For whatever reason, I have no problem refusing to give panhandlers cash. The sob stories -- some of which are surely true -- are pretty awful. Yet I stand by the principle that is plastered all over the subway station that you should give to outreach organizations -- not individuals. (It might even be illegal to panhandle on the subway, but following the law has never been a major concern of mine.)
Yet when it comes to newspaper vendors, I find myself favoring the ones who are obviously not "authorized" over the ones who sell out of those city-controlled newsstands. As I bought my papers this morning -- from the same weather-worn woman on Seventh Avenue in Midtown -- I began to question my actions for the first time.First off, I know why I buy from her. She looks cold, lost and in need of a little help. I think I respect her willingness to make an effort -- versus begging for money -- yet I'm completely willing to overlook the fact that she almost certainly pays for one Daily News and one Post in a vending machine somewhere, and steals the rest to resell. Meanwhile, I'm shunning the men and women who are playing by the rules to operate those legitimate newsstands -- and paying rent and giving a cut of their profits to the city -- in pursuit of their American dream. Surely there is something wrong about my doing this.
It got me wondering: Do my bleeding-heart liberal tendencies get canceled out by the fact that I'm buying a paper owned by a right-wing mogul?
Friday, February 11, 2011
Am I Right, or Am I Left?
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2 comments:
Right? Left?
Which way do you dress?
We've long wondered.
A similar thought I've always had: Times Square and Chinatown are saturated with Middle-America law-and-order types who happily spend money on stolen or pirated (aka stolen) merch. Discuss.
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