Here
Not To Serve You
by Scott Clifton
There’s no
way around it: I have to go through waterboarding. Actually, my
daughter and I have to go to the local Department of Motor Vehicles
to get her learner’s permit. We’re excited, but bummed about the
prospect of waiting in one of those DMV lines. But wait – isn’t
this the computer age? It’s been years since I’ve been in one of
those buildings; maybe today things will be different!
1:15 – We arrive
at the DMV. Office hours are posted: Monday through Friday 8:00-4:30,
closed on Saturday. Hmmm. Isn’t Saturday the day most people could
come in and renew their license without missing work? The left door
of the double entrance doors is locked for no discernible purpose,
so I try the other one. Success! This is a good sign.
About 15 people
are lined up in a hall outside the door of a waiting room, and about
15 more sit inside the room. We get in the hall line and stand there
for a few minutes before someone in line tells us, "You have
to register inside first." I look around for a sign that points
out this somewhat important detail. There is none. But in the hall
on a door that looks like a restroom door I see a plaque that has
on it this exact word: "Mens." This is a not a good sign.
1:21 – "Hello!"
I say to the guy at the counter in the most friendly way I can think
of. "Yes?" he replies, with the same cheerful, glad-to-see-ya
expression a person might use while facing a mugger. "We’re
here to get a learner’s permit for my daughter!" I tell him.
Counter Guy takes all our forms and scrutinizes them, regularly
delivering the approximate same grunting sounds someone makes when
he’s having his teeth scraped. "I can’t do anything with this
– you were supposed to have this form signed! It’s not signed! You’ll
have to come back when this is signed!" he barks. Gritting
my teeth into what I hope is still a smile, I answer, "Well,
I’ll sign the form right now for you," a declaration that has
the same effect on Counter Guy as though I had announced it to a
fire hydrant. "She’s homeschooled," I explain, "so
I’ll just sign the form as a school official right now." Counter
Guy’s head turns a reddish-purple as he slaps a ticket with our
number (B237) on the counter and tells us to wait: "It’ll be
about an hour."
1:25 – Off
for a late lunch with my daughter; why wait at the DMV? We’ll come
back at 2:00 and have only about 30 minutes to wait – maybe even
less, if we’re lucky.
1:57 – We arrive
back at the DMV, remembering to use the right door this time. A
few minutes later the left door rattles loudly as a woman tries
to open it; she opens the right door and enters, looking quizzically
behind her. Me too, lady! "B233," says an electronic voice
over the speaker. We’re getting close to B237! Peeping into the
waiting room, I notice that much progress has been made – if "progress"
means "14 of the same 15 people are sitting there, but looking
even more bored." There are a few empty seats, but not two
together, so back to the hall we go.
2:01 – A woman
with her 15-year-old son strikes up a conversation about how long
they’ve waited, how poorly the DMV is run, and government inefficiency
in general. "Well, that’s to be expected," I say. "Why
should the DMV be efficient or friendly? There’s no competition!
That’s why we avoid dealing with government as much as possible.
And, anyway, why should a free person have to ask the government’s
permission to drive?" This last one is a new idea to her, and
she thinks for several seconds. "Hmm...that never occurred
to me," she says, "but you’re right about how bad the
government does things, for sure. And don’t get me started, especially
after that Supreme Court thing on Obamacare. Government doesn’t
do anything right; we avoid dealing with them as much as we can,
too." "Oh, so you homeschool?" I ask. "Well,
no," she says, "but our kids go to McGlukster High (not
the real name), and it’s pretty good." My daughter looks at
me; she understands. I take a deep breath, reach out, take the lady’s
collar in my hand, and shake her. "What in the world are you
thinking?" I ask. Actually I just take a deep breath, look
away, and sigh the world’s loudest sigh that only my daughter and
I can hear.
2:26 – Still
not much movement in the line. I notice that there are "A"
numbers and "C" numbers being called, in addition to ones
like our B237. For about the fifth time, another unsuspecting person
grabs the left door handle to open the door, which still doesn’t
budge. Okay, that’s it. I walk over to the left door and snap open
the flush bolts so both doors can be used to enter or exit. There
we go, folks! "Thank you! Thanks a lot! Why was that
stupid door locked?" say several persons waiting in the hall.
Actually, no one says a word. Instead, several inmates look surprised
that anyone should attempt such a dangerously subversive maneuver
and involuntarily lean away from me, in case a cop comes to arrest
me and thinks we’re together. "B234," says the electronic
voice over the speaker. Open the pod bay doors, please, HAL.
2:43 – There
are now two seats together in the waiting room, so my daughter and
I sit. Fellow wretches fill the seats; everyone is bored, listless,
resigned to the heavy hand of DMV Fate. The room, like the rest
of the building, is gray, cold, ugly. There’s probably a government
manual on how to decorate buildings to look their dreariest. Chapter
26: Submission Through Drabness. An image flashes in my mind of
a scratchy old film clip I saw once of a Soviet Union bread line.
