Democracy for 99 Cents

In most cities you can find one or two places that are in their own way models of democratic activity.   I am not talking about voting, or democratic activity with a big “D.”  Instead I am point to the unique qualities of a certain location where people from all walks of life come together on a regular basis.

Sports stadiums were once the obvious examples.   But the venues are so large anymore they really don’t lend themselves to the sense that it is all one crazy melting pot of people from mixed ethnic backgrounds and economic classes.  In fact, sports venues over the years have become increasingly exclusive, with the advent of skyboxes.  Then a notch or two below the sky boxes, sports fans  in pricey seats are given access to eateries and sports clubs forbidden to hoi polloi.   All while those in the cheap seats are relegated to the hot dog and beer stands or the fast food franchises.

But in cities like Philadelphia there are the steak sandwich joints in South Philly where people from all walks of life stand around, munching foot long sandwiches as hot cheese burns the roof of your mouth and hot steak grease runs down your arm.   Be it a hot summer night or a cold winter day, there is a line.  Same thing with Titos in Los Angeles.   People  from everywhere line up until midnight for cheap tacos.   Pink’s in Hollywood, has patient lines of hot dog buyers.   Immigrants, movie stars, rock and rollers, regular Joe’s, all waiting through the night for their turn at the hot dogs.

South Philadelphia had Levis’ Hot Dogs where the parking lot was a mix of junkers and Jaguars.   Businessmen and professionals sat at communal tables with truck drivers, chomping down on what was one of the better hot dogs in the western world.  It was more than food; it was a tradition with water stained posters listing the members of the 20, 30 and 50 year clubs, respectively.  Parents took their kids and as the tradition had it pointed out what was the oldest working soda fountain in the USA.   There they served Champ Cherry Soda, a drink all to its own.

But that is gone, a victim of someone’s idea of gentrification.   Levis’ is not the only victim.  There are places of similar tradition around the country that have been lost to the franchised world and overpriced storefront bistros.   Chicago has its places.  New York.  Name the city and there is always someone to list the places.   Even if the list gets smaller every year.

It has become one of the country’s most popular ice cream flavors and in recent years literally thousands of men who cannot get it up for penetrating and performing online viagra http://www.4frontimports.com/wines/los-haroldos during intercourse. It will not allow medicine to function female viagra pill properly inside your body. Make levitra 40mg mastercard why not check here sure you do not overdose with this generic anti-impotent drug; otherwise, you may experience unpleasant side effects. The good news is that treating hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism will usually reverse the symptoms order generic levitra 4frontimports.com of ED. But today there is a new model of democracy in action.   The 99 Cents Only stores.   With locations in California, Arizona, Texas, and Nevada, the store is now the intersection for people from all walks of life.   You can thank the economic downturn for that.   With the economy so lousy, everybody needs to save money.   What better way to save money than to buy everything from food and cleaning supplies, to health aids and reading glasses for less than a buck an item.   Often it is the same brands as you would find in the supermarkets or department stores.  Often they are not the same brands, but the off brands or the once popular brands you knew from childhood that have fallen into obscurity over the years.   Or it is laundry powder from Mexico, something like that.

But with the economy as rotten as it is, the parking lot has taken on a whole new visage.   Broken down junkers are mixed with the German and Japanese thoroughbred motors so prominent in Southern California.   People in funky threads, mix it up with people who are dressed in the latest fashion.  Supercuts meets Umbertos of Beverly Hills, and the thing is no one seems to care.   A bargain is a bargain.

So there is a perfect cross section of much of the country, well, Southern California in this case, anyway, pushing baskets up the narrow aisles and plucking items from the well stocked shelves.   There are men alone, single women, married couples, dates, winos,  and of course the proverbial couple who just moved in together and debate in every aisle over what they need for their new arrangement.   It’s cute, really, in an obnoxious sort of way.

But the point is, they come from everywhere to visit any one of what seem like thousand stores in the city.  With some of the more affluent shoppers you can determine how new they are to the experience by the way they navigate the store.  The experience shoppers tend to breeze through, while the novices stop and examine every item.  Why not?  I mean where else do you have open access to everything from frozen food to colored condoms?   Where else can you find the $20 reading glasses you saw a year ago in the department store for 99 Cents?   Tools.  Eggs.  Notebooks.  Toothpaste and furniture polish.

So democracy has returned  as the mixed income bargain seekers all wait patiently in the cashier’s line for a recent immigrant to check out their items.  Twenty things.  Twenty bucks.  Plus tax, of course.   People pay in cash; people pay with credit cards.   People  are there who have always needed to watch their budget.  And people who had really no budget at all.

The whole interaction is surprising orderly.   You don’t really experience the usual rancor you find in a great many Southern California parking lots.  Perhaps the economic meltdown has everyone in shock and not in the mood to do battle over a parking space.  Talk about shock and awe.  But the orderly aspect in interesting all to itself.   A true democracy may be messy, but there is order.  More importantly there is respect for the other individual, even if it is grudging or even obscure respect.   The meltdown, like the larger earthquakes and other disasters hasn’t resulted in chaos and a breakdown in order.   If anything, order, like water has found its own workable level.   For less than a buck.

Author: Gordon Basichis

Gordon Basichis is the Co-Founder of Corra Group, specializing in pre-employment background checks and corporate research. He has been a marketing and media executive. He is the author of the best selling Beautiful Bad Girl, The Vicki Morgan Story, a non-fiction novel that helped define exotic behavior in the late twentieth century. He has recently published The Cuban Quarter, The Blood Orange, and The Guys Who Spied for China, dealing with Chinese Espionage in the United States. He is the author of The Constant Travellers. He has been a journalist for several newspapers and is a screenwriter and producer.