August 1, 2024
Volume 54 - No. 31
AMERICA
Land of the Filthy R. L. Peterson My grandson has dual citizenship – the United States and Netherlands – and is fiercely proud of his American heritage. Fluent in four languages, he’s travelled the world widely. I’d just picked him up at the Los Angeles International Airport for a 3-day visit. As we weaved our way through the early morning traffic, Rick looked at the surrounding landscape and shook his head in disgust. “Gramps, don’t they ever cut the weeds and pick up the trash? My
country ‘tis of thee, may be a sweet land of Liberty, but our cities are the dirtiest in the world.” He waved his hand at chunks of Styrofoam, light fixtures, hub caps and broken glass lying beside the freeway. “You’d never know by this filth, which could be cleaned up, that Los Angeles is one of the world’s most important cities.” I agreed with Rick. Used to a clean, pristine Brussels not filthy Los Angeles, he said. “This makes a leading financial city look old, tired and worn out. More Nairobi than a world leading city.”
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My wife and I played “Have They Or Haven’t They?” for over two years regarding trash on the freeway. The name of the game came from watching a driver of a car that had been in an accident, take a case of wine from his trunk and place it near the freeway guard rail while waiting for the authorities to arrive. Our game was about when, if ever, the wine would be removed. Each time we drove there we’d say, “Have They or Haven’t They?” The answer is “No.” Rain and the blistering sun have deteriorated the cardboard box, but the three jugs of wine still are there as of last week.
The problem extends to many other American cities. Portland, Oregon, for example. A Clean Up America campaign concentrated on a quarter mile of Interstate 205 in the heart of Portland. Working at night as the Highway Patrol controlled traffic, twelve clean up warriors picked up an astounding array of trash - window air conditioners, automobile tires, and other junk- aluminum ladders, orange Home Depot buckets, soccer balls, automobile bumper assemblies, automobile windshields, construction hardhats, aluminum baseball bats, child-size wooden desks, computers, automobile hub
Filthy
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