Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/07/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]It may be too late to talk about this. Its not photographically relevant, but poor families in upstate NY are relatively common. Jayanand has posted an excellent photo essay showing their plight; op-talk.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/07/21/when-struggling-families-spark-inter net-rage/ Most visitors to New York, American and European alike, spend most of their time in New York City and imagine that the rest of the state is similar. It is not. NY state, about the size of an average European country, is largely agricultural. Drive an hour outside of the city in any direction and you are in rural countryside. Most cities in the state were established near waterways to facilitate the transportation of agricultural products. Populated areas are located by the ocean or lakefronts, along the Hudson river or, after 1826, along the Erie Canal. As one of the first areas to be densely settled in the USA, New York developed an economy largely based on manufacturing. Shoes, typewriters, photographic equipment, computers, automobiles, air conditioners, gin, pianos, and even Crayola crayons all were made in the state. But things change. Anti pollution legislation, forced many of the companies to relocate elsewhere. Manufacturing and jobs went overseas. Things like typewriters and photographic film became obsolete. Industries left but the people remained, many without jobs and no hope of finding new ones. To complicate matters NY state had very liberal welfare laws which drew poor people like a magnet and discouraged their leaving. These policies were a residue of the time when New York was flush with cash and could easily support the hoards of immigrants who landed at Ellis Island. Up until recently both the City and State University systems, with a total of nearly half a million students, were free. So the plight of the poor families in Troy is understandable. Similar pictures could be taken in Newburgh, Buffalo, Rochester, Schenectady, or even New York City itself. Sad but true. Larry Z