It was the evening of the day that old stupidhead got his
AHCA passed, and we were walking up Glisan Street in the Pearl District in downtown
Portland, beautiful Portland. Suddenly, we heard a huge commotion, cheers,
boos, a loudspeaker, and so forth.
gentrification kills kittens |
“It must be a protest!” My cousin Alex said happily, making
a beeline in that direction. “Let’s join in!”
“More likely it’s some event at one of these places advertising
some kind of new Kale soda pop or something,” Jackson told us, trailing
boredly behind with his girlfriend and my daughter.
And sadly, he was closer to the truth than his mother: the
commotion was coming from an impromptu arena set up outside a brewery where a
Cinco de Mayo celebration was ongoing, and it featured, not the bad rock band I
feared, but a bevy of Alaskan racing pigs. Alas, no one was protesting the
destruction of health care (and sanity) in America, not even in Portlandia;
although it should be said that people did give little halfhearted boos to the
poor little piggie that was named “Donald Trump.” They did not insist that it
be made into bacon, instantly, but they also did not cheer it on.
So there’s that.
As the kids walked ahead of us on up to Buffalo Exchange and
Powell’s Books, Alex and I – both of us journalists, both of us old enough to
remember outrage, sanctimony (and laughter, LOL) -- were given pause. We’d both wanted a
protest, damn it. I can also remember when this exact neighborhood was full of
old man bars and felt sort of dangerous to walk around in at night. It’s nice
that it’s not anymore, and yet at the same time, the proliferation of kale soda
and pig races, and of a society that takes part in them at the expense of
protesting injustice, somehow seem implicated in the creation of the dark forces
that are aligning in this country. The whole scene was like Animal House meets Animal Farm.
Indeed, Alaskan racing pigs are indeed a fitting allegory for the situation we are in now. First the pigs noodle around in a tiny pen all nudging one another out of the way, and then they are stuffed into little track suits and made to run around a course and jump a little hurdle, only to get their snouts into a feed bag at the end of it. There’s no real sport in it. They do what they’re told, like the patrons of the bar who believe it is necessary to celebrate Cinco de Mayo by cheering them on.
all animals are created equal but some animals are more equal than others |
Indeed, Alaskan racing pigs are indeed a fitting allegory for the situation we are in now. First the pigs noodle around in a tiny pen all nudging one another out of the way, and then they are stuffed into little track suits and made to run around a course and jump a little hurdle, only to get their snouts into a feed bag at the end of it. There’s no real sport in it. They do what they’re told, like the patrons of the bar who believe it is necessary to celebrate Cinco de Mayo by cheering them on.
Those are kind of harsh thoughts, but I’ll be honest. This
week has been tough. OGimme Shelter wherein a black person
(Meredith Hunter) is killed by whites and then white students are asked to
discuss it in front of black students, who don’t really like their remarks.
n the way
home from Portland, Caitlin asked me if I thought the phrase “Cinco de Drinko”
is racist. I told her I don’t think so: I just think the whole concept of Cinco
de Mayo is pretty wrongheaded and white-centered, not so much racist as racially
awry, especially in this era when it is a pretty feeble counterpart to the
anti-ethnic rhetoric and legislation that simultaneously blights our landscape.
But I had to add that my opinion is worthless, as I have been censured a lot
lately, if not for explicit racism, for somehow being implicated in a racist
system that hires white people like me to teach about subjects like race and
then lets them show movies like
It turns out that might not have been a good move, on my
part, pedagogically speaking. The question I asked was: “Are the Rolling Stones
partially responsible for this young man’s death”? Here’s a list of answers that I got:
1 1. Yes.
2.
2. No.
3.
3. The responsibility lies with the Hell’s Angels
4.
4. The responsibility lies with the individual
Hell’s Angel who killed him
5.
5. The responsibility is embedded in issues to do
with the era and the historical context.
6.
6. The responsibility lies with the victim who
waved a gun in the face of a violent Hell’s Angel. (I believe the exact comment
was, “What did he expect to have happen?”)
7.
7. The responsibility lies with the filmmakers, for
colluding at a situation that was getting out of hand and then for callously displaying
the death as spectacle, for, in Pauline Kael’s words, producing an actual snuff film.
There are probably other answers that I’m forgetting, but
those are the main ones, and if you’ve seen Gimme Shelter, you may have your
own answer to this question. My personal feelings are weighted well towards #1 (as you
know if you’ve read my book Exile In Guyville, I have a complex love/hate
relationship with the Rolling Stones, and anyway, Altamont was the Fyre
Festival of 1969), but the point of teaching is not to tell the students what I
think about it, it’s to explore (“unpack”) the range of options in a situation
like this.
You can probably guess which answer caused the ongoing
ruckus that we’ve had in my class all week – a drama which, now that I’m
writing about it, I don’t think is unmerited. I mean, earlier in the week,
Geoff had given a lecture in which he railed on the educational concept of
‘western civilization’ as one of the ideological underpinnings of both the Cold
War and of our nationally ingrained racist policies in general. Perhaps he and
I should not then have been surprised that later on the class rose up as one and said,
‘If this is so, why is our entire reading list written or made or by white
people?”
That was our bad. It really was. Some of the damage was
undone with a more fruitful lecture on Wattstax, and surely going forward
into the hip hop era I can do a better job of shining a light on the opposition,
rather than just exposing the disgusting nature of white America and then
going, “Oh, whoops.” In retrospect, I
feel like showing Gimme Shelter at all was sort of my Cinco-de-Mayo moment, that
is, a time when thought that I was being an ally, but actually
I was being an aggressor.
Meanwhile, the pigs keep running around in that little pen
getting nowhere, and the people, they keep cheering us on. Get it? The pigs are
us; people. And the cheering masses are the forces of evil, getting more and
more gleeful as the night goes on.
yep.
Two comments on Cinco De Mayo, one cultural and one Marxist (although, Karl was an old white guy buried in London, too).
ReplyDeleteMy personal memory of Cinco De Mayo was that we learned about in elementary school Spanish class, which most everyone took in California public schools back in Days Of Yore. We "celebrated" Cinco De Mayo because kids knew all three words, even in sixth grade. Celebrating Independence Day was not a good bet, because "Independence" was too big a word. I have to assume there was a similar dynamic in Texas and other parts of the West, but not as much in parts of the country where kids learned French instead of Spanish.
The Marxist part is this: who benefits from Cinco De Mayo is Corona Beer, and who distributes Corona? Why, Anheuser Busch was always the distributor of Corona, and even the partial owner. Did you ever wonder why every Mexican restaurant not only had Corona on the menu, but also Bud Lite and Michelob? It's all because Anheuser Busch was the distributor. So I think the Budweiser machine made Cinco De Mayo a big deal because it sold more beer. Anheuser Busch could build on the residual memory of college students that "Cinco De Mayo" was some sort of Mexican holiday, and encourage beer sales.
So, huge corporation commodifies personal memories casually appropriated from another culture, redefining that other culture in reductionist ways. Just another day at the office of Late Capitalism.
Thanks Corry. I don't remember celebrating Cinco De Mayo in grade school at all. Had they stopped by my time? I do remember the time you told me that you all sang "I am the frito bandito" at the assembly in 7th grade...but that was just hearsay.
ReplyDeleteMaybe it was just my sixth grade Spanish teacher who had us celebrating Cinco De Mayo.
ReplyDeleteThe "Frito Bandito" singalong really happened. It was an intentional, school-sanctioned event. I will not be retailing that shameful episode on the Internet. It's right down there with the Gilroy Project.