WHAT WEEKLY

Aspiration Vacuum

05 October 2011

★ Lee Boot


Have we forgotten how to aspire? Have our problems, once merely sticky but now bordering on existential have scared us timorous, unadventurous and unimaginative? When’s the last time you heard a sober person paint a utopian vision in public? She’d be tarred and feathered with skepticism. But the irony that has to be choked down like a used tire sandwich is that otherwise thoughtful, well-meaning people never to try anything “unrealistic” and so repeat the same tired, unsuccessful solutions to problems over, and over, and over again in ways that defy reason. Education’s not working so let’s double down on what we do already—we’ll just do it more. Public health campaigns fail as they ever do so let’s wrangle more resources and do them again the same way. No credible person should propose anything that might be considered “out there” because theory of change that is unfamiliar or novel in ways that require us to grill a sacred cow is automatically unconvincing. We’ve conflated familiar with smart. We accept incremental as innovative.

Have we lost the ability to think big unless it involves bulldozing large tracts of undeveloped land, or visioning something certain not too happen—like socialism or ending cars? In the past people thought: let’s sail across the monster-filled ocean; let’s walk on the moon; let’s make discrimination illegal; let’s light Randy’s sneakers on fire (seemed big at the time). Now we have such bold ideas as let’s keep kids in school longer; let’s open another clinic. I’m not against such improvements—they’re essential. But when will we start dreaming of things that could actually get us there? We are all participating in Baltimore’s renaissance, but what would make Baltimore a fundamentally better place for all its citizens—better in ways that are obvious to everyone? What would put the city back in the black? What would make here the place where everyone wants to be?



fashion

Drive2Thrive – Discover Wonderland Fashion Show

It's not everyday that Alice in Wonderland meets Project Runway in a philanthropy-driven spectacle under the towering glass ceilings of…

Tailor Made Cocktails

Designs by Stephanie Bradshaw

Fighting Rape in Underwear

Dyed For You

Startup Sheik :: The Swavor Story

nightlife

Let’s Mess With Texas

Many of the two-hundred-plus people gathered at MICA for the CreateBaltimore event on January 15 were hacker/ techies, so tons…

Brian Baker

Boite: Show and Tell

Gateway at Ruintown

Commissure At The Contemporary Museum

Mobtown Microshow: Celebration

social innovation

Let There Be Transit

Baltimore has plenty of fire. Fire for crime, for housing, for jobs. This past weekend the fire focused on transit,…

Baltimore Hackathon

Educulture

Challenging a Culture of Low Expectations

Operation Oliver

Give Corps turns 1!

artist profiles

Ian Hesford :: Dead and Back Again

The tropes concerning what people see when/after they die are well-worn; bright lights, the spirits of dead relatives, out-of-body experiences…

Baltimore’s Most Badass Theater-Bitch :: Danielle Robinette

Charm City Makeup

BROS

Travels with Jack Radcliffe: Michele Li Murphy

Kaveh Haerian :: Poster Child

sustainability

An Ambitious New Charter School Comes to West Baltimore

Publishers’ Note: Green Street Academy is a client of What Weekly’s sister company, What Works Studio. We are proud to have…

Baltimore Free Farm

Strange Folks at Ash Street Garden

Small Time

Fixing The Future

Welcome to the Free Farm