“Reverse Gentrification”

Ramon Jimenez

Artist Statement: We all think about how and who will remember us when we are no longer here.

If the law didn’t apply to me

I would squat in an upper income

suburb in SoCal the same way 

Europeans squatted on land not their own. 

And after stealing a home 

not my own I would bulldoze the entire block to the ground.

Put up a 10-story apartment complex.

Siphon water and electricity 

from the entire neighborhood

watching pools go empty,

and gardens wilt. 

I would leave them with no choice, 

but to move out or rent from me 

at a cost equal to half or more 

than the average family’s monthly income 

while never fixing sewage, or power. 

I would,

call the cops on all of them,

for walking their dogs at 11 PM, 

for jogging in the middle of the street, 

and for wearing yoga pants at 2 pm on a Wednesday afternoon. 


Happily, 

to boost the local economy,

I would open a pawn shop,

Paycheck loan management center

and liquor store. 

While I’m at it,

I could get a 1980’s CIA connection,

traffic drugs on the block,

hand some nickels and dimes 

and a glock.

Give them different colored bandanas.

Sit back and watch them tear each other apart.

Use the profit to fund an illegal war in some foreign country 

and then call the cops on which ever group gets too big.

But I would never do this, 

because it’s already been done to us.

My name is Ramon Jimenez, I am a writer and educator who resides in Seattle, WA. I teach language arts and I run a summer youth poetry program. I write poetry that focuses on immigration, culture and travel. I am interested in exploring locations and how they connect to memories. My poems are published in Rigorous Magazine and the Anti-Languorous Project.