Another attack on another unsuspecting western city. This time it's Manchester, England. Sleepy small town vibe, innocent Manchester, but 2nd largest city in England. Yes, it's horrendous that children were killed, innocent children, among the young adults. Humans who have limited understanding of their growing identities into whom they will become. Cut short. Life is over. It's a horror I agree. And governments are incapable of preventing this sort of thing or are they?
Our constant invasions and our own attacks on the Middle East certainly haven't helped the situation. What roils me most, besides those numbed brain fanatics killing & maiming people, are the lame verbal responses from government officals and the tough talking retired generals and the cable "news" shows talking about how the fanatics can make their bombs and the triggers they use and the pointing of fingers and the showing of yellow taped off scenes and interviews with the shocked who had been there and the "will ISIS take reponsibilty?" meme repeated over and over, but also the responses from ordinary people on social media. The so-called "in our hearts" response. Oh fuck you already. This is your way of saying what? Oh I'm so sorry. No, what you're saying is I'm glad it isn't me. Stop supporting this so-called war on fanatics because there is no victory in the current way we are doing it. And it's not going to stop. This so-called war is fig leaf bullshit. All the crap that we the U.S., the Europeans are doing is window dressing, theater, security theater.
What we've got to do is get out of the Mideast. Stop with the racism. Try to come up with some kind of diplomatic reasoning. Stop kissing Saudi Arabia's ass as well as the other countries in the Mideast that are paying up to prevent attacks on themselves. It's their problem. Not ours.
Western governments have bombed the stuffing out of the Mideast and social media discussions support those assaults on their innocent children or at best "tut tut" over the air strikes, but their children aren't wept over in this manner. How many are dead, maimed, demoralized in Syria? There are thousands and thousands killed and maimed. (No we're not bombing civilians! Russia is. Only Russia. Right?) How many drone strikes does it take to help destroy a country. How many Mother of All Bombs will we need to drop on Afghanistan. Yeah we're going after ISIS, Al Qaeda, the Taliban and I don't know who else. And nothing changes and bomb makers are making lots and lots of money! You know who the losers are? We're the losers. The winners are the arms manufacturers.
It's not like England doesn't have an expensive top of the line security apparatus as does the United States as does the EU. And it is costly. But that's not going to stop one individual. Doesn't matter how many stops of entrapped wanna be fanatics there are over the years. It just takes one who is smarter than that. So that old saw that says: if you keep repeating the same things over and over but expect different results you are crazy.
I don't want to sound heartless. It pains and upsets me when I hear about these insane bombings. It upsets me about the babies, the children, the young adults, the old people, the destruction of families and the loss of friends and also the people who have to clean up and try to put people back together. And what about the houses and communities and cities that are destroyed? I put myself in the shoes of the survivors. I think what if I were in that situation, what would I be doing, saying? Existing? Responding? Goddamn it we are all humans! But here sitting at my laptop or you sitting at your laptop, tablet, phone are so far removed, and so it's alright to strike one's breast in sorrow but how about a mea culpa already? We are guilty too.
Some News items. But mainly personal opinions that may be unreasonable, without warrant, meaningless and shameless but relentless and consistent as a blinking light. Of course there is that story about Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier, the guy who discovered and named oxygen & hydrogen and executed during the reign of terror. He purportedly asked a servant to see if his eyes blinked after he was beheaded. No one could prove the story. But maybe we can see after death.
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
Friday, March 31, 2017
No E-Reader for me -- Ever!
(This was written originally 11/29/2007)
The NPR radio program "On the Media" ran a segment on the e-book reader and mentioned the Kindle. In addition there was an interview with a writer whose name escapes me but the title of his essay remains: "Hamlet's Blackberry." What he said at least in the interview was that paper itself is a technology. Those of us who have been around for sometime before this wonderful e-revolution still require that we have the feel of paper, the feel of a book in our hands as we read. Our hands in some way inform us in this process of reading and in fact do quite a bit of work. These days as a retiree I don't buy newspapers much but read them online. On the rare occasion when I do encounter a newspaper I realize how much I miss holding the paper and scanning the page and folding it up and pulling out sections and so on. And if I want to look at an advertisement I will. . . and if I don't want to I don't.
But I gave this Kindle some thought. It would be great to carry around 200 books with me. But does anyone have any idea how long it takes to read 200 books? It's not like I'm going to read them all in a Subway ride on the F-train on my way into Manhattan from Brooklyn. Besides all these years I've always felt close to my books, to the paper, to the feel of new pages and being able to mark up something, some scrap of thought in the columns. I love the look of different fonts. I love to see how far I've gone along and how far yet I have to go. And I sometimes love to just flip back and check out the first few pages and maybe skim them while I keep keep my thumb as a place marker. And then I love to look at my book shelves and sometimes pull down a book I read long ago and just look at it and feel it or skim through again or maybe even decide to read it again. Often memories come back of a different time and it evokes a certain feeling.
