Thursday, March 28, 2019

Main Street is the Best Street

I sit on the planning commission in the suburb where I live. This is a frustrating experience.

Its frustrating because this suburb, like so many others, has adopted a planning ethos flush with modernity. My suburb is made for cars, and it comes with the ample parking lots, deep setbacks, and lack of walkability common to these types of locales.

As usual, the past is instructive - but ignored.

In the past, our city streets had limited setbacks, narrow roads, and broad sidewalks. In short, they were ideal places to navigate on foot, or bike, or by streetcar. When I suggest that my city adopt this sort of approach, if only in small amounts, I am looked at quizzically by my fellow commissioners and citizens.

I wonder, though, if these people have looked around at what they have created? The main road by my house is hideously ugly -- rife with characterless buildings straddling a freeway-esque road and oriented for use only by automotive users.

Ironically, these same citizens take vacations to big cities and little beach towns made in an entirely different image. Its the image our forefathers used to build their towns for generation upon generation.You know the one -- shops and homes closely abut the sidewalk, which itself straddles a narrow road lined with trees.

We vacation to "old-fashioned" places, but fail to infuse their best features into our own. Its a shame, methinks, and I'm doing what I can to change hearts and minds on the subject. I hope you will, too. Why? Because, old fashioned joys are the wave of the future.

Monday, March 25, 2019

The Taste Makers Were Warned

After I decided that I needed to investigate more traditional means of living, I naturally began to look for others who might belong in my tribe. Enter Andrew Keen.

Mr. Keen is a writer, thinker, and professor with the interesting opinion that Internet 2.0 - the social internet of Facebook, Twitter, and Youtube - presents about as many problems as it creates. He has compared today's technology-soaked world to the Gilded Age, when companies grew big and rich while distributing negative externalities around the country.

Mr. Keen is no luddite, he insists, but, rather, someone who supposes the current system can be improved upon. In my own review of his work, I was fascinated to find this speech he gave to Googlers back in 2007.

In it, Mr. Keen warns the very people who were creating today's tech landscape about all of its many foibles. This includes the possibility that bad actors will manipulate people; that news media will suffer and die; and that culture, in general, will see a dumbing down of discourse.

Of course, the brilliant minds at Google were having none of it, as you will see in the linked video. They questioned Mr. Keen's notion that Internet 2.0 is fundamentally different from more traditional media forms. But, then, we know by reading the papers remaining today who was right and who was smug, don't we?

Friday, March 22, 2019

Living In the Past is Devine

For many years, I have valued simple ways of living and looked on with concern about the increasing complexity of modern life. Many cynics have scoffed at my notion to assume earlier ways of existence, in the face of "technological progress." However, I choose to scoff at the cynic instead, and this blog will chronicle my thinking and behavior on the matter.

To acclimate the reader, below is a list of some things I am "for:"
  • Bricks & mortar retail
  • Old radios
  • A limited number of nationally-available tv stations
  • Classical architecture
  • Hand-made items of most varieties
  • Tradition
  • Baseball
  • Catholicism (though I am personally agnostic)
  • Sewing
  • Gardening
  • Book-making
  • Model T's
  • Moldings
  • Old Master works of art
  • Newspapers
  • Hand-written letters
I am hopeful that this blog will help me connect with other people who find joy in simpler and older ways of being.

Before you comment, "But isn't that ironic?" allow me to remind you that modern technology has killed the readership of printed classified ads, leaving me with few alternatives to this less-than-ideal medium.

Perhaps this blog can help me restore in number the use of these lost arts.

Cheers!

Katie