Friday, November 16, 2007

BELTWAY BEAUTIFICATION (Or: Is it true what they say about our nation's capital?)


Recently, I was forced to leave the haven of home for a fortnight's journey to the City that Loves to Serve - Washington, DC. I used to live and work in the District, way back in the Reagan era, which, despite my memories of it, was apparently a Golden Age of prosperity and freedom. So much so that Washington has re-named its only endurable airport after the star of Girls On Probation.






While in Washington, I had several hair-raising adventures that reminded me of younger and happier days, when I was a bright-eyed bushy-headed gofer at the Washington Post Magazine. For instance, during a visit to the National Archives, a security officer gave me the business for endangering the security of the reading room by trying to enter it while wearing a baseball cap. I never found out if my hat was feared as a potential terrorist, or whether the Chief of Archives suspected that it might attempt to steal documents by concealing them under its brim. If the former, perhaps, in future, security officers could simply search hats for guns, knives and explosives - a procedure that would take no more than a quarter-of-an-hour, even in Washington. If the latter, I would think that my hat would be no more likely to conceal documents than my shirt or my underpants, both of which were allowed to enter the reading room without intereference.

That afternoon, as I walked back from the Archives to my cousin's house in Georgetown, I came across the following sign on M Street:




Ha, ha, ha, I thought to myself. There's Washington in a nutshell: The Municipal Beautification Department oblivious to the Department of Public Thoroughfares; an admonition for caution, incautiously obstructed. Ha, ha, ha.

Unfortunately, the ha-ha-ha's quickly gave away to consternation. All up-and-down M Street, and a quarter mile up Wisconsin Avenue, nearly all cautionary signs were obstructed in the same way.

Like the Bush Administration in Iraq, the municipal government of the District of Columbia has thrown caution to the wind.

-cc-