Friday, August 28, 2009

No City for Old Men





Most of Butte Montana looks like a Walker Evans photograph. The buildings, and many of the people, look as if they had been preserved by a time warp. In the middle of an average business day, the streets are virtually empty. The normal hustle and bustle of a thriving metropolis is absent. Coffee huts and cottage industries of one sort or another dot the landscape. But ultimately, Butte is embroiled in a desperate struggle to survive; to create an identity for itself as a living museum for what was once the greatest mining city in the world.As of this writing, the only active mine in Butte is the Continental Pit. In a city which boasted Morgan Earp as a policemen and where the writer Dashiell Hammett worked as an operative for the Pinkertons in 1917.  He would resign from the Pinkertons when he became disillusioned with their union busting tactics, probably after the murder of IWW organizer Frank Little that same year by six masked men.  No surprise that the crime was never solved.  The preservation of Butte's once thriving mining history, with its glorious intrigues, labor disputes and violence, has become the predominant industry in Butte.

Today, the primary inhabitants of Butte seem to be poverty stricken men who wander the streets aimlessly in search of something to do. I suspect that a lot of disabled men and women end up in Butte because of the cheap housing.  I observed this fellow poking his head into various shops and then proceeding as if he were in a great hurry, but seemingly, with nothing actually to do. The only places where business seemed to be booming were the local taverns, where I could hear loud boisterous conversations and raucous laughter. During the bust year of 1893, the year that silver crashed and many banks closed, there were 212 saloons in operation in Butte, proving once again that during times of economic hardship, the entertainment and

hospitality industries thrive.

Approximately 40 abandoned mining rigs dot the landscape of Butte. Each night they are lit up in red. To the east of town, Our Lady of the Rockies, a ninety foot statue can also be lit up at night for a small fee to honor a departed loved. The installation of the lady, a cross denominational effort, is purportedly in honor of all mothers.

Perhaps she is a reflection of the city's diversity. Irish, Italian, Finnish, Chinese, Eastern
European, Jewish, Black and who knows how many other ethnicity's worked in and around the
mines.

Today the artifacts of these various cultures can be found strewn all over the city. A kind of "Italian" coffee shop on S Montana street called the Palace serves mostly generic American food while subjecting the eater to the sounds of Al Martino, Perry Como, Jerry Vale. All of a
sudden the lyrics from theMichael Maltese song Attsa Matta for You, from the old Bugs Bunny cartoon A Hound forTrouble wafted across the room:
Attsa matter, attsa matter??

Hey!!
At'sa matter for you?
You eata my raviola
And my pasta fagiole too
I'mma give you caccitore
and a pizza that's good to chew
Attsa matter you no like??
Hey!!
Attsa matter for you??

The skewed angularities and planes of many of the images I am showing you are in part caused by the limitations of the lens on my camera, but many of them also reflect the nature of the age and infirmity of many of the buildings in Butte. I think that some of them are so old and neglected, not to mention that they have been built on steep hills, that they are literally sinking into the ground.


Maybe it's just my imagination.

The miners union organized their first strike when the "Copper Kings" decided to cut wages from $3.50 to $3.00 a day. No doubt these trust magnates would still be paying us three dollars a day if it wasn't for the heroic efforts of the Wobblies and other unionists. The worst mining fire in American history occurred in Butte on Nov. 16, 1917. 168 miners were killed. The "Copper Kings" finally consolidated their interests and formed the monolithic Anaconda Copper Company. It's ironic that they named themselves after a snake that kills its victims by strangling the life out of them.




Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Teddy Kennedy

While I was up in the middle of the back country in Glacier National Park. I got into a more or less friendly conversation with an older hiker who worked as an "outdoor sports" columnist for a paper in Colorado. He knew a great deal about conservation issues and although he was a bit of a blowhard(basically he talked over anything anyone else said), I had to admit to myself that he was knowledgeable enough to force me to reexamine many of my notions about environmental issues.

Suddenly, out of the blue, he blurted out: "I can't believe that a murderer like Kennedy is getting so much sympathy." What could elicit such a remark from what I would consider an otherwise reasonable man? I stiffled my initial urge to point out that there are many who consider BUSH-CHANEY-RUMSFELD war criminals and conceivably, under different circumstances, might be indicted for war crimes, as being a cheap shot and in any event irrelevant to the fact that many people in America feel that Teddy did get away with murder. I pointed out to this man that first of all, indicting the last surviving Kennedy brother for what at the worst might be considered involuntary manslaughter, in light of the unbearable tragedies that have befallen the Kennedy family, was inconcievable.

I think that in the final analysis, his ultimate acts of contrition were Ted Kennedy's enormous contributions to the public interest and to democracy itself.

Censorship


I started this blog because Facebook censored one of my posts. This post was a relatively benign rant against what I termed "bad capitalism". Take a look at this picture of the Berkeley Pit in Butte Montana. This mile in diameter sludge pit(some might call it toxic cesspool) was created after the Atlantic Richfield company abandoned their strip mining operation at this site. After turning off the pumps the pit began filling up with ground water which was caused by the numerous mine shaft's that perforate the area in, around and under the pit. Ultimately, the "villainous" EPA stepped and forced ARCO(now a subsidiary of BP) to show some corporate responsibility and start monitoring the pit.
I guess that Facebook found my comments "too provokative"(misspelling intentional). If I can't speak my mind on Blogger, I'll create my own website if I have to.
So long for now.