Bushvilles
David Neiwert, Alternet
Reading a CNN report on a homeless woman in California (video here), I came across this:
There are 12 parking lots across
The lots open at 7 p.m. and close at 7 a.m. and are run by
It is illegal for people in
Well, we all know that
Can't afford a home? Well, you can take up residence in your car in a parking lot at night, just like these fine middle-class housewives do.
These transient homes for the once-prosperous deserve their own name, too. I propose we call them Bushvilles.
You all remember Hoovervilles from your history books, don't you?
They were products of an eerily similar economic policy: favor the wealthy, soak the poor, and screw the middle, then let God sort it out:
A Hooverville was the popular name for a shanty town, examples of which were found in many
The word "Hooverville" derives from the name of the President of the
These settlements were often formed in horrible neighborhoods or desolate areas and consisted of dozens or hundreds of shacks and tents that were temporary residences of those left unemployed and homeless by the Depression. People slept in anything from open piano crates to the ground. Authorities did not officially recognize these Hoovervilles and occasionally removed the occupants for technically trespassing on private lands, but they were frequently tolerated out of necessity.
There's certainly no shortage of parking lots these days. And no shortage of the newly homeless. In a world in which economic failure is just a matter of survival of the fittest, the two obviously go together well -- though I do wonder what happens when the occupants can no longer afford the gas to drive their cars, either. Most likely those parking-lot slots will become semi-permanent homes, and the lots themselves little cities.
Bushvilles. Has a certain ring, doesn't it?
[A hat tip to sadlyyes.]
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