Did you know that Fred Trump was Woody Guthrie’s landlord? Did you know that Woody wrote a song about Old Man Trump and his racism? I didn’t. Read this and you will know.
John Whitlow wrote this opinion piece for the New York Times. He is a lawyer who represents tenants who have been ripped off by unscrupulous landlords. He teaches law at City University of New York.
The folk singer Woody Guthrie once wrote a song about life in an apartment owned by a particularly odious landlord whose business practices consisted of a brew of dodgy bookkeeping, race-baiting and corporate welfare: “Beach Haven ain’t my home!/No, I just can’t pay this rent!/My money’s down the drain, And my soul is badly bent!”
Beach Haven, of course, is the apartment complex built by Fred Trump, a place that Guthrie called “Trump’s Tower.” Fred Trump’s management of Beach Haven is also one example among many of the shady dealings and outright deceptions documented in the recent exposé about the Trump family’s real estate empire.
The story proved what anyone familiar with New York real estate has long known. Donald Trump is a homegrown creature, a species well known and justifiably loathed by most New Yorkers — the unscrupulous landlord. The rest of the country may be in a constant state of shock when confronted with the tornado of news that whirls around the Trump administration. But tenant advocates know what he is doing. More than a stooge for Vladimir Putin or the embodiment of a disgruntled — and mythical — white working class, Mr. Trump is at his core a landlord, turning a handsome profit while the rest of us live in increasingly precarious conditions.
As a tenant attorney, I regularly interact with landlords in the city’s housing courts. They make a killing by taking advantage of a rigged system. They extract as much wealth as possible from hardworking people trying to hang on to the places they call home, with little regard for the common good or the social fabric of our city. They take advantage of tax subsidies to renovate old buildings and construct new ones, and they engage in a range of practices, lawful and unlawful, to raise rents above the threshold beyond which tenants lose the protections of rent stabilization. And they regularly discriminate against tenants on the basis of race, language, national origin and immigration status.
Much of the outrage generated by the reporting on the Trump family’s finances has focused on tax evasion, which is immense and possibly criminal, and on the myth that Mr. Trump is a self-made man. But it is no small thing that the Trump empire is built on the same kinds of predatory practices that tenants and tenant advocates deal with every day: inflated costs for repairs, which are passed on to tenants in the form of rent increases; lax government oversight over building conditions and rent levels; and racial divisiveness.
Just as the Trump family built its wealth through price-gouging and discrimination against tenants in the complex and easily manipulated regulatory environment of New York City, the Trump administration is now engaged in a scaled-up version of the same project: tax cuts for the already wealthy, the gutting of the administrative state and a white-nationalist-inspired immigration policy.
I once represented a group of tenants in Bushwick, Brooklyn, who came home one day to find that major sections of their rent-stabilized building had been gutted. Their landlord cared little about the health and safety of his tenants — he wanted to force them out and convert the building to high-end apartments. When the residents didn’t accept the paltry buyouts he offered, he took them to court. But the tenants decided to stay and fight. They made connections with neighbors whom they barely knew. They joined a community-based organization that worked for tenants. After months of organizing, litigation and news conferences, we won, and the tenants were able to stay in their apartments, with rent abatements to compensate for the conditions they endured.
There is a long history of New York City tenants coming together to organize against landlords like the Trump family. These efforts have been most effective when tenants have constructed multiracial coalitions and have relied on tactics from rent strikes to eviction blockades to cooperative housing to strategic litigation. As we confront America’s landlord, the lesson we can draw from this history is that we must organize creatively and fight to save the place we call home.
Who knew that Fred Trump was Woody Guthrie’s landlord?
An earlier article in the New York Times attributed the discovery to Will Kaufman, a British professor of American literature:
Mr. Guthrie, in writings uncovered by a scholar working on a book, invoked “Old Man Trump” while suggesting that blacks were unwelcome as tenants in the Trump apartment complex, near Coney Island.
