Monday, August 23, 2010

Meaning?

I’ve reached a place where I’m grateful for what happened to me in Wheat Ridge.  I’m grateful because it has given me a new purpose in life.   

A man who survived a Nazi concentration camp once wrote a book called Man’s Search for Meaning.  He stated that the people who survived tragedy of the camp all had one thing in common:  They had something to live for, a family, a career, a higher calling.  He  had a name for this purpose.  He called it Meaning. 

And now I have meaning.  I want to use this blog to speak out for the lower class in this country, people like me who are vets, artist, musicians and poor White Trash who are trapped in a mental prison and are too injured physically and mentally to escape, at least for now.

I fled Wheat Ridge and now live in Denver. 

Denver, along with San Francisco, is the kindest city I’ve ever lived in.   I’m around people who are just like me, lower class whites with nowhere else to go.   I’ve met many men had to leave their hometowns due to societal pressures and pressures from police.  All of these men have gone through the same thing I went through in Wheat Ridge.    They’ve been harassed by police, accused of crimes they never committed and made to feel unwelcome in public institutions like gyms. 

When I walk down the street in Denver, I feel safe.  I don’t have to constantly be on the look out for police.   And when I go to the gym, people don’t laugh at me when I walk by and watch my every move on their security cameras.   When I work out, I draw cartoons sometimes for my own amusement.  People don’t seem to really care.  They are more concerned with their lives to worry about me. 

I like who I am and where I come from.  Lower class whites like me are the most creative and artistic and resourceful people I know. 

The modern day White Trash men I know in Denver are similar to the African American men I met when I was a boy hanging around my father’s church in Mississippi.   The men in Mississippi I knew felt there was little the world offered them, so they turned inward and found validation in God and Jesus and art and music.

The same is true for all of us here in Denver.  We feel like we have replaced African American men as the national projection screen for all the suppressed hatred of the middle and upper classes.   So, we occupy one bedroom apartments all over Capital Hill and go to AA meetings and help our fellow vets and alcoholics with the Twelve Steps  and we play our guitars and draw cartoons. 

Currently, there is a class war going on all around me.   

The people in Wheat Ridge had the right not to like me or ask me not to draw cartoons of them.   But when they crossed the line and violated my civil rights, then everything changed.  Now I feel like I have a responsibility to stand up, not just for me and my family but for countless vets and other men.

And this responsibility has given me the greatest gift of life.  It’s a gift that cannot be bought:  I have the gift of meaning.

Thanks bye,

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

The last thing any good Christian in Wheat Ridge wants to hear...

When I was growing up in Wheat Ridge, the nice people gained strength from social alliances they formed in churches.

Their strength came from people and institutions in the community.

But we white trash were excluded from that world. 

We had to gain strength from abstract sources and that made us all the more odd to people like the police and wealthy church goers who saw us as superstitious more than spiritual.


The most abstract source of strength is, of course, Love. And the greatest teacher of Love is Jesus.  And all us oppressed people love Jesus because he makes us feel valued in the eyes of God.

One day a nice church lady sentenced me to H-E-double toothpicks:  "Sean," she said, "if you don't stop drawing cartoons, you'll spend eternal life in fire."

I countered her spiritual bully tactic with a quote from Jesus.

"Judge not that ye--"

But before I could finish, she walked away.

The last thing any good Christian in Wheat Ridge wants to hear is anything Jesus had to say.

Friday, August 6, 2010

White Trash Lynching


Jim Goad, author of Redneck Manifesto, writes:

So why am I perturbed by all the trash-bashing?" Because they are talking about ME. For the longest time I didn't want to admit it. Realizing you're white trash is like being diagnosed with cancer: First comes denial, then a "lashing-out" phase, the grudging acceptance. If you're fortunate, you'll be able to turn the bad news into something good.

What happened to me at the Wheat Ridge Wreck center is nothing new.

At least twenty times the Wheat Ridge police have iterrogated me and tried to arrest me but didn't have a specific crime to charge me with. It's happened to every white trash man I know in that part of town. The cops always use code words like "you're odd" or "it just seems strange that..." or "you're out-of-the-box." Now that I have gray hair, there's a new twist, "it seems odd that an old guy like you would date younger women."

When I was a kid I visited my father in Clarksdale, Mississippi one summer and saw an African American man hanging from a tree. Being from the North I'd never seen anything that traumatic. My father explained that the man was lynched for talking to a white woman. In Wheat Ridge, if white trash talks to a woman at the Wheat Ridge Wreck Center, he's accused of stalking. This humiliation is called a public lynching.

