The Streets Were Paved with Gold (57 page)

BOOK: The Streets Were Paved with Gold
2.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Democracy becomes a kind of Tolstoyan drama in which interests and events and institutions, not individuals, often hold sway. Ed Koch came to City Hall determined to shake up the system. He captured a public mandate to do so. He had the opportunity created
by the fiscal crisis. The sign on his City Hall desk, the same desk that Fiorello LaGuardia once used, reads:

If You Say ‘It’ Can’t Be Done
You’re Right—
You
Can’t Do It.

“I have persevered,” Koch told me in March 1978. “I never give up. Don’t tell me it can’t be done. That’s the sign I have on my desk.… The bastards are not going to beat me down. They’ll have to carry me out of here.” So every morning New York’s ebullient Mayor rises, anxious to get to City Hall, to unleash a new reform proposal, to condemn some ancient wrong as “an outrage.” Like most people in government, Ed Koch is an optimist by choice as well as by chemistry. It would be difficult to get out of bed in the morning and face the day’s problems if he were as cynical as most journalists. Koch honestly believes he can make a difference.

But, imperceptibly, a change comes over most officeholders. It’s not just the crush of responsibility that accompanies public office, a greater appreciation of complexity. It’s also something basic, like ego. After a while, you come to label defeats as victories, not because you’re a liar but because you can’t tell the difference between the two. You also come to believe your own press releases. Knowing that you’re judged not always by what you do but by what you appear to do, a good press becomes all-important. Soon you’re spending part of each day laboring over your image. Success comes not from resolving problems but from skirting or appearing to solve them. From holding press conferences, giving speeches, issuing press releases, creating photo opportunities. The daily press’s preoccupation with a steady diet of news feeds the politicians’ preoccupation with making news.

Soon much of what you do becomes gloss. New York City’s economy looks better to Mayor Koch since
he
assumed office. Why? Because “I feel it,” Koch says. Like his partners, Koch claimed the labor settlement was an “extraordinary achievement,” as was “the progress” made by the city generally. To claim otherwise is to disparage your own work; all the backbreaking hours of toil and sweat. Besides, your staff and the local military/industrial complex agree. Together, you’re making progress.

Soon you lower your sights. You aim not for the moon but for
the top of the trees. “The chains of habit,” Samuel Johnson once said, “are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken.” For the first three years of its fiscal crisis, New York could not break with past habits. In his first ten months in office, Mayor Koch could not break the chain, either. He achieved a labor contract, won the continued investment of the banks and pension funds, helped persuade the Congress to pass new loan legislation. He survived some difficult crises. He got by the year.

But as long as the city’s debt and budget grow faster than its revenue base, bankruptcy lurks just over the horizon. As long as no dramatic moves are made to make the city economically more competitive or to improve services, it is unlikely New York will maintain a tax base to support its budget. As long as the city spends more money than it collects, investors will be wary of making loans. As long as the rhetoric of the fiscal crisis is not matched by the actions, the Sturm und Drang of the fiscal crisis will become a permanent fixture, like the Brooklyn Bridge. Someday, the public will no longer believe the rhetoric.

Yet an almost eerie sense of optimism prevails among the partners. “We avoided bankruptcy,” Jack Bigel almost cheerfully told me in September 1977. “No one knew how we were going to refinance $8 billion in 1975. That we did. No one knew how we could come up with $983 million to pay moratorium noteholders in 1976. Yet we did. Ibsen can write and bring a play to a close in three acts. For us, it’s just another four weary years of continuing the formula we started in 1975. Call it a loose coalition, a process of exchange among partners. If you ask me how, I don’t know. I have to fall back on history.” The partners were, again, emboldened when the Congress passed additional loan legislation in the summer of 1978. Each congratulated the other for the truly brilliant lobbying effort. One of the few sour notes was sounded by
The Wall Street Journal
, which over the three years had earned the right to say I-told-you-so. “The doctors are concocting a patent cure for anemia, but the patient has a severed artery,” they editorialized. The city’s budget, they reminded readers, still wasn’t balanced. Nor was it soon likely to be. In 1978, as in 1975, the city was granted loans for essentially political, not economic reasons. In both years, the big change was that the loans came not from the public credit market but from the federal government, the pension funds and a handful of banks.

