my car at a meter on Ventura Boulevard for my monthly haircut. I fed the meter enough quarters for an hour and fifteen minutes. The same woman, now semi retired, has been cutting my hair for nearly thirty years. Sometimes we get to talking and I’m usually her last customer of the day, so I always hedge with a few extra coins to insure against a parking ticket because I’ll probably forget about it or procrastinate over until it triples.

I emerged coiffed, shampooed and replete with pleasant smelling hair elixirs wafting, contemplating lunch, only to witness my car on a flatbed on its way to an impound.  My tags were expired.  Months earlier, when registering my car at Triple A, I learned that my insurance had yet to appear in the DMV data base so they issued me a sort of temporary certificate of registration.  Proof that I was paid up.  It goes without saying it wasn’t good enough for the department of transportation dickwad who’d initiated the whole miscarriage of justice.  After a brief and heated exchange where I made sure he understood that I was indeed not in arrears with documents in hand, after I precipitated a definitive end to the conversation by congratulating him on his career and remarking that his parents must be proud, he rolled up his window and sped off and my car did the same on the flatbed truck.

It was really nobody’s fault but mine, but still, because it was a Saturday and the bureaucracy with authority to release my car was closed for the weekend, it ended up being a nearly $500 mistake.  Three days of storage fees.

Over expired tags that I had actually paid for.

Fuck me.

I’m lucky.

I could take the hit.

I’ve been in a position where it would have sunk me.

But I’m confident that most people with expired tags simply can’t afford the fees yet need their vehicles to get back and forth from their shitty jobs, pick up their kids, go to the grocery store and the doctor.

People need their cars in Southern California.  They don’t neglect due diligence when it comes to livelihood.  In Los Angeles, you need a car.

I thought about how this morally absent kind of fuckery results in people becoming homeless.

There are European countries that base fines and penalties for minor infractions on income.  If you’re income is modest, it’s like ten bucks, if you’re flush, it’s like $500.

Makes sense.

I read somewhere recently that American banks collected about $300 million in overdraft fees last year.

That’s bullshit.  These huge, outrageously profitable financial institutions preyed on the people who can least afford it.

That’s America goddamnit.

Love it or leave it.

We just hate the poor.

You’re a loser in America if you’re poor, even if you went broke because you got sick.

You’re a loser in America if you can’t afford a college education in America despite the fact that housing and tuition have risen by something like 800% in the last couple decades.

You’re a loser in America if some greedy asshole CEO outsourced your job to another country, not to save the company, but merely to further line his and board member pockets and you need unemployment compensation and food stamps because they fucked you over amounts of money they’ll never even be able to spend.

This is why our middle class is evaporating.

This is why we have record rates of poverty, homelessness and child hunger.

This is how unchecked, unregulated capitalism is a slow motion catastrophe.

This is why America is well on its way to becoming a third world country.

Be sure to check under your bed for Muslims and root for your favorite team.

Drinks for my friends.

 

 

 

14 Responses to “Ain’t that America”

  • Joanne Giovenco:

    I am a BIG loser.

  • Cathy Rouse Page:

    I weigh a scant 110 pounds. Due to disease. Yet,I am probably the biggest lose by that metric.
    I refuse to let them tear me down. Yes, I am poor. Well below the poverty level for one. I know my worth, I know what I had accomplished before illness and injuries took away my ability to work. I just refuse to play the consumer necessary capitalists game. Good thing that I am eclectic in my tastes, because much of what I wear, how I furnish my humble mobile home are castoffs, recycled, reused, or, the classy upcycled.
    I feel for the people who toil endless hours, who have precious few moments of quality time with their children, their mates, for themselves. They work, often 50-60 hours a week, at part-time jobs, and IF they are managing to pay the bills, are just a small disaster, an illness or injury away from being truly fucked. That $500 you mentioned would definitely sink many people.
    Unfettered capitalism and the greed factor has not only set the US on a downward spiral, but,has brought war, ruin, and death to other countries, as corporations have sought the resources of others. It had ruined great swaths of the planet.

