Missoula Notebook

A Line in the Gravel


This will not stand, this aggression against Kuwait my half of the alley.

By Sutton R. Stokes, 11-10-09

Back in college, my class in informal logic taught me that reliance on slippery-slope arguments was a sign of weak reasoning, but this “fact” was probably just part of a coordinated misinformation campaign being pushed by my professors, who in addition to being liberals might also have been child molesters. (I certainly never saw any evidence that they weren’t.)

Now that I am no longer a naive young college student, I can see that those professors were cut from the same cloth as the scum currently trying to convince us that making health insurance more affordable won’t have an outcome roughly similar to that shown in the massive photograph of Dachau victims displayed by Tea Partiers at last Thursday’s protest on Capitol Hill.

And once you take your blinders off, it only makes sense to start referring to the traitorous Representative Anh Joseph Cao—the only Republican to vote with Democrats to pass the House version of the health-insurance-reform death-of-America bill—as Representative Mao. Sure, Cao isn’t responsible for the deaths of millions—yet—but as the Dachau sign proves beyond a shadow of a doubt, it’s only a matter of time.

I’m just glad that the Tea Partiers have opened my eyes to how quickly one thing can turn into another much worse thing, because now I’m thinking a little more clearly about a situation right here in my own neighborhood.

The lot across the alley from my house is subdivided in half, with one house facing the street and another smaller one facing the alley. We were all glad when the previous resident—a woman who used to stand in the alley for half an hour at a time, trying to get her dog to come home by screaming profanity at it—moved out.

As usual, however, one must be careful what one wishes for.

Soon after the new owner moved in, we noticed what I’m only now realizing were the early signs of naked aggression. First, much like Hitler did to the Sudetenland, our new neighbor quickly annexed the dead end of the alley between our properties as his own personal parking lot.

This seemed reasonable at the time—after all, he only had room to park one vehicle on the property he’d actually paid for, and he needed an additional parking space for when his father visits. And one for his other truck. And one for his drift boat. And one for the tenant he had crammed into the tiny house’s basement. And one for her boyfriend. Not to mention space for an engine on top of a pile of cargo pallets, a canoe, some big spools of wire fencing, and whatever bottles of antifreeze and motor oil he doesn’t feel like carrying back across his property line when he’s done with them.

Then, when Amy and I returned from her summer field-work season in Arizona, we discovered our trash can over in his yard, full of hedge trimmings. Sure, another trash can with broken sides had been left on the little trash-can shelf on the side of our garage, but it didn’t feel like an even trade. I’m sure the oil companies whose production facilities Hugo Chavez nationalized in Venezuela probably felt the same way.

As for that tenant, she uses the alley as her own personal dog run but apparently hasn’t noticed that there are no employees to pick up her pooches’ leavings. The only comparison I can think of here is to multinational corporations using third-world countries as dumping grounds for toxic waste, but that would be kind of socialist of me, so I guess I’ll just let this one go.

Anyway, I was thinking of going over and knocking on my neighbor’s door to, you know, negotiate about some of this stuff.  But now that the Tea Partiers have helped open my eyes, I’m starting to realize how naive that would be. After all, while everything he’s done so far has been merely inconvenient, what’s next?

I mean, if I don’t draw a line in the sand gravel, what is to stop this neighbor from cutting a hole in the wall of my garage and installing his own door? After that step is complete, there will be little to prevent him from drilling down through the concrete pad and digging a tunnel between here and Mexico, so that he can smuggle illegal immigrants and methamphetamine into my backyard. At that point, it might only be a matter of time before he walks into our bedroom one night and clubs Amy and me to death like baby seals.

I’m still thinking about what steps to take, but it’s clear that inaction is not an option. As Edmund Burke wrote the Tea Partiers are fond of saying, “all that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.”

Wish me luck, and may God bless America.


Want more Notebook? Read the rest here. I’m also on Twitter and Facebook, and I write a blog.

[End of article]
Comment By The Nice Neighbors, 11-10-09

We've got your back Sutton! The war against poop, engines and bad neighbors begins! (Unless that means actually talking to them - in which case we'll just hang out behind our fence and say bad things behind their backs.) Good luck.

Comment By Chuck, 11-11-09

Great story Sutton but rather than bringing up the Tea Partier's I think we should thank all of the Missoula Libs who think your neighbors infill urban expansion project is exactly what Missoula needs. The libs on the Missoula City council are always pushing for more ADU's , "mother in law" apartments with no offstreet parking and minimal setbacks so the hippie neighbor can just keep adding more shit onto his house and drag in another old broken down bus to convert to a "studio".
I feel for you and the neighborhood, call the Tea Partiers and ask them to come over for a work weekend to reclaim your street.

Comment By Sutton R. Stokes, 11-11-09

While I thought I made it pretty clear that I think this situation is almost as awful as the total societal collapse that will ensue should my family one day be able to get its own health insurance (even though my wife has the "pre-existing condition" of hay fever), I should point out that the whole ADU rule is pretty different from a subdivided lot. The way I read the new zoning rules, an actual ADU set-up would probably even help PREVENT stuff like this, just by giving you recourse to a landlord right there on the same property. Decide for yourselves by downloading the new rules here: http://missoula.duncanchicago.com/

Comment By JustJEssi, 11-11-09

I too am dealing with a neighbor slightly off. Let me confirm that you WILL feel confident in your decisions and confident that you are in the right even more once you confront the ninny neighbor and they show their tru colors which will probably be hot headed red. Action is far better than simmering.

Comment By dave, 11-11-09

that which you have worked so hard to create on your side of the alley, must be sacrificed for those not as affluent as yourself. for the common good of course.

Comment By Iron Fist, 11-13-09

Take back your can, fill that one he left at your place with all the poop in the alley (disgusting but I think you see where I'm heading), put it in that sorry excuse for a can he left at your place, set it on the car in the alley, set it on fire, see what happens.

Just riffing here...

Comment By Sargent Kelley, 11-19-09

My advice: Don't rush to any decisions/actions without first finishing off most of a sixer.

I would get into the similarities of the "it's all about me, to hell with anyone else"-ness of the Tea Partiers and your neighbors, but good golly I'd hate to muddy the waters with a discussion of how learning to live respectfully with others seems requires some degree of empathy and self-reflection.

Dog poop bomb!

Comment By Ray, 4-26-10

This "spreading the wealth" is just another part of the societal plan Washington would like to achieve. You obviously are "rich" having a undented trash can, therefore, need to share that wealth. The dog bombs in the alley are but an attempt to live green by fertilizing naturally, and the spare parts, engines, etc are conservation of resources by your conscientious socially conscious neighbor. You should be thrilled to have such a enlightened neighbor whom you may sit at the feet of and learn.

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