Showing posts with label Bureaucracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bureaucracy. Show all posts

Saturday, January 10, 2009

The Trouble Ahead


At 8:15 a.m. Friday morning I stood waiting, the only customer in a quiet, cold and beautiful Art Deco Post Office building, waiting for someone to show up on the other side of the counter.  There was someone in front of me, another customer, already at the counter but he too had been waiting.  Finally, an older, trim and prim black woman emerged silently from the sorting room behind the counter.  Her movements were slow, deliberate and graceful but she wouldn't make eye contact and barely managed a "That will be...." whatever the amount owed for the transaction.  It had taken her 15 minutes to do that customer's business.

Finally, it was my turn.  I needed to buy 435 $.59 stamps.  Again, she made no eye contact and seemed a bit annoyed at my request.  Without saying anything, she disappeared into another part of the area behind the counter and was gone for at least 10 minutes.  I was counting by now because I was urgently needed back at my office, so that I could hold down the fort for my co-workers who had to leave to go to San Francisco, asap.

The postal clerk then made her way back to me and proceeded to count out and UPC-read each sheet of the 20-stamps-to-a-page, for a total of 435 stamps.  It was interminable.  She never spoke the entire time except for a soft, "That's  20, that's 40," and so on.  She never smiled either.  Then I had to give her a check from my boss, show her my driver's license since the check wasn't mine.  Slowly she began scanning a 100-page collection of names, looking for me, making sure I wasn't someone who had foisted bad checks onto the Federal Government.  This process took another 7 minutes.  It was all I could do to not sigh rudely or to say something.  I knew if I did, she'd probably slow it down even more.  Despite my sunny attempts to smile encouragement her way, the entire transaction, from my first approach to the counter to walking out those automatic doors took 27 minutes.  To buy stamps.  Stamps that are probably going to go up in price any minute now as the federal government grapples with deficits and unemployment and salaries and unions.

As I left the counter, my precious stamps in hand, I glanced back to see that there were 8 people waiting in line.  Even though you could see other postal personnel milling around in the back, in the sorting room, at no time did anyone bother to poke their head out and ask, "May I help you?"

This, I fear, is pretty emblematic of most government bureaucracies, especially those that have direct interface with the public and who are supposedly providing services.  What I've seen and experienced first hand is that those jobs have become bureaucratic entitlements, that the focus is not on service but rather passing time in a 9-hour day (1 hour for lunch, 2 15-minute breaks).  With rigid work rules, little else to do but certain exact things, and innovation or short-cuts anathema (boat rocking), is it any wonder that tax payers are getting a little irritable or that the Internet, FedEx and UPS are making the USPS obsolete?

Here's the thing: our country is in a world of hurt.  Unemployment is now 7.2% and growing.  The idea that someone can keep their job, even when they provide such slow, almost arrogantly indifferent service, seems to me the highest form of disrespect.  To all of us customers but also to themselves and their co-workers. 

And what most people don't want to admit is that it's those folks in the bureaucracies who just don't give a fuck who will prevent the capital "C" change Obama and the newer breed of leaders and we, their followers are calling for.  The bureaucrats who can't be fired just want to do their job, at their pace and on their terms and the rest of us can just kiss their civil service ass.  

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Why I Love HBO's "Generation Kill"


[August 19, 2008]  David Simon, the crabby genius who brought us
The Wire on HBO, has managed to outdo himself.  With the help of his writing partner, Ed Burns and guided by the original work of Rolling Stones reporter Evan Wright, through Generation Kill we are seeing, smelling, tasting, feeling and hearing--mostly hearing--the grit and gore of the Marine 1st Reconnaissance Battalion's advance of the "first U.S. boots on the ground in Mesopotamia."  And I love every word of it.

I feel like a voyeur, watching with both horror and glee, men be men.  Listening to them speak in arcane military speak, ruthlessly rib each other, go sleepless and bathless and dig holes to do their business, not the least self-conscious.  Sweaty, filthy brothers in arms.

I marvel at their training, the lethal accuracy of their bullets, the shape they are in and cringe watching the chain-of-command bitchiness and foolishness that creeps in, threatening to undermine or ruin the rational and earnest Lieutenant Nate Fick.  Sometimes I get angry at the incompetence that is covered over or allowed to slip sideways: Captain "Encino Man" and "Captain America" come to mind.  Idiots in charge while my favorite grunts Corporal Ray Person and Sergeant Brad "Iceman" Colbert ride point, take the flak and do their best to stay on task, even when the task is a waste of time and resources.

I love Generation Kill because, through the words, the gestures and expressions of the characters, we are reminded how incompetents kill.  How bureaucracies harbor and even promote them.  That those who would question authority have to find support in sick humor and camaraderie because the outcomes of stupid egos run amok are wincingly painful.  No different than The Wire's Avon Barksdale boys taking each other out over territory; the Mayor of Baltimore reneging on his promise to let the police do real policing and not juke the stats; kids slipping through the cracks in the schools; no different than newspaper reporters making up stories or cops faking serial murders.

But mostly I love Generation Kill because it arrives at a time the whole country needs to see up close and bloody what going into Iraq--without a plan, without the right equipment, without any thought to exit strategy--was really like and what it has wrought.  We've all had our heads in a recession-fearing fog and even before then, we partied through the war.  Busy consuming and wasting and inflating home prices by buying what we could not afford.

Maybe Generation Kill--showing up and finishing just before the Democrats nominate Barack Obama and the Republicans nominate John McCain--will resonate a little with those of us watching those spectacles.  Maybe we'll begin to see that what we've started in Iraq--never mind the reasons, they are now irrelevant--we must finish.  We must find a way for those thousands of U.S. troops to come home where we will treat their wounded minds and bodies, welcome and thank them for their service and hope that history will not punish us more than we deserve.  And next time we send such well-trained human forces into battle, let's for God's sake know why and have a plan.  For more on the seven part mini-series go to http://www.hbo.com/generationkill/