“He thought that Fred Trump was one who stirs up racial hate, and implicitly profits from it,” the scholar, Will Kaufman, a professor of American literature and culture at the University of Central Lancashire in Britain, said in an interview.
Mr. Kaufman said he came across Mr. Guthrie’s writings about Fred Trump while he was doing research at the Woody Guthrie Center’s archives in Oklahoma. He wrote about his findings last week for The Conversation, a news website.
In December 1950, Mr. Guthrie signed a lease at the Beach Haven apartment complex, Mr. Kaufman wrote in his piece. Soon, Mr. Guthrie was “lamenting the bigotry that pervaded his new, lily-white neighborhood,” he wrote, with words like these:
I suppose
Old Man Trump knows
Just how much
Racial Hate
he stirred up
In the bloodpot of human hearts
When he drawed
That color line
Here at his
Eighteen hundred family project
Mr. Guthrie even reworked his song “I Ain’t Got No Home” into a critique of Fred Trump, according to Mr. Kaufman:
Beach Haven ain’t my home!
I just can’t pay this rent!
My money’s down the drain!
And my soul is badly bent!
Beach Haven looks like heaven
Where no black ones come to roam!
No, no, no! Old Man Trump!
Old Beach Haven ain’t my home!

Very interesting, had no idea.
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Related-
ALEC and the Heritage Foundation are brother organizations funded by the Koch’s.
The NYT and TPM reported on Oct. 18 and 19th respectively that Heritage has a law clerk training academy that promised the backing of generous donors in return for secrecy about the content of the Foundation’s program.
The question is whether Gorsuch and Kavanaugh were graduates and if Roberts would do anything about it, if they were.
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I grew up in the folk tradition. I learned to play guitar and banjo from Bess Hawes and later, Frank Hamilton. My parents had hootenanny’s at our house in Topanga Canyon, where all of these great musicians would congregate. I learned this song when i was 11 but the lyrics were a bit different and I don’t remember the reference to Trump, but I have a very clear memory of the song. This issues that were on the minds of this very engaged and politically active political tribe, have changed little in half century since that last hoot.
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“We can’t make it and we never will, we’ll starve to death in the Cotton mill.”
That is what Mr Ward, an old banjo player I knew years ago sang. He said they didn’t want him singin that down at the mill where they worked.
They don’t sing songs like that now.
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Hum. The pearly gates are unlikely to have opened for Fred and won’t be easy for Donald!
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Old news for us Guthrie groupies. 😎
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Wow. That’s cool.
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Here’s the song. It begins at 1:35
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👍 Thanks!
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Read this baloney on Trump’s tax cuts and then realize that Trump’s followers have more than Trump to listen to. The wealthy will get tax hikes while the middle class will have more money to take home. I wonder why the deficit is rising and why the GOP is now drooling at the thought of cutting Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security because these ‘give-aways’ can no longer be afforded.
…………………….
Left’s Unhinged Response To Trump Tax Cut Reveals Their Real Fear: What If It Works?
12/20/2017
Following passage of the Republican tax reform, Democrat politicians and leftist media celebrities have become nearly unhinged, and that may be an understatement…
Brian Riedl of the Manhattan Institute, further crunching the TPC numbers, found that while the top 1% of incomes now pay 27% of all federal taxes, they will get just 21% of the tax cuts. The bottom 80%, including the middle class, pays only 33% of all taxes, but will take home 35% of the tax cuts.
Of the 12% who will face tax hikes, they’re overwhelmingly among the rich — not the middle class.
So, no, it’s not “tax cuts for the rich.” That’s a totally bogus argument.
For that matter, so are the arguments that tax cuts tank the economy. History is replete with examples of why that isn’t true.
The tax cuts on corporations and small, pass-through businesses, along with letting companies immediately expense the cost of new equipment, should lead to more business investment. So should shrinking the death tax, which should encourage more small-business investment…
https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/lefts-unhinged-response-to-trump-tax-cut-reveals-their-real-fear-what-if-it-works/
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