Recently a mother was charged with beating a 71-year-old woman who
criticized her rude manners and child rearing and a man was arrested for kicking a pregnant woman in the belly
on a 4 train. Such savage assaults are not surprising, sorry to say. While
people join in the moral hate of these accused, it begs the question: who does
deserve to be beaten on our subways and busses? We agree that the pregnant and
the elderly should be spared violence except under extremely rare
circumstances. But there are certainly many for whom swift and destructive
violence is richly deserved.
Below are modest descriptions of the five people who are
worthy of vigilante justice.
People who bring
bicycles onto trains. Does anyone have any excuse to bring a bicycle on a
train, ever? This is your method of transportation. If you got caught in the
rain, too bad. Read the weather forecast before you bring your two-wheeled
throne of entitled ineptitude onto our train car. The worse I’ve seen was a guy
with a motorized scooter on the train. A motorized scooter! This also applies
to people who bring awkwardly large objects onto the subway. I’ve seen people
bring all manner of inappropriately large items onto public transit during rush
hour. Baby strollers are the most tolerable item since some mothers don’t have
a choice as to when they travel. But a bicycle on the subway? With the
exception of the rare bike race in town, there should be no such thing.
People who stand in
front of doors or enter the subway before everyone leaves. I have often
dreamt of investing in some sort of spinning blades on a stick that one can set
on fire while pulling into the station. I feel with the right tools we could
eliminate much of the population in my neighborhood of Flushing. No subway seat
is so precious that you should surrender your dignity.
Rush hour panhandlers
and performers. One should never give money to panhandlers at all as a
general rule. Even the most sympathetic advocates for the homeless will tell
you that the majority of cash you hand over to beggars is used for drugs or
alcohol (giving food is another issue). But if someone is trying to walk
through a packed subway car to collect money, then they deserve a knuckle
sandwich and should appeal to their bleeding-heart suckers during a
less-crowded time. I usually go out of my way to give money to performers.
Musicians and other people who make our lives richer with their art deserve our
support. The sensible performers would not walk through a crowded subway car at
rush hour. They know to avoid crowded trains because they are considerate and
good at what they do.
People who wear
backpacks on trains and buses. If you wear a backpack onto a subway or bus,
you are a jackass. Not only are you taking up too much space and making it
difficult for people to move around you, you are putting your own personal
belongings out of your view and at greater risk of theft. True justice would be
to slice open these backpacks and allow the contents thereof to spill onto the
floor. This may end up causing a stamped to grab these items, creating a
greater disorder and inconveniencing law-abiding commuters. Also the
authorities may take issue with a knife being used in this way. A good public
prank would be to glue very large and garish dildos to these backpacks.
According to the police, such acts are not vandalism and they’ll have no reason
to report you to the authorities if you are caught in the act (note: not all
police may take the same view as the slacker cops I encountered in Flushing).
Pole hogs and seat hogs.
Unless you are a stripper performing in a strip club, you have no business
putting any part of your body other than your hand on the subway pole. If you
weigh 800 pounds and take up more than one seat, then OK, you’re doing us a
favor not trying to stand on the subway and you’ll die of a heart attack soon
enough. If you are a more regularly-proportioned individual and you are taking
up more than one seat, then you deserve a boot to the face. Your luggage didn’t
pay $2.75 to ride the bus or train.
Honorable mentions for New York street justice in transit:
people who neglect to wear headphones while
listening to music or watching videos, those clipping their nails on the bus or
train, and anyone who stands on the left side of an escalator.
Our public transit will never be a cocoon of luxury and good
tidings. We don’t need that. But some common decency and courtesy would go a
long way. There’s nothing morally wrong with a little bit of “the old
ultraviolence” on some of our fellow Big Apple denizens who weren’t raised with
the same manners, I realize that these are but fleeting dreams. We cannot visit
such extreme justice on all who deserve it. If we did so we would do nothing
else. But let us join together in these sweet day dreams and get through our
day the better for it.
Happy commuting everyone.
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