So no Kindle for me ever. The problem I see is that the e-revolution has just allowed us to become a more of a throw away, uniform society than we were before. The mystery and the wonder of a book will hold nothing for us anymore. In fact with computers the concept of wonder no longer holds a thrill for us. I think it was Goethe who said that the highest form of thought is wonder. Sadly with the internet beneath our fingers wonder is just a word on Wikipedia.
The NPR radio program "On the Media" ran a segment on the e-book reader and mentioned the Kindle. In addition there was an interview with a writer whose name escapes me but the title of his essay remains: "Hamlet's Blackberry." What he said at least in the interview was that paper itself is a technology. Those of us who have been around for sometime before this wonderful e-revolution still require that we have the feel of paper, the feel of a book in our hands as we read. Our hands in some way inform us in this process of reading and in fact do quite a bit of work. These days as a retiree I don't buy newspapers much but read them online. On the rare occasion when I do encounter a newspaper I realize how much I miss holding the paper and scanning the page and folding it up and pulling out sections and so on. And if I want to look at an advertisement I will. . . and if I don't want to I don't.
But I gave this Kindle some thought. It would be great to carry around 200 books with me. But does anyone have any idea how long it takes to read 200 books? It's not like I'm going to read them all in a Subway ride on the F-train on my way into Manhattan from Brooklyn. Besides all these years I've always felt close to my books, to the paper, to the feel of new pages and being able to mark up something, some scrap of thought in the columns. I love the look of different fonts. I love to see how far I've gone along and how far yet I have to go. And I sometimes love to just flip back and check out the first few pages and maybe skim them while I keep keep my thumb as a place marker. And then I love to look at my book shelves and sometimes pull down a book I read long ago and just look at it and feel it or skim through again or maybe even decide to read it again. Often memories come back of a different time and it evokes a certain feeling.
So no Kindle for me ever. The problem I see is that the e-revolution has just allowed us to become a more of a throw away, uniform society than we were before. The mystery and the wonder of a book will hold nothing for us anymore. In fact with computers the concept of wonder no longer holds a thrill for us. I think it was Goethe who said that the highest form of thought is wonder. Sadly with the internet beneath our fingers wonder is just a word on Wikipedia.
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
Found in a journal I wrote back in 1977
In Paris June 1977
The
other day I saw a Jazz trio—Soprano Sax, Banjo and Bass, playing
near Le Bon Marche. They were under an overhang and it was raining
and many of us crowded under the overhang. No one wanted to be wet.
These were all young men, student age or less, full of spirit and
passion and full of the blues and they were like nothing I'd heard
except maybe on a Sidney Bechet recording. They played the
West End Blues beautifully, so beautiful that if Louis Armstrong was
alive and was listening he would have had a smile from here to China.
My eyes welled up from the beauty of it. Then they played Out of
Nowhere. The Bird I thought had played that the best but these street
musicians played good enough that the Bird would have accompanied
them. They played maybe an hour maybe two hours because I lost track
of time and I kept throwing francs in the Sax case. On the 6th
day here, all that suffering of travel and feeling uptight was worth
it just to hear these guys play. My spirits were raised beyond
buoyancy.
It
was unreal. Was I in New Orleans? Chicago? Was it the 1930's? No I'm
in Paris, it's 1977 and these are very impressive players. The
Soprano sax player was diminutive, no more than 5'3”, thin with
short dark hair that hung like bangs on his forehead, black intense
eyes and he knew his instrument like he knew his body. When he
played he crouched then walked back and forth in time to the music.
He was the main soloist. In between solos he sat on a small low ledge
and shouted out in a French accent, “yeah, OK!' many times. And
he'd clap his hands or he'd growl out words of some sort with a deep
guttural sound. Sometimes he'd puff on a cigarette. Sometimes he
bantered with the other players and the banjo and bass player
wouldn't miss a beat even as they all laughed. The banjo player and
the bass player each got solos. It was Jazz in the raw. It could
have been completely free. They probably wanted the money but they
loved playing, it was obvious, and seemed solely to live for that.
The
crowds kept gathering and some were out there in the rain cheering
them on and clapping in time to the music. Oh it was an event
suddenly, a moment in time to never forget, to be fully human and be
able to comprehend all that was going on. All the ugliness of life
disappeared as a tune that was probably a Sidney Bechet tune echoed
under that overhang and even the Gendarmes who were probably called
to break it up stood there with the crowd and clapped. At some point
une jeune fille ran up and kissed all the players when they had
stopped between songs. And everyone applauded.
