Progress in the 1950s

I thought it was interesting how Fullilove relates urban renewal to war, although this correlation necessitates the question of whether urban renewal causes societal upheaval which facilitates war, or whether urban renewal is the result of societal upheaval which would be the precursor of war anyway. But Fullilove connects the French revolution and the war in Vietnam to urban renewal programs in Paris and the US, respectively. I also enjoyed Fulliloves discussion of the 1950s use of word “progress” to cover up anything. People who had very little political knowledge and analytical ability to foresee consequences of urban renewal would blindly say they agreed with it because they supported “progress,” whatever that even meant. My dad grew up in the 50s and often told me about how he thought the era was characterized by conformity. After the chaos of WWII, people just wanted everything and themselves to be as “normal” as possible. So the question I would ask you is, how what terms today do you think are used similarly to the way Fullilove describes the word progress was used in the 1950s?

-Jesse Geisler

Ghettos in Root Shock

I thought it was interesting how Fullilove discussed meanings of the word “ghetto” and differentiates this from what a “slum” is. According to Fullilove, a Ghetto is an area of enforced residence due to membership in a particular ethnic or religious group, whereas a slum by contrast is an area marked by poverty and worn out housing. The map Fullilove provides, showing how poor areas tend to clump in urban centers with wealthier enclaves on the outskirts, the barriers marked by acts of vandalism was highly interesting. She is implying residents are contained and enforced to continue living in the ghetto due to general discrimination from those outside the area. As professor Braine mentioned on our field trip to look at the 3D map of NYC and our discussion of public housing, in some areas you are “Once a tower kid always a tower kid.” This is to say the stigma of where you grow up will follow you. Fullilove made several interesting inferences in her discussion of African American ghettos. First, she implied that for the people living there it is close to a warm, friendly place, with strong communal support and ties. Given that my experience of “ghettos” I’ve visited or people I’ve known who have grown up in such areas is post the crack epidemic and American crime wave, when I say I am skeptical of her assertions it may be because I cannot imagine a 1960s ghetto. The second interesting connection she makes is the implication that the end of segregation led to the end of the “supportive” African American ghetto; the end of this kind of idealized nurturing community. I would ask what a ghetto is to you, and how would you define it?

-Jesse Geisler

A trip through South Bronx

Ive only every seen the South Bronx twice, once when I made a wrong turn trying to get onto the RFK bridge, and once from an academic perspective at the Queens Museum Panorama. Driving through the area, especially at night, made me feel extremely unsafe, despite living in East Flatbush for a year prior. I think what differentiates the Bronx from other areas in NY is how compact it is. Wallace brings up overcrowding in houses in the Bronx. And I dont think I need to reiterate that this, paired with injection drug use, among other things, makes the area extremely prone to HIV.

So, are parts of New York “to far gone?” is there a way ha we can restore, not just the Bronx, but the bad areas of New York? and how? it’s easy to say urban renewal, but we all know that that would simply displace to many people to deal with, on top of the cost.

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Societal HIV

The spread of drug abuse, and indices of public health including homicide and infant mortality suggest a disruption of personal domestic and community networks accompanied the migration of ghetto communities. While HIV may be mainly regarded as a public health issue, it must be regarded in a larger social context as well. HIV/AIDS not only deteriorates health but contributes to urban decay, catalyzing a collapse of the urban ecosystem. Ostracizing and stigmatizing such individuals leads to social disunity naturally caused by ignorance and apathy of individuals and government.

Could this ignorance be analogous to a “societal HIV infection” in that in that it disrupts the societal structure and causes its slow, dwindling emaciation, which is virtually incurable?

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Spread of AIDS in South Bronx

As many others already mentioned, the first thing that came to my mind when I realized this article was about the South Bronx was the trip to the Queens Museum as well. I remember during the trip how Professor Braine kept saying Bronx, particularly South Bronx, is perhaps the only are where we’d see completely black on the map. After reading this article, it is not so difficult to understand why.

The article starts of by mentioning the reduction of the fire service. This might seem irrelevant, however, it acts as the initiator of a chain reaction which ultimately lead to the spread of HIV/AIDS in South Bronx and much of Bronx in general. When fire services were reduced, people tended to come together in a community, as they felt the sense of security they had lost when the fire services were gone, could be replaced by people simply being next to each other. However, Wallace makes it explicitly clear that while there are various mediums by which HIV/AIDS could be transmitted, drug abuse was the vector in South Bronx. The problem would not have been potent were it not for the “planned shrinkage” program of the city and the redlining by the Fire Department. These two events caused “the geography of drug abuse from being tightly and centrally distributed in the traditional poverty communities of the South-Central Bronx into a split and bifurcated pattern covering a much larger area…” (Wallace 17). The expansion of drug use also led to the expansion of drug abuse, which in turn exponentially increased the rate of HIV/AIDS. My question, however, is why did the government not try to tackle the drug abuse problem? This was clearly the reason for the staggeringly high rates of HIV/AIDS in the South Bronx, so why was this problem not addressed?

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Feedback on A Synergism of Plagues

Ever since the beginning of this Macaulay seminar, I heard information about HIV/AIDS as well as about disastrous effects that residents of the Bronx experience and I was curious as to know why the effect of HIV/AIDS of residents of the Bronx was recurring throughout the class. Once I read the Wallace article, I then understood why.

