Monday, February 23, 2009

This Race is Torture

John Fritchey

For Congress ... For Clout

That's whats written on the poster-board hanging from the fence in front of nearly every empty lot or construction site in the northside neighborhoods of Johns Center & Fritchey Square. No? OK. They actually say "For Congress… For Us." And the neighborhoods are still officially called North Center & Lincoln Square. But it's an honest mistake.

Picture being water-boarded. Now picture staring into the smiling face of your local powerbroker, begging for the permit you'll need to pay your mortgage and kids tuition, heavy poster-boards leaning against the counter, as you hope that taking one is all it will take to save your business. Poster-boarding is our very own, local form of "intense interogation."

To those new enough to the city who notice Chicago's torturous political poster-boarding, and to those vigilant veterans who've always noticed, and to those whose recollection has been refreshed (Grazie alla Blagojevich), there is a perfect example of the "Chicago way" on display in the Fifth Congressional District.

Or maybe this is just cynical. All the builders and business owners may just find themselves with a sudden and complete commonality of values in one another; a once in a lifetime synergy of interests making it clear that among 23 candidates in total, and 12 Democrats in particular, there is only one possible - rational choice.

But just for a moment what if?
What if the developers, builders, businesses, and empty lot owners are being subjected to poster-boarding?

Poster-boarding is the process - express, implied, or ingrained – of extracting political support from companies and people who rely on the city for their financial well being. To loosen the squeeze, to grease the skids, to stop the pain, businesses, developers, builders, generally "the beholden," all tell their "beholders" what they want to hear – in this case apparently – "I'm for John Fritchey," or "I'm for John Fritchey the most."

And then these people who do business with the city will prove their devotion by competing against each-other for the honor of displaying the most visable, largest poster-board they can find.

To be completely fair, lets assume that all parties involved in this play are free from any illegal, immoral, dishonest or untrue intentions – and further, that none asked or insinuated that political support of any sort would loosen the squeeze or grease the skids or stop the pain – the ingrained culture that leads to poster-boarding should still be stopped.

In fact, that particular type of culture, "ingrained culture," is the only one that can be stopped at the ballot box. This is an entirely circumstantial case but it begins from the unavoidable, and of late rather "unimpeachable," (pun intended), premise that the "Chicago Way" is "Pay to Play."

Since the thesis is that there are "beholders," (read: aldermen, zoning board members, etc.) who are being beholden too, test it by looking at the interests of the "beholders" who support and endorse the candidacy of John Fritchey.

Above is a small sampling from our neighborhod. Feel free to post, it shouldn't be hard, look next door or across the street.

2 comments:

Cal Blue said...

Has your neighborhood been Fritchified?

I like the 'what if'. What if developers just like him, because he's a nice guy who is good for development?

If developers just liked him, they'd like across the district, and not just in wards where the alderman supports him.

Anonymous said...

At least in my neighborhood, they sure came down quickly!