Call it the Crack Goldberg .
The crack epidemic didn’t happen in a vacuum. It was a system: cheap cocaine base, hollowed-out urban economies, punitive drug laws, media panic, mandatory minimums. Each part of the machine was designed by policy, enforced by policing, and animated by despair. The user didn’t build the machine—they were just the ball bearing rolling through it. crack goldberg
That’s the machine. And we all watched it run. Call it the Crack Goldberg
Where Rube Goldberg’s inventions took mundane tasks (turning off a light, wiping a mouth) and stretched them into symphonies of inefficiency, the Crack Goldberg takes survival—eating, sleeping, staying housed—and turns it into a carnival of collapse. One rock leads to another. Another leads to pawning a wedding ring. The pawn shop receipt becomes a domino that trips a police raid, which tips over a child’s placement into foster care, which springs a parole violation, which catapults a person into a cycle of incarceration, release, relapse, repeat. Each part of the machine was designed by
Artists like Keith Haring saw this machine in motion. His Crack is Wack mural (1986) wasn’t just a slogan—it was a freeze-frame of the Goldberg’s middle gears: the wide-eyed face, the yellow skull, the words screaming in primary colors. He knew you couldn’t reason the machine apart. You could only mark its existence and hope someone pulled the plug.