    You will have to excuse my state of mind. I learned that the city of Flint,Michigan has been supplying its residents with lead tainted water, for at least a year. Because some captains of industry polluted the Flint River…no, I don’t know anyone living in Michigan, but, I have seen the effects of lead poisoning in little children. They are the most harmed by exposure. It is not reversible. It is devastating. And, this type of situation could happen anywhere.
    A large portion of pollution problems happen because corporations cut corners, to increase profits. Greed.
    Sorry for the rant, Michael.

  • Elizabeth:

    Cathy Rouse Page, ***Excellent*** rant!

  • Heather:

    Been here, done that… or almost.

  • David:

    Ah public “servants” that jack us around. If a service is required there should be an unwritten rule that if you work for that entity, you have to treat people as if they are friends and/or family.
    I don’t think I need to remind you of the experience I had with our fellow associate Chad at A&M when, upon one sunny afternoon he & I were pulled over with many cops/cop cars all with guns pulled out ready to “do some justice” because I had apparently stolen my own car. Yep that’s right, these fuckwits were not sure if I owned my own car. My car HAD been stolen 3 years prior, only to be found by myself 2 days later in a parking lot — so I called them and said, “Hey, I just reported my car as stolen 2 days ago but I saw it in this parking lot near my work. Can I just go get it?” – “Oh no sir, I’m sorry (they said) we have to run it through our impound center to process it fully through “the system”. “Okay” I said reluctantly, not knowing that the reward for me doing their detective work and being nice enough to call them and let them know where my car was, that they were going to tow it, impound it & charge me the low low fee (in 1994) of 250.00 just to make it “through the system.”
    Fast forward to 3 years later and me & Chad were almost shot, had our faces pushed into the asphalt, knees in our backs as they barked at me, “Who’s car is this!?” — (calmly) “It’s mine sir… license is in my wallet, registration is in the glove box.”
    Boy were they confused. Took me and Chad downtown to be handcuffed in the waiting area while they figured out what was going on. 2 hrs later we were released with barely a nice gesture, vaguely resembling an apology but it sure didn’t feel like one.

    There are 2 things I regret not doing at my days at A&M:
    #1 NOT kicking Jon Bon Jovi in the nuts for being the uber douchebag he was/is (that’s a whole ‘nuther fun story).
    #2 NOT getting a good lawyer to get me $ for the stress/grief/etc that the LAPD had caused me.

  • G.a. Underwood:

    I, too, appreciate the concept of Europe’s incremental fees system. I wonder, though, how they base the driver’s or owner’s income. With all the tax dodges our American Congress provides the wealthy, I could easily imagine Republicans distorting such a system here and turning fines into yet another personal and corporate source of income.

    “Actually judge, after considering our accelerated depreciation, the deferred taxes for financial firms on certain income earned overseas and the deferral of income from controlled foreign corporations, you’ll see that my business lost huge sums of money last year! It costed us a fortune to prepare for court today. Here’s our lawsuits against the city, county and state.”

  • Pretending to leave a comment.

  • This time, I promise I won’t pretend to leave a comment. Instead, I will pretend to not leave a comment.

    So not there!

  • Deb Lander:

    Interesting that the latest dip in the stock market is being blamed on corporate greed by stock analysts. Why, you might ask? Because wages are too low, hence Americans are not spending enough to boost the economy. Weird how that works. However, the greedy fucks that are not paying the wages are laughing all the way to the bank, until it all trickles uphill and they start to suffer also. We’re all screwed when the middle class is screwed, it’s been proven time and time again. SMH

  • Robert Platka:

    It seems like so many municipalities that have reduced taxes to “stimulate the economy” find themselves with massive budget shortfalls that they try to make up for with ridiculous fines and other fees levied against those who can least afford it. It’s a sad state of affairs and governors everywhere are doubling down on it. That’s ‘Murica.

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