| Last
week, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer ran a story titled
“Solutions sought at crime-plagued Steinbrueck Park”.
The story had a picture of a shirtless man bending forward
talking to a woman holding a map. It looks like he’s
giving her directions, but the caption says he was a homeless
man and was persistently yelling at the woman, who was
a German tourist. It said he was demanding that she sing
a song for him on his guitar.
The article also had a nice chart, which showed how the
number of park notices handed out in the park have increased
1997. It said that according to the police there has been
an increase in the total amount of crime, which has been
mostly non-violent and similar to that of other cities!
The title says solutions are sought. Let’s solve
these problems in this column!
The problems: The yelling man. An increase in park notices,
and in arrests for mostly nonviolent crime, similar to
that of other cities! (Aren’t Sodom and Gomorrah
other cities?) Plus, homeless people coming back to the
park, even after they’ve been told to leave and
not come back! Plus, how does a homeless man get a guitar,
when he should be saving every dime to move into a room?
I’d like to be able to lie around all day shirtless,
making Germans sing for me. Wouldn’t we all?
We need to know a cause, and one look at the chart and
I knew what the cause was. Me!
That’s right. I stopped being homeless at the end
of 1997, and thereby deprived the streets of my good example!
None of this trouble ever happened when I was on the streets.
People even wrote it on their backpacks. WWWD: What Would
Wes Do? “Would Wes take his shirt off and tell a
lost German to sing for him on his guitar?” “Duhhh...
No! No, he would not! So we won’t either!”
OK, that was today’s irony quota. Ha, ha, no, that
was just stupid.
Let’s try to find some other real or intelligent
explanations. I mean, this is serious business. “I
want to hear 99 Luftballons! Now!”
My first clue as to what has been going on was to look
back at when the parks exclusion law was passed. Hmm.
It was passed in 1997. Aha! So the number of park notices
has dramatically increased ever since there was a law
to give them out! Damn those homeless people, getting
laws written against them!
Then I remembered that Real Change, the people who print
my crap, are putting on a book sale and that hundreds
of books will be sold at Trinity United Methodist Church
in Ballard at the end of the month. As a result the office
is packed with donated books. I cracked one open. It was
a psych book by some Dr. Phil or Dr. Jesus. I opened it
to a random page and it said if something someone does
annoys you, you might think how their actions mirror yours.
So the idea is, we look at the yelling shirtless man,
and ask if we ever did anything to him or people like
him that was similar. That might be the key to his behavior.
And I had it! Throughout the 1990s, we took almost
away all the public benches downtown, and made it so he
couldn’t lie on the ones that were left. In 1994,
we passed a law that prohibited people him from sitting
or lying on downtown sidewalks, and by 1997 that law was
out of litigation and began to be enforced by armed men.
So we want to create laws that use the police to yell
at the homeless for us and drive them from “our”
sidewalks and benches into parks. Then we want to moan
that there’s a homeless man at Steinbrueck Park
who drives tourists from “his” end of the
park to the other.
The solution: Arrest the mirror?
|