So begins my walk, from Tonawanda to Lackawanna, (How Seuss-ian!) around some nice old school charm.
Hopefully to end in a bar in time for happy hour
Only ten minutes in and already the Buffalo as a physical Buffalo thing is getting old
Whatever the theological issues, can we agree Protestants (Pentecostals aside) got the worst aesthetics of all Religions. I mean. This is great and all, but this is a town hall. No soul lifting sacred-ness here
They seem to like this thing called the Bills here
Are you a McDonald’s?
Dollar Tree. Liquor store. Massive radio towers. That is like my photo bait
Attention shoppers!
Insert Looney Tunes joke here
Cart down! Cart down!
Whatever else Buffalo is, it has great aesthetics
I will not start drinking at 9am. I will not start drinking…
Made out of Legos. Can’t convince me otherwise
Buffalo has royalty?
Man. I do not wanna live on this avenue
My people!
After 9 billion Bison/Bills references/cartoons/illustrations i applaud a different & less obvious alliteration. But bengals?
Burmese & Congolese markets. Your normal Rust Belt demographics (really. Lots of refugees resettled communities in Rust Belt cities).
And Nepalese apparently
— BOSS REVOLUTION YOUR VOICE
— CALLING CARD
Only thing that would make this more Buffalo is a Bison plowing into the snowman
The owner (Yemenis-American, like every bodega owner in cities it seems), didn’t believe I was taking pics because I loved the colors/look. But I do!
Unapologetic Rainbow Stan
Just your normal building with a fish motif
Just your normal Verdi statue
This could feel poignant but right now it is feeling really really depressing
Feels like someone hit the Gentrification button on my walk
Uh. I take that back.
There is a lot going on here.
This building is cool enough, but you need the sound effects… (next tweet)
Hmmmmm.
Sitting on this bench in the middle of traffic as an act of utilitarian defiance
Yes. Please do stop making these hideous soulless buildings
Dear lord Buffalo. You have that absolutely amazing city hall, then you go and do this??
Ok. You win again. Well done Buffalo
I do love walking under expressways.
Really does smell like Cheerios here
I been hooked!
I don’t know anything about local politics (keeping it that way this walk), but I can guess what side this is on
If you made a movie set like this, nobody would believe it.
South Buffalo, like Twitter, is fed up with Matt’s
Now this is a draw bridge. All pretenders can go home
Just some tiny local company nobody on Twitter has opinions about. Wonder who CEO is.
“CDS destroyed Wall Street & created the financial crisis!”
This came out of nowhere
Nickle City?
This little guy wandered far away from home and is now lost
Ok. My phone is dying and there are so few places to get a beer around here. Two more miles to my goal
How quickly neighborhoods change in Buffalo
Anyways. Turning off phone. This was fun. I think. 17 miles.
Here is an old (more thoughtful) piece I wrote about last time I was in Buffalo
Since I walk about 3 hours a day, I try a lot of audiobooks & podcasts and so I stumbled onto this weird podcast about the history of rock music and after five minutes I was about to eject it because it sounded like it was made by a crazy guy in his basement, but his absolute dedication, encyclopedic knowledge, and understated enthusiasm for the history of the rock music won me over and now I think it might be the best podcast ever.
I’ve never seen a better example of amateur professionalism. No corporation would allow him to make the choices he has made, and that is a such great thing because his intense passion is on full display
Believe me. Give it thirty minutes. You are going to want to eject after two. Stick with it.
Bishkek (Kyrgyzstan) is one of the most unique cities I've walked. Almost zero tourist, because very few people even know it exists.
I wouldn't recommend it for someone looking for a relaxing vacation, but if you want to really feel your in a different place, a bit detached from the rest of the world, it's safe, inexpensive, and interesting
About ten miles outside of Bishkek is a 3 square mile market, built, lego like, from shipping containers.
Almost entirely self-regulated, it started after fall of USSR as a place to swap goods -- where they came from, and how, nobody asked, or cared
Slapped down in the middle of an otherwise bland neighborhood of mud roads and single homes it's now Central Asia’s largest marketplace.
A complex of stores inside freight containers selling anything and everything you want: Toys, TVs, Jeans, Bras, Bikes, Spices, Trinkets, X-mas decorations, Tools, Gas Masks, Hijabs, Watches, Wall clocks, Slippers, Shampoo, Stuffed Animals, and on and on.
All of it imported from China, Russia, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, South Korea, India, Iran, etc. Carrying on, in a very modern way, Kyrgyzstan’s Silk Road tradition.
It’s a microcosm of our very material global supply chain world. A visceral picture of how our world of stuff works. How the clothes we wear, the food we eat, the things that fill our homes, come from all over, shipped across the globe in rectangular metal boxes.
It has it's own restaurants, a mosque, and keeps expanding.
Traveling to places like Bishkek has helped me understand history better. Not from going to museums, or historical sites, but from seeing how people physically live, especially those without a lot of money.
The marketplaces of Bishkek, or Istanbul, are not that removed from the marketplaces of ancient Rome, or Paris in the middle ages. They are crowded, loud, busy, colorful, communal, and self-organized. Or to put it simply, messy.
When you go to a historical monument, like the ruins of an ancient building, or a preserved cathedral or mosque, you get the entirely wrong image of the past. You see quiet, dignified, empty, sterile spaces. Places where you are scared to touch something. Places where people walk around in hushed voices.
That’s nothing like what the past was, and you can see that in the present in places like the shipping container market.
Update on this: I went to eye-doctor, & no I don't have cataracts. The doctor did mention, almost all her customers now complain about same thing, to extent some have completely stopped driving at night.
The primary offender is newer cars with very bright headlights -- Tesla's are particularly bad, & with them, it's not about the height, but only strength of beam.
There's also less awareness on when to use high beams, especially with younger drivers.
The combo of it all is, driving at night, especially in rural areas, has gotten dangerous. It's not some silly annoyance thing, but a real problem.
Limiting beam intensity, is an example of what competent Government regulation is supposed to be about -- curtailing selfish individual behavior, with limited benefit, that's directly dangerous and harmful, in a clear physical way, to the larger community.
Even hard core libertarians can get behind this one.
we'll be up against the Big-Beam-Industrial Complex. But think of bugs life. We can overcome!
Why is this happening? Spend more than one week, not visiting, but residing, in any big city poor neighborhood, or in a depopulating mid sized city anywhere in US, and you will get it.
Unless you have the strongest ideological blinders on
Pundits need to add Anomie to their list of buzzwords.