Laughing
All the Way to the Gallows and the Poorhouse
by
Burton S. Blumert
Exchange
of emails
From: Rockwell,
Editor, LRC
To: Blumert,
Former LRC satirist
Where
is the funny article you promised about all the bursting bubbles
in San Francisco?
From: Blumert
To: Rockwell
Well,
I’ve accumulated a few one-liners like: Did you hear about the former
dotcom billionaire who begs in downtown Mountain View with a sign
that reads, "I Work For Gigabytes"?
Or,
when I called the movie theatre to find out when the feature started,
the voice asked, "What time would you like to get here, sir?"
Or,
things are so bad in California that my bank returned a check stamped
"Insufficient Funds. Us not you."
I
realize this is some of my funniest material ever, Lew, but don’t
you think it’s tasteless (this, even more than usual) to jest about
people’s suffering, particularly with a bloody war on prime time
TV as a backdrop?
From: Rockwell
To: Blumert
If
we are supposed to laugh all the way to the gallows, we can certainly
laugh all the way to the poorhouse.
In
deference to my editor, note the title of this piece.
All
we needed in San Francisco is a war. As if the economy wasn’t disastrous
enough. Tourism, the number one industry, is a vague memory to most.
Cab drivers and hotel doormen are plundering one another just to
stay in practice.
Things
are so bad for the fast-food restaurants that they even rolled out
the red carpet for the antiwar demonstrators and the National Guardsmen
who came to town last week.
The
antiwar event was hardly mentioned in the media, but police admitted
that the crowd was the largest in San Francisco in 30 years. The
anti-war kids looked pretty much like their Vietnam War ancestors,
and like those ancestors are totally sound on war, but illiterate
when it comes to economics.
As
for the Guardsmen, I had the impression they were in town to earn
their Crowd-Suppression Merit Badges.
To
McDonald’s and other one star restaurants, these visitors were as
hungry as regular tourists, although not quite as fashionable.
McDonald’s
was quick to put several new specials on the griddle:
"The
Dissent Burger" Half-price in case you’re arrested in the
middle of eating it.
"The
Iraq Burger" The usual pickle, onion, and special dressing
on a poppy seed bun, all covered with a layer of sand.
Just
as San Francisco prospered more than other American cities during
the "Nostalgic 90s," it now sinks into an even more profound
despair. If there’s "a broken-heart for every light on Broadway,"
there has to be a "shattered mother-board for every cybernik
in Silicon Valley." (I haven’t the foggiest idea of the meaning
of what I just said.)
I
must admit the pervasive gloom hanging over Northern California
is almost too much, even for a hardened gold dealer. Our own
Jeff Tucker helped me through it all: His guidance in reminding
that the collapse of "bubbles" built on excess, corruption
and loss of values should be celebrated.
Here
follows some of my notes while searching out those bursting bubbles
requested by my editor.
As
a suburbanite I don’t get to San Francisco often, but last month
I made the trip and decided to dine at my favorite restaurant, Stars.
In the old days, you had to reserve months in advance, but with
things so quiet in the City now, surely I might be able to squeeze
in at the counter.
I
drove up to the valet, advising the young attendant that we had
no reservation and that he could have the car if he thought we would
be served.
Puzzled,
he turned to his associate: (The
following is a translation from the Spanish):
First
attendant: Can you believe this gringo asking for a reservation?
He must be from another planet. Should I tell him that you haven’t
needed a reservation
in any restaurant in town for over three years?
Second
attendant: What do you expect from someone driving a Saturn?
After
exacting a pledge that he would not scratch our 4-wheeled beauty,
my wife and I entered the restaurant and there was not one other
customer. Not one!
The
food was OK, but it was like the final meal before an execution.
At one point, I slurped my soup and the sound bounced from wall
to wall, resonating for a full 30 seconds.
Stars
closed for good last month. We may have been one of the last to
pay final respects.
The
landlord at my office building is a gentle fellow from Taiwan, and
I was surprised to receive a luncheon invitation from him. It was
clear he had important matters on his mind.
We
dined at his favorite restaurant, the Tokyo House. (Dennis is proud
to demonstrate that he has overcome the prejudices of his ancestors).
After we finished the last of the sliced, dead, cold fish, he announced
the purpose of our meeting.
Landlord:
Mr. B, he calls me. (He can’t say Blumert; it comes out "Bwumert").
Your lease is up for renewal in a few months and I have a pleasant
surprise. I’m building you a sauna and a wet bar. Also, my wife
will be bringing tea everyday at 3 o’clock and one of the building’s
elevators will be for your use only.
Blumert:
Dennis, that’s all very nice, but you don’t have to do all that.
I’m
not about to move. And I’m happy to renew.
When
I signed the new lease, Dennis hosted a party that lasted 4 days
and the ambassador from Taiwan presented me with honorary citizenship
to that energetic little country.
(Dennis
owns several office buildings and they are 70 percent vacant)
When
I got home that night I remembered having saved a transcript from
my last lease negotiations with him. Things were very different
in those days.
Dotcommers
were renting every available foot of office space in return for
stock in their companies. Everybody was getting richer by the minute. Old-fashioned
businesses, like mine, were not the most desirable tenants.
Transcript
of Lease Negotiations 1999
(He
had me wait for 2 hours in a room with no windows).
Landlord:
Bwumert, you have ten minutes to convince me to renew your lease
with only a 50-percent increase in rent.
Blumert:
Dennis, I’ve been a loyal tenant for 15 years. Frankly, I don’t
even understand this new lease. For example, why are clauses 7-11
in Chinese?
And
you can’t be serious in Par. 1: "All building tenants must
attend daily Tai Chi exercises at 7 a.m. in the building parking
lot"?
Well,
I guess I can live with everything, Dennis, but I draw the line
at changing our name from Camino Coin to Chiang Kai-shek Coin Company.
If
there’s a plus to San Francisco’s economic woes, it’s that all those
traffic jams are a memory. You can now drive from San Francisco
to San Jose without
even slowing down. Unfortunately, the price of a gallon of gas in
the Bay Area is $2.60. I find myself looking at the fuel indicator
as I drive along.
Which
reminds me of my very first date: It was the Junior Prom and I picked
her up in a taxi. (Limos were reserved for funerals in those days).
As we were driving along, the pretty young thing asked me what the
time was. Clearly distracted, with eyes glued to the taxi-meter,
I responded, "It’s $1.25."
March
29, 2003
Burt
Blumert [send him mail]
is publisher of LewRockwell.com,
president of the Center
for Libertarian Studies,
and proprietor of Camino
Coin. See Burt's
Gold Page.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Burton
S. Blumert Archives
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