
It was at a highway interchange in Indianapolis. A black guy was sitting in front of a pink house, and that’s all there was to it. The song was an unlikely MTV staple during the cable cultural giant’s glitzy pubescence, but it was far less flamboyant than the standard video fare. In the 1980s, the singer-songwriter from small-town Seymour, Indiana, visited a stretch of I-65 on Indianapolis’ northwest side and came away with the inspiration for “Pink Houses,” a lunch-pail critique of the American dream. bzbplAnfqOĮven during the rah-rah Reagan era, Mellencamp didn’t. Sadly, neither was the Young American Foundation account, which didn’t seem to comprehend basic American history-or at least was happy to ignore it. Predictably, Buttigieg was mocked by conservative politicians and groups, including Young America’s Foundation, which shared a photo of the former South Bend mayor with the money quote from the Grio interview on social media. President Joe Biden has proposed $1.9 trillion in infrastructure spending, including $20 billion for an initiative that would “reconnect neighborhoods cut off by historic investments.” In an interview with The Grio, Buttigieg explained “there is racism physically built into some of our highways,” citing examples of roadway construction that was intentionally routed through existing Black and brown neighborhoods in the 1950s and 1960s.


Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg. It’s taken 38 years, but White America has finally returned to the interstate running through the Black man’s front yard in John Mellencamp’s “Pink Houses.” You remember-the one where “he thinks he’s got it so good.” Turns out he doesn’t, at least according to another Hoosier-former presidential candidate and now U.S.
