Thursday, October 12, 2017

Travels with Dog


I hope you’ll forgive me if I depart from my usual light-hearted silliness to tell you about our recent trip to Ventura, California, to attend a dog show with our dog, Nash, or, as I refer to him around the kennel, Fuzzbutt.  He’s a Bouvier des Flandres, a herding dog, and the show was the National Specialty for the breed.
We drove down in our pickup, with Nash ensconced in the back of the extended cab and the various crates, cart and gear in the back in two big tubs, all secured with straps and cargo nets.  We got to go over the famous Grapevine for the first time, as we drove I-5 all the way down, where we were reminded once again how much of the food we eat comes from giant operations up and down the central California valleys.  Our destination was a fancy hotel right on the beach, within walking distance from the Ventura County Fairgrounds to the north.  Our room was on the 4th floor, overlooking a plaza between the hotel and the public parking garage on the south side with the famous Ventura Pier just beyond that.
We spent a lot of time going back and forth from the hotel to the fairgrounds every day to attend and participate in the competitions, where Nash finished his Rally Novice certification and got his title to add to his Grand Champion status, though he got skunked in the conformation events, not too surprising given that the top 100 Bouviers in the country were all there.
But the thing that got to me, both on the way down and back and while we were there, was the obvious reality that, everywhere in our country these days, our society is coming apart, and an increasingly large number of people are falling off the ladder to success with nowhere else to go but in public places, where they fester and take root and cause problems.
You can tell them by their walk.  A homeless, hopeless person takes life one step at a time, there’s no hurry, because there’s nowhere to go, and any place is just as good as any other.  Perhaps it was so jarring because, on the beach in Southern California, at least, the weather is so good that the poor folks are unlikely to freeze to death.  I could look out upon the scene from the safety of my lanai, and watch the well-fed, well-dressed guests enter and exit the side door from the hotel, where their magic plastic card electronically opened all doors for them as they strolled to and from the restaurants on the plaza or their valet-parked cars, past the beggars and the buskers and the young couples lost in the glamour of living on the beach, or out of shopping carts stolen from the local grocery.
I looked out one night, across to the top floor of the parking garage, and witnessed a single individual man, complete with microphone in hand, but lacking any amplification equipment, go through a long, complex rap performance for an audience of none, complete with stage gestures, leaps, and dives into an imaginary mosh pit, which only came to an end when the local drug dealer showed up on the rooftop and handed him something that eased his pain, if only for the night.
Down on the concrete boardwalk that stretches along the beach from the Pier to the Fairgrounds there was a bearded young man in filthy clothing, with his bedroll held loosely over his shoulder, engaged in a furious conversation, with the gestures and facial expressions of one who is ready to explode, with the air around him.  People instinctively gave him a wide berth as they walked by with their expensive dogs, on leashes, in their designer jeans and sunglasses.
I rose early in the morning on one day and watched the police arrest a man who had apparently committed the sin of spending the night on a bench on the boardwalk, where they handcuffed him on the ground as they spread his entire life’s possessions on the bench from which they evicted him before they transported him to whatever lockup awaited.  I noticed that the county employed several full-time security people who patrolled on bicycles with radios on their belts in case they needed the police in a hurry.
And the road past the front of the hotel was often thick with Escalades, and Teslas, and in town the restaurant we favored featured 101 taps with different micro-brews flowing from each on command, while in the morning on a walk through the downtown core I saw people sleeping in doorways of shops that had yet to open.
This is the face of income inequity in this country, and it’s clear that it spreads across the nation, like a blanket of misery that overlays everything, where there are getting to be so many people in dire straits that we don’t have any places left for them to hide.  I have read the words of Steinbeck and others who told stories about the last time we went through this, but back in the ‘30s we were all in the same boat, and nowadays it seems like most of us are doing fine, and then there’s all those people on the beach.
We hear politicians carrying on about immigrants taking our jobs, yet all the people lined up in the cabbage fields behind the tractor-pulled harvesters looked like immigrants to me.  We saw multiple double trailer rigs filled with Roma tomatoes and limes on the highways, and the almond trees were being shaken down for their bounty, which was scooped up with special sweepers that rolled up and down each row.  Somehow, none of that bounty winds up in local food banks, which mostly feed poor people a steady diet of carbohydrates and sugar, leftover pastries from the grocery stores that are past their pull dates but so well preserved they will rot teeth for months afterwards.
There are a few miles of beach to the north of Ventura where you can rent a spot to park your motor home for a nominal fee, and it’s pretty clear that many, if not most of them, have been there unmoved for quite some time.  It’s only the clean ones that belong to tourists.  The others are home for someone, just like the ones you see in downtown Seattle, and anywhere else you want to look.  And when they break down, and get impounded, another family hits the street.
I wish I had a glib, plausible answer for all this, but I don’t.  Maybe, like China has apparently done, part of the solution lies in a guaranteed annual income for all citizens.  Maybe, like in Canada and most other advanced countries, a single-payer health care system for everyone, including mental health care for all the bearded young men with their worldly possessions in a bag on their shoulder who can’t find their way home, would fix some of the problems.

Maybe if we realized, as a nation, that as long as the poorest residents of the favelas of Rio or the slums of New Delhi, not to mention those who live among us already, do not enjoy a minimum of safety and security, then none of us will ultimately be truly safe and secure.  We really are all in this life together, and the sooner we act on that reality the better off we will be.  :-{)}