Over the first three years of the fiscal crisis New York’s witch
doctors were often asking the wrong question—how do we avoid bankruptcy? The questions they should have constantly asked were: How do we make New York whole? Restore its economy? Improve its services? Truly balance its budget?

O
NE PART OF ME
is beginning to believe that perhaps bankruptcy is the answer. Since 1975, I have accepted the prevailing wisdom that bankruptcy would be a calamity for New York—an official declaration of death, an admission that democratic government had failed. I recoil at the thought of a nonelected judge ordering around elected officials. And at the ugly prospect of a fractious struggle among the city’s creditors—welfare recipients, bondholders, city workers, printers, landlords, bus drivers—for their slice of the city’s tangible assets. I worry about the psychological impact of bankruptcy: businesses or middle-income people who feel they have a bright future will not long remain in a city that has declared it may not have any future at all. I fear that Felix Rohatyn is right when he warns that the bankruptcy of America’s premier city could further undermine the dollar and convulse the international economy.

Yet, increasingly, I wonder whether to save New York we don’t have to destroy the stranglehold of our very own local military/ industrial complex. Maybe New York’s system of consent can’t work and only a judicial command will compel solutions. Maybe bankruptcy is inevitable and by postponing it through witchcraft New York is simply digging itself deeper into debt. If forced to choose between immediate or inevitable bankruptcy, I would choose the former because it is cheaper. Maybe the Wizard of Oz had a point when he told Dorothy, “I’m really a very good man, but I’m a very bad wizard.” Maybe horses can’t fly.

That’s the pessimist in me talking. I still believe bankruptcy would be calamitous. Part of me truly believes that New York is governable—that people, not just events, shape history, and that courageous and skillful leaders can make a difference. New York can capture additional federal aid without becoming a permanent ward of the federal government; need not remain a hostage of powerful special interests. The city can cut its budget, make its economy and business climate more competitive; reform its management and civil service system; inspire citizen volunteers, neighborhood improvement efforts, hope. “I have always held,” wrote Albert Camus after long and dangerous service as a member of
the French Resistance, “that if he who bases his hopes on human nature is a fool, he who gives up in the face of circumstances is a coward.”

I am haunted by Prince Prospero. The Prince was a fool because he insisted on gaiety in the face of death, insisted on walling himself and his minions off from the truth, thinking they had “saved” themselves. While they partied and dreamed of a renaissance, the plague spread. The Prince wasn’t murdered. He committed suicide.

*
The actual deficit, an independent audit by Peat, Warwick, Mitchell & Co. later found, was $712 million.

*
Admittedly, the issue of gainsharing is complex. From the taxpayer’s point of view, it alters the traditional definitions of public service, institutionalizing a kind of gimme-gimme mentality. From the city worker’s point of view, it risks rewarding the least efficient agencies. A well-run agency may not be able to grant the same raises because it cannot achieve the same savings.

About the Author

K
EN
A
ULETTA
was brought up in Coney Island, attended New York City public schools and the State University of New York at Oswego, and received an M.A. from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. He worked for the federal and city governments and participated in national and state political campaigns. A former contributing editor of
New York
magazine and writer for the
Village Voice
, he is now a writer for
The New Yorker
, a columnist for the
New York Daily News
and a regular commentator and host on New York public television. He is also a contributing editor of
Esquire
magazine, and his work has appeared in the
New York Review of Books
and the
New York Times.

