·
“A day later, another member of the crew was
captured. He also confessed to being at
the scene but said that he was not the one who pulled the trigger. In fact, he was later quoted as saying, ‘I
was actually unarmed. I was just told I
could make fifty thousand dollars to break some glass.’” (Page 148)
This quote shows
that no violence was intended in the jewelry store robbery that Wes was part
of. It demonstrates that the only motive
of the crime was to get money, and therefore unveils that this crime, and many
others in Baltimore at the time, were induced by poverty.
·
“And then one of the officers addressed the
group. ‘Y’all know there is a reward for
Tony and Wes if you just tell us where they are. It’s a lot of money. You sure you don’t need that money?’” (Page
152)
This quote shows a
police officer bribing some of Wes’s friends and family assuming their
disadvantaged financial situations. It
illustrates a gap between the rich and the poor in Baltimore, and shows that
richer people, such as the cop, believe that they can exploit the lower
classes.
·
“North Philadelphia reminded Wes of the
Baltimore neighborhood he had just left.
The check-cashing stores instead of banks, the rows of beauty salons,
liquor stores, laundromats, funeral homes, and their graffiti-laced walls were
the universal streetscape of poverty.
The hood was the hood, no matter what city you were in.” (Page 153)
This passage
explains that the stereotypical infrastructure of poverty extended across all
U.S. cities. Judging from this, it seems
that segregation appears in cities between the nicer parts of town and the
“hood” that contains dilapidated shops and services.
·
“The truth is that there are two Baltimores. Almost every other major city in this country
leads the same double life. Those who
brag about Baltimore often ignore these substandard areas. Yet these were the areas Mayor Schmoke knew
would determine his legacy of success or failure.” (Pages 158-159)
This quote explains
how Baltimore and other U.S. cities are divided between a rich and middle class
section and a poor, less developed section.
The quote shows that it is crucial to integrate these areas, especially under
a political leader such a Schmoke, so that all of the people in a city can
thrive.
·
“As I moved closer to the home where my host
family lived, I couldn’t stop staring at the shantytown. Living in the Bronx and Baltimore had given
me the foolish impression that I knew what poverty looked like. At that moment, I realized I had no idea what
poverty was – even in West Baltimore we lived like kings compared with this.”
(Pages 165-166)
In this quote, Wes
explains how visiting a slum in South Africa made him realize how poverty in
the U.S. was not nearly as severe as in other places of the world. This shows that poverty is only a notion that
can always be considered better than the situation of others. In a way, the quote gives hope by saying that
even dreadful conditions are not so bad in scope.
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