oh my god.
let me share a memory with yāall. itās from i guess 1978 or thereabouts. itās high summer. i donāt remember where my mom was driving me, in our avocado green chevette, i just know there was a traffic jam that turned 35w northbound into a parking lot from horizon to horizon.
picture it ā wait, you donāt have to use your imagination, this happened all the damn time back then.
every one of those damn cars was burning leaded gasoline. there were no emissions regulations. there were no safety regulations. there were just thousands and thousands of detroit steel shoeboxes belching visible smoke as they idled, engines loud and hot, here and there a radiator giving up in the heat, a cloud of burning oil rising.
i, a smeet of five or six, was choking on toxic smog.
i reckon it was about a half hour into the traffic jam that i first threw up. i remember a blinding headache, i remember being confused, i remember dry heaving with my arms and head hanging out the window, the green metal of the car burning my hands and my chin. i donāt remember passing out, but iām told i lost consciousness before mom was able to get to an off-ramp, because there were no emergency lanes on the highways back then.
i lived. and life went on. what were we going to do, complain? if iād died, the cause of death probably wouldāve been recorded as heatstroke, not carbon monoxide poisoning.
i know iām probably preaching to the choir here on tumblr. but i really wish i could tell that story to the people who think deregulation is no big deal. i wish theyād put themselves in my momās shoes.
or even just look at some old pictures, then look out the window.
ever notice how cityscapes used to have that orange tint and hazy aura? yeah, thatās poison gas.
remember how the mississippi river used to be a stinking soup of baby-shit yellow sludge covered with disturbingly stiff rafts of light orange foam?
i canāt even find pictures of the sludge and foam, i guess they didnāt end up on the internet. the smell was indescribable. that oily shimmer. the reek of dead things. people didnāt boat on the river for pleasure; it smelled too bad, it was too ugly, and you could get super super sick if you touched the water.
and now look at it.
i still wouldnāt want to drink it, but if i fell in i wouldnāt bolt for the shower in a panic, you know?
if the thieving billionaires get their way, we can kiss those sailboats goodbye, and learn the smell of toxic foam once more. the ultra-rich wonāt even feel the extra money, theyāve already got more than they could ever touch, they just stash it in offshore accounts to rot, but the rest of us will return to a time of neverending nausea and weird cancers. a time when every elementary school class had at least one kind whoād been born with no fingers or their heart outside their body, and this was just⦠the way things were.
iām sorry. i didnāt mean to longpost. itās just. god. yāall have no idea how CLEAN everything is now, compared to when i was a kid. and these rich old men are counting on that, on people not knowing or not remembering how bad it was before regulation, not realizing how much we need these protections until itās too late.
I enforce federal worker health and safety and pollution regulations.Ā
When I was learning my trade, when my classmates and I were having a chuckle over theĀ āwell duhā level of specificity written into the Code of Federal Regulations (tryĀ āno hazardous material shall be stored in crew berthingā on for size), I will never forget the silence that followed when our instructor spoke these words:
āYour regulations are written in blood.ā
These regulations were notĀ written on a whim. They were written because someone thought they could cut costs by storing however many more pounds of a radioactive, toxic, carcinogenic, or whatever else material in the same rooms where the human beings they paid to transport those materials slept, and then did that, because no one was telling them not to.Ā
They were written because people died. Horrifically. Because unregulated capitalism values profit over human life and suffering.Ā
Can I say it again, for those not paying attention?Ā
Unregulated capitalism values profit over human life and suffering.



