VINTAGE POLITICAL SCIENCE AND SOCIAL CRITICISM

V-568
ALINSKY, SAUL D.
/ Reveille for Radicals
V-736
ALINSKY, SAUL D.
/ Rules for Radicals
V-726
ALLENDE, PRESIDENT SALVADOR AND REGIS DEBRAY
/ The Chilean Revolution
V-286
ARIES, PHILIPPE
/ Centuries of Childhood
V-604
BAILYN, BERNARD
/ Origins of American Politics
V-334
BALTZELL, E. DIGBY
/ The Protestant Establishment
V-571
BARTH, ALAN
/ Prophets With Honor: Great Dissents & Great Dissenters in the Supreme Court
V-791
BAXANDALL, LEE (ed.) AND WILHELM REICH
/ Sex-Pol.: Essays 1929–1934
V-60
BECKER, CARL L.
/ The Declaration of Independence
V-563
BEER, SAMUEL H.
/ British Politics in the Collectivist Age
V-994
BERGER, PETER & BRIGITTE AND HANSFRIED KELLNER
/ The Homeless Mind: Modernization and Consciousness
V-77
BINZEN, PETER
/ Whitetown, USA
V-513
BOORSTIN, DANIEL J.
/ The Americans: The Colonial Experience
V-11
BOORSTIN, DANIEL J.
/ The Americans: The Democratic Experience
V-358
BOORSTIN, DANIEL J.
/ The Americans: The National Experience
V-501
BOORSTIN, DANIEL J.
/ Democracy and Its Discontents: Reflections on Everyday America
V-414
BOTTOMORE, T. B.
/ Classes in Modern Society
V-742
BOTTOMORE, T. B.
/ Sociology: A Guide to Problems & Literature
V-305
BREINES, SIMON AND WILLIAM J. DEAN
/ The Pedestrian Revolution: Streets Without Cars
V-44
BRINTON, CRANE
/ The Anatomy of Revolution
V-30
CAMUS, ALBERT
/ The Rebel
V-966
CAMUS, ALBERT
/ Resistance, Rebellion & Death
V-33
CARMICHAEL, STOKELY AND CHARLES HAMILTON
/ Black Power
V-2024
CARO, ROBERT A.
/ The Power Broker: Robert Moses and The Fall of New York
V-862
CASE, JOHN AND GERRY HUNNIUS AND DAVID G. CARSON
/ Workers Control: A Reader on Labor and Social Change
V-98
CASH, W. J.
/ The Mind of the South
V-555
CHOMSKY, NOAM
/ American Power and the New Mandarins
V-248
CHOMSKY, NOAM
/ Peace in the Middle East? Reflections on Justice and Nationhood
V-815
CHOMSKY, NOAM
/ Problems of Knowledge and Freedom
V-788
CIRINO, ROBERT
/ Don’t Blame the People
V-17
CLARKE, TED AND DENNIS JAFFE (eds.)
/ Worlds Apart: Young People and The Drug Problems
V-383
CLOWARD, RICHARD AND FRANCES FOX PIVEN
/ The Politics of Turmoil: Essays on Poverty, Race and The Urban Crisis
V-743
CLOWARD, RICHARD AND FRANCES FOX PIVEN
/ Regulating the Poor: The Functions of Public Welfare
V-940
COBB, JONATHAN AND RICHARD SENNETT
/ Hidden Injuries of Class
V-311
CREMIN, LAWRENCE A.
/ The Genius of American Education
V-519
CREMIN, LAWRENCE A.
/ The Transformation of the School
V-808
CUMMING, ROBERT D. (ed.)
/ The Philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre
V-2019
CUOMO, MARIO
/ Forest Hills Diary: The Crisis of Low-Income Housing
V-305
DEAN, WILLIAM J. AND SIMON BREINES
/ The Pedestrian Revolution: Streets Without Cars
V-726
DEBRAY, REGIS AND PRESIDENT SALVADOR ALLENDE
/ The Chilean Revolution
V-638
DENNISON, GEORGE
/ The Lives of Children
V-746
DEUTSCHER, ISAAC
/ The Prophet Armed
V-748
DEUTSCHER, ISAAC
/ The Prophet Outcast
V-617
DEVLIN, BERNADETTE
/ The Price of My Soul
V-671
DOMHOFF, G. WILLIAM
/ The Higher Circles
V-812
ELLUL, JACQUES
/ The Political Illusion
