Generally I enjoy it, but there’s a lot of situations where I wish there was some sort of middleground between
and 
Traincabs with windows covered make people feel so much more unsafe, since outside onlookers can’t see if something is happening inside.
I get sad when I see historical buildings with a bunch of tags on them. You might think that’s silly - I would imagine some do, since I’m personally cool with newer “uglier” buldings getting tagged. So if you feel like that about all buildings and can’t relate, try to take it to extreme examples: The pyramids with tags on them, terra-cotta soldiers with tags on them, cave paintings, nature reserves, animals… All of these have been tagged. If you find those apprehensive, then start from there and go as close to “pretty and old building” as you can get until you find it acceptable again. Hopefully you get where I’m coming from then.
I know graffiti and tagging is ancient - there’s 1000-year old tags in pompei (and on pyramids) but I think that’s a reductive argument. Our notion of history, culture, preservation and so on has changed a lot since the time of widespread slavery. Had the roman empire existed today, then I’d also be mad about a legionairy tagging the walls of Versailles.
On the other hand Brechts old theatre in Berlin, which used to be some big old royal theatre, has massive red X’s painted over the coat of arms that decorate the stage, and that’s cool as fuck. So it’s not something that can easily be categorized one way or the other.
But otherwise I love it. I love seeing the signs of an underground anti-authority art movement in the world around me. I love seeing the art. I love seeing how it develops. I love seeing advertisements covered. I love it when it’s pretty, I love it when it’s juvenile, I love it when it’s insightful, I love it when it’s political and I love it when it’s crude.
I wish there was some solution. I’d love to hear other peoples thoughts.


we should live in the places we live, and that includes art.
is the train window thing researched? i wouldn’t expect aboard-train violence to be occurring at a stop and i wouldn’t expect onlookers to have time to intervene if it did, but that could just be the places and kinds of trains i’ve ridden.
I don’t know about train windows specifically but what I know for sure is researched is
So when a train window is covered you can no longer look in or out. Visibility is low. This makes people feel more unsafe.