It’s a Job
by
Robert Klassen
by Robert Klassen
After I finished my daily tour of world news on-line last night,
and after asking myself for the millionth time what do people think
they’re doing, a totally forgotten image floated into my mind: I’m
driving down a deserted street in a tiny farming village, all of
the buildings are empty, and abandoned, some are boarded up, yet
old maple trees line the street, and it looks comfortable and attractive.
Where did the people go? What happened here?
It wasn’t a dream. During the summer of 1958, I worked for the
Allis-Chalmers experimental department in LaPorte, Indiana. I drove
a farm tractor on the hay-making crew, testing – read breaking –
new prototype farm implements. I guess the engineers figured a seventeen
year-old could reveal design defects quicker than adults. I did
that, all right. They put me to work on some restored hay fields
at the Kingsbury Ordnance
Plant, some six miles out of town.
The place gave me the creeps. Mile after mile of these long, brown,
anonymous buildings, each one isolated from the other by hundreds
of feet, each one surrounded by chain link fences topped with barbed
wire, and then miles of earth-mounded concrete bunkers, with rusted
railroad tracks crisscrossing everywhere, it looked like something
out of WWII movies. That isn’t far from the truth.
The site consisted of 13,454 acres of prime farmland – that’s 21
square miles – in the American breadbasket. I don’t know how the
government stole the land, but they had to have done it during the
late Thirties, because the plant was up and running six-months before
Pearl Harbor. The plant produced artillery shells, 20 mm to 105
mm, and had a peak employment of 20,785 in 1942, half of them women.
That
number is hard to explain. The total population of the nearest town,
LaPorte, wasn’t that much, so people must have come from all over
to work in this plant. I do recall ranks of barracks across the
highway, which I now presume housed a good many of them, but many
must have braved the bad roads, and awful winters, to commute to
work there. Why? It’s a job.
I
haven’t experienced a Federal Reserveinduced, FDR friendly,
Depression in my lifetime, yet I share the common American concern
about jobs. But there are jobs, and then there are jobs. I mean,
is taking care of an asthmatic child the same as making white phosphorous
artillery shells to burn children to death? We routinely condemn
the merchants of death, while we routinely rub elbows with the working
stiffs who manufacture their products. Why do they do it? It’s a
job.
You know, it isn’t slave labor, and there isn’t a sign that says
Work Will Make You Free over the plant entrance, yet, so our munitions
workers can quit. I wish they would.
By the way, welcome to Kingsbury:

December
2, 2005
Robert
Klassen [send him mail]
retired from a forty-year career in critical-care respiratory therapy.
He is the author of five books, including Atlantis:
A Novel about Economic Government,
and Economic
Government, which describe a solution
to the problem of political government. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2005 Robert Klassen
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