V-874
ELLUL, JACQUES
/ Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes
V-390
ELLUL, JACQUES
/ The Technological Society
V-143
EMERSON, THOMAS I.
/ The System of Freedom of Expression
V-396
EPSTEIN, EDWARD JAY
/ Between Fact and Fiction: The Problem of Journalism
V-998
EPSTEIN, EDWARD JAY
/ News from Nowhere: Television and The News
V-405
ESHERICK, JOSEPH W. (ed.) AND JOHN S. SERVICE
/ Lost Chance in China: The World War II Despatches of John S. Service
V-803
EVANS, ROWLAND JR. AND ROBERT D. NOVAK
/ Nixon in the White House: The Frustration of Power
V-802
FALK, RICHARD A.
/ This Endangered Planet: Prospects and Proposals for Human Survival
V-2002
FERNBACH, DAVID AND KARL MARX
/ Political Writings Vol. I: The Revolutions of 1848
V-2003
FERNBACH, DAVID AND KARL MARX
/ Political Writings Vol. II: Surveys from Exile
V-2004
FERNBACH, DAVID AND KARL MARX
/ Political Writings Vol. III: The First International and After
V-225
FISCHER, LOUIS (ed.)
/ The Essential Gandhi
V-927
FITZGERALD, FRANCES
/ Fire in the Lake: The Vietnamese and the Americans in Vietnam
V-316
FREEMAN, S. DAVID
/ Energy: The New Era
V-368
FRIEDENBERG, EDGAR Z.
/ Coming of Age in America
V-409
FRIENDLY, FRED W.
/ Due to Circumstances Beyond Our Control
V-378
FULBRIGHT, J. WILLIAM
/ The Arrogance of Power
V-846
FULBRIGHT, J. WILLIAM
/ The Crippled Giant
V-491
GANS, HERBERT J.
/ The Levittowners
V-167
GANS, HERBERT J.
/ More Equality
V-862
GARSON, DAVID G. AND GERRY HUNNIUS AND JOHN CASE
/ Workers Control: A Reader in Labor and Social Change
V-2018
GAYLIN, WILLARD
/ Partial Justice: A Study of Bias in Sentencing
V-183
GOLDMAN, ERIC F.
/ The Crucial Decade—and After: America 1945–1960
V-31
GOLDMAN, ERIC F.
/ Rendezvous With Destiny
V-174
GOODMAN, PAUL AND PERCIVAL
/ Communitas
V-325
GOODMAN, PAUL
/ Compulsory Mis-education and The Community of Scholars
V-32
GOODMAN, PAUL
/ Growing Up Absurd
V-932
GRAUBARD, ALLEN
/ Free the Children: Radical Reform and The Free School Movement
V-457
GREENE, FELIX
/ The Enemy: Some Notes on the Nature of Contemporary Imperialism
V-430
GUEVERA, CHE
/ Guerilla Warfare
V-33
HAMILTON, CHARLES AND STOKELY CARMICHAEL
/ Black Power
V-453
HEALTH/PAC
/ The American Health Empire
V-635
HEILBRONER, ROBERT L.
/ Between Capitalism and Socialism
V-283
HENRY, JULES
/ Culture Against Man
V-482
HETTER, PATRICIA AND LOUIS O. KELSO
/ Two-Factor Theory: The Economics of Reality
V-465
HINTON, WILLIAM
/ Fanshen: A Documentary of Revolution in a Chinese Village
V-328
HINTON, WILLIAM
/ Iron Oxen
V-2005
HOARE, QUINTIN (ed.) AND KARL MARX
/ Early Writings
V-95
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD
/ The Age of Reform: From Bryan to FDR
V-795
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD
/ America at 1750: A Social Portrait
V-9
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD
/ The American Political Tradition
V-686
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD AND MICHAEL WALLACE (eds.)
/ American Violence: A Documentary History
V-317
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD
/ Anti-Intellectualism in American Life
