Graffiti Under Attack!: Big brother is spending
While graffiti can be intrusive, it should be nowhere near the top of our governments’ monetary priorities. Here in Boston, our under-staffed police can’t seem to stem the rising unsolved murder rate, yet we still have a division in charge of seeking out, arresting and prosecuting local graffiti artists.
Graffiti is, in essence, a form of rebellion. At its worst, it’s just vandalism with no rhyme or reason other than to ruin something, but at its best it is public art and a creative outlet. It’s also, in essence, advertising. It’s all about visibility and brand building.
But thanks to the media, graffiti is always associated with destruction of property instead of the art form it can be. The actual term for a graffiti artist, a “writer,” has for the most part been replaced by criminal.
The stark reality is that police have much higher priorities to attend to than graffiti. The powers that be should think about where they want to spend our tax dollars, and they should be focused on issues much larger than supposedly misled “vandals”. As a taxpayer, I welcome public art, commissioned or not. I would much rather my money be going to national health-care, social security, national security and contingents for a greener and cleaner globe.



Leave a Reply