False Spring
     In a place like  upstate New York, north of Albany, where April is more generally known  as "mud season," and the wait for "ice-out" on the big lakes takes  forever, and on frigid nights the windigos steal through the tops of the  tall pines -- it would seem foolish to complain about perfectly  beautiful weather.
     We just had a week in the 70s, with  more to come. The grass went from ochre to bright green in about  thirty-six hours. The buds are popping like mad. This is usually what  the first week of May is like around here, and that fact alone may  explain New York state's relentless population drain over the past forty  years.
     I was out on my bicycle, naturally, taking it all  in -- like, why sit inside and sulk because the weather is strange in a  pleasant way? -- and I ventured into the outlands east of town, where  an impressive number of gigantic new houses had landed like alien  mother-ships in the former cow pastures and wood lots. Of course, the  aesthetics were an issue apart from the socio-economics of it, but  nonetheless interesting.
     Each new, gigantic house seemed  the result of a losing struggle to reinvent basic design principles  that did not require re-invention. I doubt the spirit of joyous  "creativity" among the star-architects has seeped down to the level of  the provincial house-builders, who, after all, are just assemblers of  modular materials like dimensional lumber and eight-foot sheet-rock.  It's their inability to assemble these parts coherently that's really  striking, so what you get is an endless variety of mistakes along with a  complete absence of anything done really well -- which may be the  essence of what the "diversity" craze has really meant to us, the ethos  of current times.
     The abiding quality of all these houses  was grandiosity (by which I do not mean grand-ness). That, too, is a  signature of these times in America -- the nation too big to fail and  tragically destined to do just that on account of its too big to  fail-ness. And, of course, one could not fail to wonder, cruising by  these hideously ponderous houses, whether as a matter of fact they were  failing in terms of the owners' ability to keep up with the payments,  for instance. One after another, I pictured a husband and wife within  sitting in the sunny breakfast room on Easter morning humped in tears as  they sorted through stacks of bills and bank statements... and I  imagined the yellow foreclosure tape a few weeks hence atop the weird  split-block portico treatments and misbegotten arrays of concrete  balusters, and the colossal Palladianesque windows with their pathetic  snap-in muntins (and the fantastic solar heat-gain, not figured-in by  the designer-builder, that would turn the lawyer-foyer into something  like a crematorium by two p.m.)... and the pension fund in Wisconsin or  Norway that was sitting on the booby-trapped CDO that contained this  sketchy mortgage and thousands of others just like it... and, well, this  choo-choo of thoughts led to envisioning the train-wreck of economies  and nations that lies in wait just around the bend....
      One also could not fail to reflect on the recklessness of a nation that  placed untold million-dollar bets on the idea that it would be possible  to travel anywhere in an automobile from houses like these a few scant  years from now. This far along in the tribulations of our time, most  Americans still have not heard of peak oil, and the few who have regard  it as some figment that Ralph Nader or Al Gore conjured up on an acid  trip in a sweat lodge.  The more sophisticated among the mentally  unwashed are certain that the earth has a creamy nougat center of  low-sulfer light crude oil, or they heard that the Bakken formation in  Dakota holds more oil than Saudi Arabia, or that the whole US car and  truck fleet will be electrified in a year or two, or that we can  drill-baby-drill our way to permanent oil abundance, or just that the  American can-do spirit will come up with something to keep Happy  Motoring alive because we're the greatest! Such grandiosity!
      Personally, I look at these houses scattered around what was only  recently a dedicated farm landscape and I am quite sure that the  denizens within will be marooned in their great rooms, and that very  probably many of them will have no job to go to -- in the conventional  sense of what we think a job is, in some corporation or institution --  and that in a surprisingly short span of years these buildings will be  ruins or squats. I think these thoughts after struggling up a rather  steep hill more than half-a-mile (and many others previously). A trip  anywhere from here, to do anything, and the return trip, would occupy an  entire day even for someone in decent physical condition. Somebody  accustomed to rations of Cheez Doodles and Mountain Dew would be dead by  then. There will be lots of dead.
     On the macro level,  the feeling spreads across the USA that our troubles are behind us.  Employment is ticking up. The S & P index only goes up now. The  banks have stabilized and those "toxic assets" (which I call "frauds"  and "swindles") have been disarmed and safely buried under Yucca  Mountain. Housing starts may still be weak, but the "gaming" industry is  making great strides in places like the old Puritan commonwealth of  Massachusetts, so soon we'll have a virtually automatic economy of  leisure-and-entertainment paid for by creaming off a small percentage of  the quarters pumped into video slot stations. No doubt the Chinese will  be jealous and try to imitate us.
     All these lovely mild  days, I was not unconscious of the eeriness of the weather and the  possible insidious effects of it on the local ecosystem in everything  from the added generations of deer ticks carrying Lyme disease and the  death of the honeybees to the fate of this year's apple crop. I confess:  it made me very nervous. Something is happening... out there.
                                     