V-540
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD AND CLARENCE L. VER STEEG (eds.)
/ Great Issues in American History: From Settlement to Revolution, 1584–1776
V-541
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD (ed.)
/ Great Issues in American History: From the Revolution to the Civil War, 1765–1865
V-542
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD (ed.)
/ Great Issues in American History: From Reconstruction to the Present Day, 1864–1969
V-385
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD (ed.)
/ The Paranoid Style in American Politics and Other Essays
V-591
HOFSTADTER, RICHARD (ed.)
/ The Progressive Historians
V-201
HUGHES, H. STUART
/ Consciousness and Society
V-862
HUNNIUS, GERRY, DAVID G. GARSON AND JOHN CASE
/ Workers Control: A Reader on Labor and Social Change
V-514
HUNTINGTON, SAMUEL F.
/ The Soldier and the State
V-566
HURLEY, ROGER
/ Poverty & Mental Retardation: A Causal Relationship
V-17
JAFFE, DENNIS AND TED CLARKE (eds.)
/ Worlds Apart: Young People and The Drug Programs
V-241
JACOBS, JANE
/ Death and Life of Great American Cities
V-584
JACOBS, JANE
/ The Economy of Cities
V-433
JACOBS, PAUL
/ Prelude to Riot
V-459
JACOBS, PAUL AND SAUL LANDAU WITH EVE PELL
/ To Serve the Devil: Natives and Slaves Vol. I
V-460
JACOBS, PAUL AND SAUL LANDAU WITH EVE PELL
/ To Serve the Devil: Colonials and Sojourners Vol. II
V-2017
JUDSON, HORACE FREELAND
/ Heroin Addiction: What Americans Can Learn from the English Experience
V-790
KAPLAN, CAROL AND LAWRENCE (eds.)
/ Revolutions, A Comparative Study
V-337
KAUFMANN, WALTER (trans.) AND FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
/ Beyond Good and Evil
V-369
KAUFMANN, WALTER (trans.) AND FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
/ The Birth of Tragedy and The Case of Wagner
V-985
KAUFMANN, WALTER (trans.) AND FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
/ The Gay Science
V-401
KAUFMANN, WALTER (trans.) AND FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
/ On the Genealogy of Morals and Ecce Homo
V-437
KAUFMANN, WALTER (trans.) AND FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
/ The Will to Power
V-994
KELLNER, HANSFRIED AND PETER AND BRIGITTE BERGER
/ The Homeless Mind: Modernization and Consciousness
V-482
KELSO, LOUIS O. AND PATRICIA HETTER
/ Two-Factor Theory: The Economics of Reality
V-708
KESSLE, GUN AND JAN MYRDAL
/ China: The Revolution Continued
V-510
KEY, V. O.
/ Southern Politics
V-764
KLARE, MICHAEL T.
/ War Without End: American Planning for the Next Vietnams
V-981
KLINE, MORRIS
/ Why Johnny Can’t Add: The Failure of the New Math
V-361
KOMAROVSKY, MIRRA
/ Blue Collar Marriage
V-675
KOVEL, JOEL
/ White Racism
V-459
LANDAU, SAUL, PAUL JACOBS WITH EVE PELL
/ To Serve the Devil: Natives and Slaves Vol. I

Other books

Woodsman Werebear by T. S. Joyce
Military Daddy by Patricia Davids
My Life With The Movie Star by Hoffmann, Meaghan
Artifact by Shane Lindemoen
Forbidden Kiss by Shannon Leigh
Unzipped by Nicki Reed
Time of Death by James Craig
Marked by P. C. Cast, Kristin Cast