“Nomadland
– Surviving America
in the Twenty-First Century,” by Jessica Bruder, 2017
In a recent drive across the
northern plains of the U.S.
I noticed something dark. Wedged in among
the tourist vehicles of various kinds were what seemed to be the ‘homeless on
wheels.’ RV parks that advertise a $60
monthly rate, or rates for a whole winter.
RV parks where the occupants had been obviously staying there for a long
time. Vans that were full of more stuff
than a normal camper would need. A Motel
6 on a rainy, cold night in Wyoming where I
meet a grey-haired man who normally camps in the Arizona desert for the summer. What’s going
on?
Bruder followed these people
for 4 years. She tented, then got her
own camper van and detailed a new sub-culture that has grown up since the 2008
housing and foreclosure disaster. What
she discovered is that these ‘new Okies,’ gypsies, houseless ‘rubber tramps’
and ‘workampers’ form an itinerant workforce traveling the U.S., staffing
Amazon warehouses, Forest Service campgrounds, Crystal Sugar beet harvests and
other no-rent jobs, working for not much more than minimum wage. They are nearly all older white people - 'the unbearable whiteness of vanning' as one joked. This
book is similar to Barbara Ehrenreich’s “Nickel
& Dimed,” as Bruder also works for short periods at some of these jobs
too. She most closely follows Linda, a
woman in her ‘60s who can no longer afford an apartment, and who buys a small
trailer to live on the road, working for as many months as she can. Linda ultimately buys a bit of cheap Sonoran
desert near the Mexican border to build a sustainable ‘Earthship’ house, but
she seems to be one of the few.
This is a new ‘mobile’
precariat living in RVs (recreational vehicles!), vans, pickups with covers, trailers and even sedans.
They hide on city streets, in WalMart parking lots, in 24-hour business lots, at
rest stops and truck stops, state and national campgrounds, private RV parks, in
unincorporated wilderness or desert. They
have mail forwarded from postbox forwarding services. Due to recent right-wing changes, in some
states without a permanent address they can no longer vote, as a business
address is not acceptable. Their
social-security checks average a small $550 a month. Their children, if they
have any, are also in financial straights.
Most don’t see a way back to a permanent home. For them, the ‘American
dream’ has become a fraud.
This sub-culture has web
sites and annual meetings, especially the big one in Quartzsite, Arizona. They have
a camp-fire ‘freedom philosophy’ of sorts and many, many survival skills that
they teach each other. They try to stick
together to help each other, even the ‘loners’ and introverts. You can learn a lot about how to become a mobile
gypsy in this book, as there is info on van and RV roof solar panels, the
benefits of hybrid vehicles, how to avoid police or nosy people, tricks on how
to make your vehicle look like no one is sleeping in it, where the jobs are,
where to shower, internet survival, how to stay warm, etc.
Most interesting is how
various businesses, like Amazon’s ‘Camperforce’, the US Forest Service and
their private contractor California Land Management, or Crystal Sugar in the
Red River Valley recruit older workampers en mass to do physical jobs. They understand that these gray-haired
workers are desperate but also hard workers, punctual and experienced. Reading
about walking dozens of miles through Amazon’s huge warehouses, suffering
carpel tunnel, back strain and boredom, with Ibuprofen dispensers freely
available, tells you something about how the cheap crap at Amazon.com comes
your way. The workampers call it a form
of slavery, which it is - wage slavery.
Of course, that is AFTER it is manufactured by lowly-paid Chinese,
Cambodian or Bangladeshi workers on their side of the Pacific
Ocean, so the model is consistent on both sides of the ocean. Linda is especially repulsed by the
disposable crap that Americans buy when she works filling shelves at Amazon…
even the sex toys. It all has landfill
potential…
This is first-person
journalism of the finest sort, but goes only so far. It is missing statistics,
a more detailed analysis of why housing is a privilege in this country, or even a hint of a
solution to houselessness or shelterlessness in a capitalist society. Bruder works hard to show the sunny side of
workamping, but also can’t avoid the pitfalls – cold, heat, poverty, car
problems, medical care and legality issues. For instance for dental care, many workampers
cross the border into Mexico,
just as Minnesotans have gone to Canada to get cheaper drugs. Given corporate city councils are now
cracking down on unlicensed ‘camping’ while encouraging gentrification; and
state governments are demanding permanent addresses to vote, being ‘homeless’
is now being further criminalized or made invisible.
If police see a ‘Quartzsite’
camp sticker on a vehicle, they know the inhabitants might be houseless. Bruder
says that the Arizona town of Quartzsite
has 73 RV parks, with 40,000 people living there between December and February
in various configurations. This ‘old
rush’ or ‘Jurassic
Trailer Park’ encampment
of nomads can move from Quartsite to a huge federal land area called “La Posa”
which allows camping for 7 months for $180.
While Bruder says that ‘class lines’ are blurred at Quartzsite, I would
guess they are only put in the background so as to lessen conflict. Oldsters with $100k of RVs or trailers with all
the toys, parked near people with white Econline vans they bought for $2,500
can only induce a rolling of the eyes.
This is a quick and
illuminating read. It introduces you to
a world you might not be familiar with, until you have no choice. Rent, utilities, mortgages, real estate taxes
or house insurance are some of the biggest costs everyone faces. For working class citizens, there is no
barrier anymore to rises in every one of them.
Rent and building controls are not solutions on the radar of bourgeois
politicians, nor is the socialization of the land. Nor are the corporate politicians talking about putting people in empty houses or apartments, or building actual 'affordable' housing instead of just pretending. Rising interest rates, home prices and real estate taxes are all
built into rentier capital’s control of land, either through the banking,
real estate or political sector. That
is, until there is a recession. These van dwellers have decided to dump them
all, either voluntarily or more frequently, necessarily. They are perhaps our road warrior future…
P.S. - now a film starring Frances McDormand.
P.S. - now a film starring Frances McDormand.
Other reviews on this
topic: “Cade’s Rebellion,” “Rebel Cities,” “Reinventing Collapse,” “The Lower
Depths,” “Famished Road,”
“Hillbilly Elegy," and "The Precariat." Use
blog search box, upper left.
And I bought it at May Day
Books!
Red Frog
October 19, 2018
No comments:
Post a Comment