If any other minority was profiled by the police, accused of a crime with no evidence and attacked from behind and beaten like I was, they'd be classified as a victim. But with white trash like me...well, we don't have the luxury of being victims. Everything that happens to us is our own fault. We are the only minority that is expected to transcend our upbiringing. In their minds I created the attacks myself and got what I deserved. After all I was perturbed by the Wreck Center employees invading my private notebook, stealing my ipod, being rude to me, laughing in my face, talking behind my back, refusing to swipe my gym card unless I handed it to them properly and, of course, making amplified, trash-bashing old guy jokes while I walked by. And so I joined in the fun and mocked them back with my cartoons. Turns out they can dish it out, but can't take it.

Like Rich Swanson implies in his letter posted on my blog, my mere presence is a threat to the safety of his staff. So he, the Mayor, the police made up their minds to get me out of their gym and their city. After they did an intense investigation of me, they realized they had a problem. I hadn't committed a crime. So, they just made one up. Now I'm branded with the Scarlet Letter S on my head.

I was jumped many times when I was a child growing up in Wheat Ridge. After a point, I got sick of it and started fighting back. I got creative at defending myself.

But now I'm too old to fight back. When the thugs from the Wreck Center jumped me on my porch, my mind knew what to do but my body couldn't do it. So, I just turtled and took my beating like a coward. I became their punching bag and kicking post for some built up ethnic rage or projected guilt that had nothing to do with me.

So now I'm sick of these people like Rick Swanson getting away with lies and I'm starting to learn how to fight back with my mind.

Maybe that's what Jim Goad means when he says If you're fortunate you'll be able to turn the bad news into something good.

Other Blogs by Sean H.

Don Juan de Colfax
12 Step Art

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Plans Underway for Wheat Ridge Wreck Center Protest


I hope to do caricatures of all the Wheat Ridge Wreck Center Employees for the protest. This is the Mayor talking out of both sides of his mouth, saying he's interested in open communication but not interested in people like me who communicate openly.

Other blogs:
Don Juan de Colfax
12 Step Art

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

An Ongoing National Lynching


"If I was talking about White Trash, I'm merely be another torchbearer in an ongoing national lynching."
--Jim Goad

"White Trash, old man. Stay out of the Wreck Center. And if you call the cops this time, we'll kill you and your cats."
--voice of one of my attackers

Like I've stated, I'm a member of the most hated class in America today, White Trash.

If Rick Swanson, the supervisor of the Wheat Ridge Wreck Center, sent a letter like the one to the left to any other minority in this country, he'd be in deep trouble. He would be called a bigot and a racists and respected less than the Klu Klux Klan who at least are honest about their sick prejudices.

But as Jim Goad states, we White Trash are the only cardboard figures left in the ethnic shooting gallery. It's so uncool for sophisticated and educated types to hate anybody but us. We are the objects of your jokes and the fodder for you wars. Just sign us up and send us out to the desert to die while you drive your Mercedes Benz down Colfax on the way to Sears to buy your twenty dollar khaki shorts or you fourteen dollar Dockers.

But if I were anything but White Trash, the city officials in Wheat Ridge would not tolerate and vague letter like the one above. If I were any other minority, Rich Swanson and the management team at the Wreck Center might have given me the chance to defend myself before they tied my hands behind my back and put the rope of slander around my neck.

The Mayor and the police surely know what everybody knows, that there are two sides to every story, not just theirs.

But when you are White Trash, nobody wants to hear your side of the story. That might mess up the stories they make up amongst themselves.

Sure, I was wrong to draw cartoons that made fun of employees.

I don't like them or respect them and maybe I could have expressed that in a more adult and appropriate way.

Not only were they consistently rude to me, but they stole my cartoons and my ipod. They violated my privacy and read my personal writings and left my notebook out on the counter for everyone to read.

When I'd walked by them I'd hear them making jokes about old men and how they snore, among other insults. And the police told me they watched my every move for months.

Later they give out my personal information to good ol' boy thugs who came to my home and used me as their punching bag.

Sure, any manager of a business has the right to ask me not to draw cartoons that offend. He even has the right to ask me to leave his establishment if I'm harming his profits.

But did Rick Swanson and the police have the right to violate my First and Fourth Amendment Rights?

The only people I know these days who study the Bill of Rights are White Trash. We have to know our rights to protect ourselves. If I had not known my Fourth Amendment rights, I'm certain the Wheat Ridge Police would have arrested me at the Wreck Center on the night they interrogated me.

The High School's nickname is the Farmers. The city was build by men who plowed the Earth on the same strip of land that is now gated off so that White Trash like me cannot even put the soles of our feet on the same soil we grew up on.

My mother lived in Wheat Ridge for over thirty years and worked hard and payed her taxes. Maybe a few of her tax dollars even helped build the Wreck Center.

She even died in a hospital in Wheat Ridge, the one on 38th, just down the street from the Wreck Center.

Other Blogs by Sean H.
Don Juan de Colfax
12stepart