2:52 – "I’ve
been waitin’ two hours to get this thing renewed – just renewed!"
a 60-something man next to me says, waving his license. "And
people want these guys to run health care," I joke. A late-30s
to early-40s guy sits with his two daughters, both around six or
seven years old. "Yeah, these two are pretty wild," he
announces, "but it’s my two-year-old who won’t listen to nothin’
I tell her." I suddenly notice that he sports a Mickey Mouse
t-shirt that reads "Kickin’ It Old School" and "gangsta"
shorts down to his shins. I am a teetotaler, but decide that if
I ever get out of this building, I will begin drinking regularly
and heavily. "B235," says HAL over the loudspeaker. I’m
sorry, Dave – I’m afraid I can’t do that.
2:58 – It finally
registers to me that the waiting room TV screen has been playing
the same three-minute loop of Hollywood trivia scraps and "educational"
information over and over, like the ones in a movie theater. Many
rich golden nuggets of multimedia counsel are offered, though: Children
Shouldn’t Smoke, and Don’t Mow Down Construction Workers While Driving,
and For Best Results In Growing Flowers And Vegetables, Water Them.
These profundities are packed with frequent spelling and punctuation
errors; somehow this seems to fit perfectly. "B236," says
HAL, and my daughter’s eyes widen. She’s next!
3:19 – While
glancing around, it occurs to me that if I squint a little to blur
the figures in the room, it looks and sounds like a debtors’ prison
– ugly, gray walls; the sighs and groans of suffering inmates; pictures
of Our State Government Leader on the wall mocking us with a plastic
smile: "Thank you for coming today! Doesn’t this visit remind
you of who’s really in control of your life?" When HAL
drones "B237," my daughter is ready. To the testing room
she goes!
3:24 – While
she’s back taking her test, I joke about the infoscreen to the guy
next to me. Other detainees join in the fun ("Don’t they have
a spell check?" "I’m boycotting every company that
advertises with this place!" "I’ll never let my four-year-old
smoke again!") until there is rollicking laughter every 30
seconds or so. "Please be QUIET!" hisses Counter Guy,
who has materialized like a ghost. I look at him and realize that
at his desk he has been pushing unsharpened pencils all the way
through his hand and pulling them out the other side. At least that’s
what I think he’s been doing; I can’t think of anything else that
could cause his face to twist up like it is. "There are people
TESTING in here!" he adds, taking off one shoe and banging
it down on the counter, Khrushchev-style. Actually, it just seems
like he banged his shoe, but he only stomps back to his desk. There’s
no door between the waiting room and the testing cubicles for privacy
or quiet, see.
3:41 – "I
passed!" says my daughter as she waltzes into the waiting room,
and I go back to finish up with her. A guy in a shaved head and
goatee (don’t a lot of cops look like that too?), in a stentorian
drill sergeant tone, rattles off rules for first-time drivers –
way more rules and steps than I remember when I got my permit. I
ask a minor question or two, which agitates him, like it’s spoiling
his lecture.
3:43 – Drill
Sergeant hands my daughter a mileage sheet. "You have to log
your first 60 hours of driving here. Don’t lose this piece of paper,
or you’ll have to start all over with the 60 hours of driving to
move to the next step."
"Wait,"
I stop him. "Can I download one of these forms from your web
site in case she loses it, so she doesn’t have to start all over?"
"No. This
is an official document you can only get at this office."
"You’re
kidding!? Can’t I just make a copy of this before she fills it out,
in case this gets wet or torn or lost?"
"No, you
can’t. This is an official DMV document, and if you lose it you’ll
have to come down here to get a replacement and start over."
"Can you
just give me an extra one now in case something happens to this
one?"
"No, I
can’t do that."
"Why can’t
a person just make a copy and hand it in, or get an extra copy now?
What if I just made a copy at home and filled it out if the original
got lost or wet or something?"
"Then
we would consider that a fraudulent document, and it would not count
toward her driving hours."
"Fraudulent?
Doesn’t that seem ridiculous to you?"
"You can
talk to the governor if you don’t like it."
3:51 – After
taking my daughter’s picture, apparently Drill Sergeant has thought
it over and graciously changed his mind: "Do you have a copy
machine that you could use to copy the front and back sides
of the mileage form?" he asks. "Of course!" I reply.
"I know five-year-old children that can run a copy machine
or scanner. Are you aware that personal computers, printers, scanners,
iceboxes, and air conditioning are items that most people have access
to at this point in human history?" At this point I’ve had
enough: I throw my head back and scream as loudly as I can and dash
around the office, grabbing huge stacks of mileage forms and stuffing
them in my shirt and down the front of my shorts.
Actually, I
just say, "Yes, I have a scanner," mentally note to scan
the form when I get home, and leave.
Afterwards,
my daughter says, "I could hear you guys out there laughing
when I was taking my test."
I don’t doubt
it.
July
6, 2012
Scott
Clifton [send him mail]
is a small business owner who writes from North Carolina.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
|