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The Post did its best this weekend to drive a divisive wedge into the multi-culti image of Fort Greene by writing about a car alarm incident on Lafayette Avenue. In case you missed it, here’s the play-by-play: Man (who turns out to be black) has a car whose alarm frequently goes off in the middle of the night; residents (plural) leave notes on car to ask him to fix his alarm; car owner does nothing to fix alarm; one of the residents, who turns out to be white, calls Council Member James to complain; James calls the car owner, who uses his anger over the changing demographics of the neighborhood and his Brooklyn cred to justify his inaction: “I don’t know what my fellow neighbors think goes on at night, but people come by and pillage vehicles! All of these little white people over here are not gonna dial 911 for a car alarm going off if it’s only once. The article goes on to quote a older African American woman irked by the new arrivals and their wide-load strollers (never mind that the sidewalk on that stretch of Lafayette is barely wide enough to accommodate a single pedestrian), though she attributes the differences more to class than race. The article’s attempt at pushing the race button feels like a stretch to us, but the one thing that does resonate is the attitude of people who’ve lived in any neighborhood for a long time—regardless of location or race—take towards newer arrivals who want to improve certain quality of life issues. “You haven’t lived here long enough to deserve an opinion” or “If you don’t like it then move” are familiar refrains. Last time we checked, though, we all pay taxes and there’s no reason anyone should put up with illegal or unneighborly behavior simply because it’s the status quo.
A Car Alarm, Gentrification and Fort Greene [NY Post]


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  1. I suspect that katiebk has a better perspective on the neighborhood than does the NY Post writer.

    rob, lots of things set car alarms off…mostly loud Flowmaster mufflers and fire trucks or even just large trucks driving by.

    If you’re car gets broken into it’s only because you left something of interest like a laptop or a GPS visibly inside.

  2. Hard for me to believe that being annoyed by being woken up in the middle of the night by an alarm is a race issue. Would imagine that most people of all races would be annoyed at same level by such an intrusion.

  3. quote:
    Unattended car alarms should be subject to parking tickets. $300 for first offense seems right

    lol. okay now that is just ridiculous. car alarms often go off cuz uhhhh someone is trying to break into it. no?

    i hate the ones that have like 45 different ring tons to them.

    *rob*

  4. Agreed, InsertSnappyNameHere. It is rather early.

    Though I must say: I’m not entirely sure why there seems to be a link drawn here between annoying car alarms and race/class issues. This is the NY Post afterall – not the most reliable source of news media.

    I live in Fort Greene and for the most part, feel it has maintained a solid sense of community and integration of culture/race differences – for the most part, I’ve seen more examples of Fort Greene folks valuing diversity and cultural difference, rather than feeling hostile towards each other.

  5. If you can’t hear and respond quickly to your own car alarm, then it is nothing more than your way of telling the world you are an asshole.

    Unattended car alarms should be subject to parking tickets. $300 for first offense seems right. That should offset the insurance deduction for having the wretched things…

  6. yeah this thread is slightly toxic. tho honestly there is nothing more annoying an a car alarm, except for people who whine about such things on the internet.

    yeah yeah i know pot kettle blah blah.

    i wish people were less cranky in general

    *rob*

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