The
news today told of a gang of burglars who tracked the comings and goings of
celebrities living in Los Angeles (how hard is it to know that star baseball
player is at a game?). They got a lot of loot… until they got caught. But we do live in a nation with more guns
than people, including tens of millions of semiautomatic assault weapons with
large magazines. That’s one hell of an excuse, but the underlying fear is
growing fast… income inequality has never been more pronounced in this country,
the absolute worst in the entire developed world.
Back
in the 1970s, the notion of a guard-gated community was almost unheard of here.
Sure, those high-rise coops in New York City had and most definitely continue
to have “doormen” and often security guards as a part of mega-wealthy financial
and corporate mavens living in the Big Apple. Their limos line the streets,
waiting for some of the richest people in the world who expect to be taken to…
er… wherever. But there has been an almost one-to-one correlation between the
growing great divide between the richest in the land and the rest of us… and
the explosive growth of guard-gated residential communities, exceptionally
evident in uber-rich suburbs in California, Colorado, Florida and Texas.
Some
pretend to offer special access to water sports, a clubhouse with a pool, skiing,
golf, but try and get into one of these without an invitation and without
showing a government-issued ID. And more than a few of these communities are
simply well-guarded fortresses with cameras on the periphery, armed guards at
the gate plus a few more driving down the streets, just in case. Estimates
place 13 million plus Americans behind such gates. Europeans are fascinated at
this phenomenon (alien to them), as this French piece suggests.
“When property developers are asked the
advantages of living in such [gated and guarded communities], they always have
the same arguments. They praise a unique opportunity to live freely, without
having to cope with any constraints of the city. They perfectly know how to
take advantage of the conservative ideas of the American middle class that
wants to live by the values of the past. Is this desire to wall up from the
rest of the world the modern expression of the American Dream?...
“In his report ‘United Gates of America,’ the
American journalist Charlie LeDuff addressed the issue of fences. Safety is the
central focus of the inhabitants. John Knight lives in Canyon Lake, one of the
most important communities of Los Angeles. When the journalist from NY asked
him why he settled there, he answered very clearly: ‘We reached such a
level of violence in this country that you need to pay to feel safe. You have
to pay for almost everything like having a private life, for humanity and for
being happy. But if it is necessary, I will pay the price for it.’
“John Knight is far from being the only one
thinking this way. For many of his neighbors, there is so much insecurity that
moving far away from the town centers is not enough to protect themselves from
violence. Distancing themselves from violence hubs also goes with hiding behind
safety devices. Vigilance continues to apply indeed within the community
itself. For instance, automatic window and door locking, unbreakable gate,
video surveillance, and private surveillance patrols aim to protect you even
against your own neighbors. You can never be too careful. Some of the people
who live in Gated Communities barricade themselves so much behind security
systems that they no longer dare to go out without fearing for their life. Like
prisoners, they live outside reality. It is the fences' butterfly effect, no
one escapes it.
“Safety is worth a lot of money in the Gated
Communities. In addition to high maintenance charges and the enormous purchase
price, these housing estates require their residents to comply with very
stringent rules. If you decide to live in a Gated Community, you are told which
lifestyle to adopt.
“You cannot do what pleases you, otherwise you
will have to pay for it. Most of the restrictive rules apply to property
maintenance. The community has to emphasize on rules that directly apply to
your home, in order to ensure green lawns, kind smiles and shining roofs. For
instance, if the water of your swimming pool turns cloudy, you must clean it
immediately. You also need to fix your plumbing problems quickly, to paint your
low walls and to eradicate weeds. If not, financial penalty may ensue…
“Gated Communities are an extreme embodiment of
communitarianism. Districts aiming at gathering people from the same social
class are not new. You just have to look at major cities in the United States
to realize how deeply urban segregation is rooted in the overall population.
Barricades erected in the Gated Communities however changed the face of social
inequality which can be easily seen and localized, and has never dealt so much
with material wealth before. Walls keep the poor together and set them apart
from the wealthy people who live an opulent life. Two worlds coexist on each side
of the barbed wire fence. As an impassible barrier, it also represents the
growing gap between the wealthy and the poor in the United States who are tired
of trying to live together. This phenomenon raises all the more ethical
questions since it only favors white people at the expense of the others who
feel let down on the other side of the wall.
“The example of Canyon Lake is striking given
that black people only stand for 1.2% of the community. In 2001, in New York,
the Gramercy Park case, highlighted how much racism we can find in these
private districts. Local black children were not very welcome to come and play
in the private park. When the residents were asked why some children could not,
they answered without embarrassment: ‘The park is not meant for those
children.’ Gated Community may have a new approach of ‘White Only’ with real
walls to protect themselves from the African-American threat.
“Whether territorial, racial or social,
segregation crossed a new threshold with Gated Communities. What future is
there for American cities under these circumstances? Is public space doomed to
turn into a giant ghetto for those who cannot afford the peacefulness of a
detached house far from the dangers of the city? Las Vegas is a good example of
what an American city could look like if the phenomenon of Gated Communities
kept on sweeping the largest cities in the United States.” Gated communities: the American dream behind walls by Laura
Wojcik, Translated by Alice Robert (10/23/13).
Architectural committees often rule
on design, colors, size and height. Some communities require a recommendation
from an existing resident or an interview with a standing committee that
actually checks references. Racism? Less affluent people simply cannot afford
to think about this? These communities are designed to exclude “them”? Probably
all of the above to one degree or another, but at the heart of this movement is
a combination of fear with excess wealth.
Given the way the country is going,
maybe that fear is justified. But what have we become as Americans where most
of the wealth in this country is controlled by the one percent at the top? Has
the American Dream become an American nightmare for at least half of us? That
upward mobility has vaporized. Skilled blue-collar workers are relegated to the
history books? College education requires outrageous debt for most of us?
I’m
Peter Dekom, but the mere existence of such fortresses raises the ire of the
masses of Americans who have been passed by… excluded by a world they no longer
recognize.
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