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A Photo Journey Through The Baltimore Ghetto

Submitted by Bill Bonner of Bonner & Partners (annotated by Acting-Man.com's Pater Tenebrarum),

A Different World

BALTIMORE – We left the fantasy island of modern finance today. We had to take our pick-up truck in for repairs. The dealers all seem to be in East Baltimore… or east of Baltimore… so we drove out of Mulberry Street to Pulaski Highway and finally over to Merritt Boulevard.

Just three blocks east of our office, in the Mt. Vernon district, a different world begins. The first indication of it is the old stone prison at the bottom of the hill, first commissioned in 1801. For more than 200 years, Baltimore’s jail has been a disgrace to the city and its correctional efforts. Overcrowded. Filthy. Degenerate.

 

The forbidding Baltimore detention center

Photo credit: Lloyd Fox / MCT / Landov

The critical reports go back almost to the day it was built. Back then, as many as half the prisoners were there for failing to pay their debts. (Today, a similar percentage is there for drug crimes. How times have changed! Now, you can stiff your creditors all you want. But watch out. Don’t take drugs. IT’S THE LAW.) But the most recent scandal must top them all…

 

Looking into the Baltimore Jail’s courtyard from above …

Photo credit: Weyman Swagger / Baltimore Sun

 

In the 1970s, Baltimore began employing women to police the men in the prison. Then, in 2013, the U.S. Attorney’s Office indicted 44 people, including 27 employees of the prison… and some inmates, too… on charges including racketeering, conspiracy, drugs, and money laundering. But the crème de la crème of the indictment concerned Mr. Tavon White, prisoner and ringleader of the Black Guerrilla Family.

First, he earned, while a prisoner, as much as $16,000 a month from drugs and contraband. Second, it turns out that, since 2009, he had also fathered five children with four of the female guards – two of whom had his name tattooed on their bodies. Mr. White was convicted and sentenced to another 15 years in the can.

 

Gang leader Tavon White fathered five children with four female guards in the Baltimore City Jail …

Image via miseeharris.com

 

Boarded Up

Once past the prison, we found blocks of public housing – three-story brick buildings with air conditioners sticking out of windows and trash blowing down the alleys. A boarded-up brick house. A boarded-up stucco house. A boarded-up slipform-stone house. The Pillar of Truth Apostolic Church. Ray’s Liquors. Jane’s Liquors. Pam’s Wine and Spirits. Johns Hopkins Hospital. Bail Bonds 24 Hours. More boarded-up houses.

 

Boarded-up row houses in East Baltimore – there are an estimated 16,000 abandoned houses in the city

Photo credit: Eric Parker

 

Convenience Mart. Sister Beth’s Palm Reading. Heating Repairs. Mufflers. A Moslem community center. More boarded-up houses. Sally’s Show Bar. Everyday Painting Company (in a house that badly needed painting). Blacks. Hispanics. Burger King. McDonald’s. Kentucky Fried Chicken. Dot’s Sandwiches and Subs. Kae Won Fu Asia Carry Out. Used cars… no credit… bad credit… no problem; $795 Down and You Have a Ride.

Whiskey River, apparently closed. Discount Shades and Blinds. Sudsville, 24-hour laundry. Pompeiian Olive Oil. Tombstones and monuments. “Pray for Baltimore,” said a billboard. “Vote for Catherine Pugh,” said a large sign. “Where will your next meal come from? Call 211…” More boarded-up row houses, these with porches.

 

Boarded-up shop fronts in Baltimore…

Photo credit: Edwin J. Torres

 

We took the road toward Dundalk. More auto dealers. Rundown bars. White men in pick-up trucks. The Poplar Restaurant. Central Masonry Supplies. A liquor store with a purple door. Subs. A huge lot full of white delivery vans. Trucking companies. Strip malls. Auto painting. Bay Concrete. Plumbing Distributor. Chesapeake Pets. Dundalk Liquors.

Now the brick-and-form stone disappeared. There were individual houses, wood frame with siding or shingles. White. Boxy. Built in the 1940 or 1950s. Thousands of them. The cars in the driveways are recent, but the houses are the same as when they were built. Cheap. Simple. Small.

 

Another Baltimore ghetto view …

Photo credit: PurpleHaze1100

 

These suburbs were built when Baltimore’s industries were running hot. The GM assembly plant. Beth Steel’s Sparrow’s Point furnace. Domino Sugar. McCormick Spice. Ordinary working stiffs earned decent wages and lived well.

But here we are a half a century later… and ordinary working stiffs are in the same houses… earning the same wages (roughly) as they did in the 1970s. Judging from the polls and presidential primary results, they’re not too happy about it.

 

A city official visiting the recently closed squalid detention center