In Victorian London, the main epidemic was the cholera epidemic. In post-Civil Rights movement Black America, urban renewal was the main epidemic. Now we head toward the main epidemic that will affect the future of New York City: the AIDS epidemic. Like the people who became sick from cholera and the people who face psychological trauma from urban renewal, the people who are affected by HIV/AIDS should not be stigmatized, but like the other two groups, they are.

What leads to such a high rate of HIV/AIDS in the Bronx is perhaps a broken sense of community. Housing loss and homelessness was what was linked to drug abuse and violence, which led to negative effects in terms of public health. Even when there was housing, it was overcrowded and had urban decay. The quality of life that the residents faced was by no means healthy or even satisfactory for any sort of living standards.

This article linked to chapter 8 of Fullilove’s Root Shock, Human Rights in the City, mentioning the South Bronx as an ugly secret of New York City compared to the Disney like feel of Times Square. Residents of the South Bronx are the ones who face the highest rates of AIDS, violence, mass incarceration, and other conditions.

Upon reading this article Fullilove’s quote rings in my ears : “Is Forty-Second Street beautiful if Willis Avenue in the South Bronx is not?” After all, it is injustice that New York City is home to the richest and the poorest of people, to the most fortunate and the least fortunate. And that is a major problem.

Synergism of Plagues

This reading reminded me of what we talked about on our trip to Queens Museum and how the South Bronx was consistently affected throughout the years whether it was about poverty or HIV/AIDS. It was one of the few areas that was concentrated with people affected by both. I like how Wallace uses a lot of graphs to show how the South Bronx is being affected. He makes an interesting correlation by starting off about the lack of fire services in the South Bronx. Who knew that this would eventually lead to increase poverty and people with HIV/AIDS in the area. It’s sad to see that the government wasn’t able to help South Bronx. Even if the government did start to build more fire services in the area, it simply wasn’t enough to counteract the downward slope the South Bronx was headed towards. Even today the South Bronx is still a community know to have a high poverty rate and a greater density of people with HIV/AIDS. Wallace makes a good connection as to how the South Bronx needs more help and that it left alone it’s only a downward slope for the community. He talks about how there are some apartment buildings that have a lot of tenants who have HIV/AIDS and how people find the building “undesirable” and then eventually the landlord abandons the building which then becomes a perfect place for fire setting. My question is how can we rebuild the South Bronx? Sadly society is shallow to an extent and it’s unfortunate that people would be turned off by people who have a disease that isn’t even air born. How do we prevent these buildings from closing down and how do we detach the stigma associated with the neighborhood?

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Effect of HIV/AIDS

It was necessary to keep the spread of HIV and AIDS in check in the south Bronx and other areas because the rapid spread of these diseases effected the population on a larger scale. Drug use and other promiscuous behaviors spread the disease and this soon effected more “developed” parts of the nation. Looking at the Bronx, these mechanisms to spread HIV/AIDS effected South-Central Bronx and Northwest to East Bronx.  And this, along with other factors, gave New York City the title of the HIV capital of America.

It was interesting to see how housing related to people who were infected to HIV. I have never thought of it in that light. The sicker people were, the less able they were to work and pay the rent. There was also a chance that a particular housing area could have multiple people infected and that would drive away healthy tenants. There was an urban crisis that often composed of either homelessness, drug use, violence, deterioration of public health, or poverty (2).

My question has to do with something mentioned later on in the article. Why is it that when a larger population of people are infected the number of people with symptoms are proportional to the number of people without symptoms.

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“A Synergism of Plagues”: Wallace Reading

The closest I have ever gotten to the South Bronx is “seeing” it on the panorama at the Queens Museum, so I found the reading to be quite interesting from the very beginning. At first, I questioned the direction of the reading as it jumped from AIDS in the Bronx to the fire service reductions and the fire/abandonment epidemic to overcrowding and urban decay. However, as I continued to read I understood that the concepts, in fact, are strongly connected. As the reading pointed out, the overcrowding led to drug abuse which in turn, led to AIDS. They then explore the possibility the the infection will go unchecked, and if it does, it is possible that the AIDS outbreak could lead to further urban decay that continues to cycle “in a destabilizing positive feedback.” My question is, if this were to happen, how would the cycle end? Would there just continue to be more urban decay which leads to more drug use which leads to more AIDS which leads to more urban decay and so on? At what point is enough enough? Instability from the first urban decay wave, as Wallace explained, made AIDS difficult to control, so I can only imagine that it is getting increasingly more difficult. What is even scarier is that it is becoming a threat not only to the South Bronx, but to a five boroughs within New York City. I like that Wallace lays out a threefold plan for a return to stability (1. restoration of municipal services, 2. community organization, and 3. attention to stabilization/ extension of low income housing availability) and I feel that it has the potential to be successful.

Planned Shrinkage

Like Albert, I was surprised by how there could be a domino effect that would lead from neglecting municipal fire services to drugs and urban decay.  This paper was definitely a challenging read because of all of the math and statistics involved in explaining the correlation between these seemingly independent variables.  How can neglecting municipal fire services cause people to contract HIV/AIDS?  I never would have guessed that there would be a connection.  Nevertheless, I am both intrigued and dismayed by the fact that this series of cause and effect could have been stopped, but it was not.  Instead, it was a “planned shrinkage.”  I want to know how the government was allowed to let all this happen.

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