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One Happy Big-Box Wasteland

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Wed, 17 Aug 2005 12:51:29 -0500

One Happy Big-Box Wasteland

 

 

 

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One Happy Big-Box Wasteland

Oh my yes, there is indeed one force that is eating away the American

soul like a cancer

 

--By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

 

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/archive/2005/08/17/notes081705.\

DTL

 

Do you want to feel like you might as well be in Tucson or Boise or

Modesto or Wichita or Muncie and it no longer freakin' matters, because we as a

nation have lost all sense of community and place? Why, just pull over, baby.

Take the next exit. Right here, this very one.

 

Ah, there it is, yet another massive big-box mega-strip mall, a giant

beacon of glorious community decay, a wilted exclamation point of consumerism

gone wild. This is America. You have arrived. You are home. Eat it and smile.

 

There is the Target. There is the Wal-Mart and there is the Home Depot and the

Kmart, the Borders and the Staples and the Sam's Club and the Office Depot and

the Costco and the Toys " R " Us and of course the mandatory Container Store so

you may buy more enormous plastic tubs in which to dump all your new

sweatshop-made crap.

 

What else do you need? Ah yes, food. Or something vaguely

approximating it.

There is the Wendy's and the Burger King and the Taco Bell/KFC hybrid

(ewww) and there is the Mickey D's and the Subway and the Starbucks

and the dozen other garbage-food fiends lined up down the road like toxic

dominoes, all lying in wait to maul your arteries and poison your heart and make

you think about hospitals.

 

And here's the beautiful part: This snapshot, it's the same as it was 10 miles

back, same as it will be 10 miles ahead, the exact same massive cluster of

insidious development as you will find in roughly 10,000 noncommunities around

the nation and each and every one making you feel about as connected to the town

you're in and the body you inhabit as a fish feels on Saturn. In the dark. In a

hole. Dead.

 

You have seen the plague. I have seen the plague. Anyone over 30 has seen the

plague evolve from a mere germ of disease in the late '80s to a full-blown

pestilence of big-box shopping hell. I was recently up in

northern Idaho, where my family has owned a beautiful house on a lake in a tiny

burg near the Canadian border for 40 years, and to get to this region you must

pass through the explosively grown resort town of Coeur d'Alene, and the plague

is there perhaps worse than anywhere within a 75-mile radius.

 

I am officially old enough to remember when passing through Coeur d'Alene meant

stopping at exactly one -- one -- traffic light on Highway 95 on the way north,

surrounded by roughly one million pine trees and breathtaking mountain vistas

and vast, calming open spaces, farms and fields and sawmills and funky roadside

shops and gorgeous lakes for miles.

 

There are now about 20 traffic lights added in as many years,

scattered down a 10-mile stretch of highway and each and every one demarcates a

turnoff into a massive low-lying horribly designed strip mall, tacky and cheaply

built and utterly heartless, and clearly zero planning went into any of these

megashops, except to space them so obnoxiously that you have to get back in your

goddamn car to drive the eighth of a mile to get to the Target to the Best Buy

to the Wal-Mart to the Super Foods and back to your freakin' sanity.

 

Do you want to know what depresses the American spirit? Do you want to

know why it feels like the center cannot hold and the tyranny of mediocrity has

been loosed upon our world? Do you want to know what instills more thoughts of

suicide and creates a desperate, low-level rage the source of which we cannot

quite identify but which we know is right under our noses and which we now

inhale Prozac and Xanax and Paxil by the truckload to attempt to mollify?

 

I have your answer. Here it is. Look. It is the appalling spread of

big-box strip malls, tract homes like a cancer, metadevelopments paving over the

American landscape, all creating a bizarre sense of copious loss, empty excess,

heartless glut, forcing us to ask, once again, the Great All-American Question:

How can we have so damned much but still feel like we have almost nothing at

all?

 

Oh and by the way, Coeur d'Alene has a distinct central portion of town, well

off the toxic highway. It is calm and tree lined and emptily pretty and it is

packed with, well, restaurants and art galleries. And real estate offices. For

yuppies. Because, of course, there are no local shops left. No mom-and-pops, few

unique small businesses of any kind. No charm. No real community per se. Just

well-manicured food and mediocre art no true local can actually afford and

business parks where the heart used to be.

 

I have little real clue as to what children growing up in this sort of

bizarre megaconsumerist dystopia will face as they age, what sort of

warped perspective and decimated sense of place and community and home. But if

you think meth addiction and teen pregnancy and wicked religious homogeny and a

frightening addiction to blowing s-- up in violent video games isn't a direct

reaction to it, you're not paying close enough attention.

 

This is the new America. Our crazed sense of entitlement, our nearly rabid

desire for easy access to mountains of bargain-basement junk has led to the

upsurge of soulless big-box shops which has, in turn, led to a deadly sense of

prefabricated, vacuous sameness wherever we go. And here's the kicker: We think

it's good. We think it helps, brings jobs, tax money, affordable goods. We call

it progress. We call it choice. It is the exact opposite.

 

Result No. 1: Towns no longer have personality, individuality, heart.

Community drags. Environment suffers. Our once diverse and quirky and

idiosyncratic landscape becomes ugly and bland and vacuous and cheap.

 

Result No. 2: a false sense of safety, of comfort, wrought of empty

sameness. We want all our goods to be antiseptic and sanitized and

brightly lit and clean. In a nation that has lost all sense of direction and all

sense of pride and whose dollar is a global joke and whose economy is running on

fumes and whose goods are all made overseas and whose incompetent warmongering

leader makes the world gag, that toxic sameness is, paradoxically, reassuring.

 

Result No. 3: We are trained, once again, to fear the different, the

Other, That Which Does Not Conform. We learn to dislike the unique, the foreign,

foreigners. We lose any sense of personal connection to what we create and what

we buy and I do not care how cheap that jute rug from Ikea was: When they are

mass-produced in 100,000 chunks in a factory in Malaysia, it ain't quirky.

 

Sameness is in. Sameness is the new black. It is no different than

preplanned Disney World vacations or organized religion or preplanned

cruises or themed restaurants where all edges have been filed off and

every experience has been predigested and sanitized for your protection because

God forbid you have an authentic experience or nurture genuine individual

perspective or dare to question the bland norm lest your poor addled soul

shudder and recoil and the Powers That Be look at you as a serious threat.

 

I have seen the plague and so have you. Hell, you're probably shopping in it.

After all, what choice do you have?

 

©2005 SF Gate

 

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