Posts Tagged Opinions

If You’re Not Outraged, You’re Not Paying Attention

I should start this by saying that I don’t have any solution to the problem. However, I’m hoping to at least start a conversation among friends (and a broader audience if it happens) about how we go about fixing it.

Part of my 4th of July celebration involved me sitting down and reading the Declaration of Independence. I’m not going to say that reading it was the sole impetus for my line of thinking, but it certainly got me going this direction. The eloquence of Jefferson and knowing the subsequent actions that would form these United States got me thinking: it really seems that we have lost our ability to be actionably outraged.

Sure, you will see TV pundits honing their acting chops with something that looks like outrage, shouting at the cameras and staging these ridiculous tea parties. However, their spew does nothing more than fatten their wallets and maybe sell a few more of whatever products that advertise during their shows. But, I’m talking about real, honest to God, take to the streets, “we’re mad as hell, and we’re not gonna take it anymore” outrage. The kind you might have just seen in Iran or the kind the French seem to muster up over just about anything.

I’m sure that there are those that would tell me that I’m living in the past, but the last administration gave us any number of reasons to be outraged, but most people I know did nothing more than gripe over drinks or slap a bumper sticker on our car. However, our conversations were filled with actual anger over what was happening to our country. What happened? Why was our anger confined to 15 minutes and a cup of coffee?

I look through Sunday’s Herald-Leader and see the mess at KACo, the scandal at the airport, one politician or leader after another involved in marriage infidelity at best and corruption and bald faced lying at worst. We’ve somehow come to accept this as the norm and just “the way things are.” However, I, for one am tired of “it” being that way.

Is it just that our lives with ever demanding jobs, BlackBerrys that beep and Facebook pages that require updating take up too much of our time? Do we exhaust ourselves doing what “must be done” to the point that we don’t have time to be actionably outraged? Has the corporate machine ground us down to a population that is too exhausted to take action? Are we just apathetic? Maybe worst of all, do we feel like we can’t do anything about it?

Like I said, I don’t think i have the answer. However, I’d love to get some ideas, because I’m mad as hell and I’m not sure what to do about it.

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A Request for Young Lexington

I should start by saying that I agree with the premise of Mary Beth Sekela’s article in the op-ed section of Sunday’s Herald-Leader about the need to attract young people to Lexington and the paradigm shift that must occur to make that happen. (Thanks to Jim Gray for the tweet that brought the article to my attention). A young and vibrant community of creative people and thinkers could propel Lexington towards the “world-class city” status that it hopes to become.

However, I think the question that begs asking is “Why aren’t we engaging the young people we already have to help take Lexington forward?” As I wondered through Friday night’s Gallery Hop, with no less than 7 friends (all young professionals, I might add), I couldn’t help but wonder where all these people were every other night of the year. The Downtown Arts Center was packed shoulder to shoulder with mostly 20somethings… lines formed to get up Gallerie Soleil’s narrow stairway, and my group discovered the beauty of Christ Church Cathedral. Downtown Lexington’s sidewalks were booming with young, artistically-minded people spending their Friday night not just visiting art galleries, but maybe more importantly in Downtown.

I’m sure most them also stayed Downtown to have dinner (Atomic Café was our pick) and maybe even stuck around after that for a drink or dancing (a table on the sidewalk at Mia’s is prime real estate for people watching and the music that flows from inside has even spurred me to attempt salsa dancing at the corner of Short and Limestone). But why isn’t the city engaging them/us when it comes to generating ideas and trying to develop our Downtown? We’re already here and we have disposable income! We just might not have enough cash to afford a condo Downtown, but more on that in a minute.

With UK, Transy, Georgetown, EKU and Centre all at Lexington’s doorstep, we already have young people. Lots of them. And most of us would love to see the potential of Downtown actualized. Our voices are just rarely heard when decisions are made on what path our city and our Downtown should take. And yes, it is certainly hard to scream over the UK basketball fans and to outspend the “horse money” that is in Lexington, but we’re here and we want the vibrant, diverse, and artistic Lexington that Sekala writes about.

I also agree with her that we need more investing in the arts and creating this “creative class” would be spectacular. However, we also have to keep in mind that “creative class” reaches across all kinds of economic classes. So far, a good chunk of the development of Downtown has priced our city’s young professionals out of the market. Wikipedia says that the average income of a household in Lexington is around $40,000/year and the median income for a family is just over $53,000. How would someone making that kind of money afford a condo in Downtown that can range from $200,000 up to well over half a million? Instead, we are left renting or buying well outside of Downtown, which keeps us out of the Downtown that the city wants to lure us towards.

On a recent trip to Philadelphia, I was delighted by a local chain of restaurants that specialized in really great food with an obvious slant to young people with a modern décor. It was priced no differently than an Applebee’s: Marathon Grill. Their restaurants were placed strategically throughout the city in the young “artsy” areas of town and appeared to be frequented by that crowd. When I look at Lexington’s downtown eateries, there are plenty of places I like. However, they are mostly “special occasion only” establishments that are hard to leave without dropping at least $100. I would venture to guess that something local but more affordable could, certainly, draw more people into spending their entire evenings and weekends Downtown… instead of a couple hours on a Saturday night or a few bucks for a drink in a bar.

Lexington certainly does need to change the way it thinks and do more things to lure young people into the city. However, we also shouldn’t overlook the people that we already have right here that are already making Lexington their hometown. And while most of us may not be looking to leave, we’d love to have a reason to stay.

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