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Washington,
D.C., August 22, 2010, 6:15 PM EST.
Transcript of video news spot by Mario Verita of UPI.
As
you can see, I am standing closely, but not too close, to the
electrified barbed wire fence surrounding the United States
Capitol building. The fence was erected three weeks ago,
following the declaration of martial law in the nations capital.
There are no indications that either the fence, or martial law,
will be taken down any time soon. If you will follow our camera
panning the Washington D.C. skyline, you will see something
quite remarkable in these difficult times. Besides the clear
blue sky, mercifully brought in by the first significant cold
front of the season, you will see no pillars of smoke. Billowing
smoke plumes have been darkening the D.C. skyline and our
collective consciousness for the past twenty nine consecutive
days until this evening. Unfortunately, my colleagues are not
repeating this same story in New York, Philadelphia, Atlanta,
Chicago, Los Angeles, and many other major U.S. cities. Maybe
the cooler temperatures have calmed tempers, but there is no
question that the rains last night put out many of the building,
block, and car fires that the overworked district firefighters
didn’t yet reach, or that the National Guard did not forcibly
prevent with mass arrests. Fortunately for the people in the
nation’s capital, they did not suffer anywhere near the death
toll as the other cities I mentioned.
And
who would have thought, one year ago—it seems like forever
after what we have gone through in this country—the dozens of
large fires would have been caused not by terrorists or by war,
but by our own citizens. Our own unemployed, evicted,
disenfranchised, hungry, and desperate citizens. The Red Cross
now estimates that there are almost a quarter of a million
dislocated people in the district alone. Most of these are
Americans that two years ago, had decent jobs and normal lives.
In fact, some estimates place fully 200,000 of them as recent
residents of DC metro area suburbs, living in their own homes,
or renting decent apartments. People lost their houses were
squeezed by years of stagnating incomes, over indulgent
spending, higher insurance costs, property taxes, utility bills,
and finally the dollar crisis. Widespread job losses and the
adjustable rate mortgage zooming to 25% earlier this year was
the final blow. Although I’ve been told of house rents
starting to come down in the far suburbs, people now cannot even
afford to rent the houses they used to live in. Now the lucky
families live in their SUVs parked on city streets or on the
Mall itself. As we all know, the international currency crisis
that led to the US dollar devaluation by half last October set
the stage for the gripping tragedies we have seen either by
television or out the window for more than a month now.
Here
is what Bertha Jackson, a now homeless and former long time
Prince Georges county, Maryland resident, and former tour bus
operator, had to say about the situation:
“I
just prayed all day today that the fires would stop. I prayed
and prayed and by the grace of God he is answerin’. I was a
little girl in Los Angeles in the sixties, seein’ those riots,
but this what we got here is like a nightmare comin’ back to
life. Everybody is out here now with problems and prayers just
as me. Seems as if everybody in the country is here. Black
folks, white folks, brown folks, little kids, families, old
folks, every religion, and everybody in between is here. Livin’
in their vehicles, or packin’ crate huts, or by the canal.
They ain’t no jobs, and what jobs they is don’t pay for a
decent roof over your head. We’re just survivin’, tryin’
to help out our neighbors, just tryin’ to make it one more day
OK. If the sun goes down, and we don’t hear no sirens, or see
no smoke, we’ll be singin’ gospel tonight, brother.
Everybody, and you’re invited.”
It
seems like an eternity ago, but it was only six weeks ago that
this latest phase of the economic disaster befalling America
took a violent turn. Remember if you will where it all started,
in the New York City grocery store refused to accept cash in US
dollars for purchases over $20, only European and Japanese
currencies, or gold or silver coins. Of course, with milk at $15
per gallon, the irate costumers could not buy much with their
money. People who had been locked out of their offices, forcibly
evicted from homes that were once theirs, were then unable to
feed their families or themselves. It seems obvious now, but
that’s when the first of many food riots erupted in this
country. Who would have thought that America would come to this?
Desperation on a mass scale? Not long after, mob scenes appeared
at banks in New York, then the north east, and then all across
the country. Panic stricken people were desperately trying to
withdraw their dollars to either spend them for food, gas, and
other necessities, or convert them to stable foreign currencies
or precious metals. Indeed, these days it seems any foreign
currency is more stable than the once globally accepted United
States dollar. Oddly enough, US silver dimes, quarters, and half
dollars that have been out of circulation for more than 40 years
are now more commonly seen in store cash registers than dollar
bills.
Speaking
of paper money, perhaps what is also contributing to the
relative calm in the nation’s capital is the bill signed into
law yesterday by the President. Although he denies that closing
down all the federally insured banks for one week in July
contributed to our latest economic crisis, and also denies any
pressure from the angry mobs jeering at the guard towers on the
White House compound, the President called the Dollar Standard
Act a, quote [reading from a White House press release],
“major step in the recovery of our nation.” As of this
morning, any and all goods and services offered for sale within
U.S. borders, must be transacted in U.S. money. It is a now a
federal offense to refuse United States money. Any business that
illegally transacts in foreign currency, coin, or credit, so
says the legislation, will be subject to immediate closure.
Business owners or managers, or even individuals, convicted of
transacting with, or allowing the transaction of, foreign money
face prison terms of one to ten years, and possible fines as
well. Even so, more than 200 Congressmen and Congresswomen voted
against this bill, blaming seemingly every group, institution,
and country in the world. As deliberations on this bill heated
up at the beginning of August, thousands of dislocated people
stopped huddling around the antenna decorated outdoor TVs all
over the city, and they converged on Capitol Hill. As for the
fence that sprang up all around here soon after, we attempted
today to reach congressional and administration officials when
the fence would come down, but we received no response. Even
though today represents a glimmer of hope that our country is on
the mend, the political repercussions are mounting. Already, by
UPI’s count, 312 of the 435 congressmen and congresswomen have
officially declared that they would not seek reelection. Ninety
percent of those voting against the Dollar Standard Act in the
House of Representatives and the Senate have dropped out of
their election races. Whether we are seeing a reestablishment of
leadership in Washington, or an abdication is hard to tell from
our vantage point.
This
is Mario Verita, from Washington, DC, reporting for United Press
International. |