Friday, April 1, 2016
April Fool's Day
April Fool's Day or as it originally was known as "All Fools Day" originated during The Hundred Years War. (1337 to 1453). The House of Plantagenet and The House of Valois were the main combatants and were struggling over who would rule the Kingdom of France. Because it was such a long and protracted war many generations died. In 1415 both kings decided to start a tradition during the war to "lighten the mood" for at least one day during these battles. When the Lancastrian phase of the war started almost 80 years into this bloody conflict the King of England and the King of France chose April 1 under the old calendar, BTW, which probably made it somewhere in the middle of April these days. Anyway, the Kings decided to send their respective Fools (or Jesters) out into the battlefield to play pranks on unsuspecting soldiers. Usually that resulted in the Fools' deaths by cruel and unusual means because the pranks really weren't very funny but their deaths for all to see caused much merriment among the troops and a few kegs of rotgut wine were broken out (you expect the kings to give away the good stuff?) and everyone had a party.
Monday, March 9, 2015
Going No Place
I own a bungalow in a co-operative in the Shawangunks, south of the Catskills, just off Route 209 in Spring Glen, N.Y. The area abounds in history, that is, if you consider places like the Nevele in Ellenville or Kutchers to the north in Monticello significant. (Both gone now) Personally, I'm not familiar with the history of resorts, but the significance of the Catskills area, especially for New Yorkers of previous generations, it matters.
The borscht belt of old was the training ground for many who went on to be famous entertainers. Like the Coney Island of old, the Catskills was a playground for the not-so-rich. In the sixties and seventies, the Catskill region fell on hard times, and it suffered the way so many other poor areas in New York State have suffered.
Many of the bungalow colonies, that undoubtedly did fabulous business, folded up. Most were deserted and still remain looking like small decaying ramshackle towns. Some such as ours have been turned into co-ops and the summertime occupants have brought in telephones and TVs, indoor toilets and even baseboard heating for those cool evenings. And today we have colony wide WiFi. We have to keep up I guess. Our colony, in addition, has a refurbished pool, a tennis court in need of repair, a decent playground and a sometimes basketball hoop.
Initially, this was not my idea of a vacation. But after renting one summer for two weeks and seeing how attached the kids became, my wife (at the time) and I decided to buy in. That was in 1989. Then there used to be about twenty-five kids running around all summer at our co-op, and the place thrived with laughter and fun, barbecues and swimming. So it's 1992 when this was written. Everyone is up late and they all sleep in mornings. Nothing gets locked up and you can hear the crickets and tree frogs all night, the bubbling stream not far away and the wasps warming their nests just before the sun rises. From the middle of April to the middle of October Spring Glen is our home, while the house in Brooklyn becomes a place to stay during the work week. Opening day is a wild day, mixing memory with desire, as the poet says, and on closing day, you can feel the leaves fall from your heart.
I've made some good friends in the last three years at the co-op, but the thing I've grown most attached to is the relief from this nightmare we call living in New York City. And how does that relief come about? Mainly just from watching things grow, or hearing people speak unhurriedly, or bicycling up a mountain before the sun sets to watch the deer cavort in the fields, or just going no place at all. But in all honesty I have lots of places to go.
On the mornings it doesn't rain, and drought watchers know it doesn't rain much, I walk about four miles as early after sunrise as I can. There are two directions I can go and one has an alternate walk besides. I can walk past the Homowack resort (also defunct these days) up beyond Poplar Grove Cemetery or I can walk up the Mountaindale road where the trees are thick and darkening and glints of morning sun streams through, the way light streams in a cathedral. I always go by myself. And though the excuse is to go exercise, it is not my intent to succumb myself to physical exercise and miss everything that happens. So what happens? Not much.
I know every inch of my walks and can shut my eyes and replay every inch of them as well. The road past Homowack I've laid out in miles from my bungalow. At the first sign announcing the resort, I'm 9/10's of a mile away. At 1.2 miles, I've reached the telephone pole with the noisy electrical box attached to it, just alongside the golf course. At the end of a small New England style stone fence on my right is an apple tree; it's 1.6 miles. The cemetery is 1.9, and if I go the extra distance I'd make it to the gravel pits almost 2 1/2 miles away where some flea bag hound won't stop woofing.
The way is marked by the changing seasons; in particular, there are the masses of wild flowers and the indistinguishable growths that jut out alongside the road and the stream that parallels it. Somehow the way these flowers have avoided the wheels of cars and the fumes that the cars spew, clarify for me, in some heady manner, the drift and hue of life. I don't know the names of the flowers and I guess that doesn't matter since they don't know my name either. I remember them by their shapes and their color and the time of the year that they appear. At some point all the colors appear at once, and they become flaming carpets as they sway from the road's edge into the fields leading to the mountains in the background.
In the early spring there are the white and purplish almost onion-like looking things, prodding up from the soil like little fingers. Next as the deciduous trees burst with leaves and the flight and twitter of insects and birds in pursuit of survival takes place, small yellow balls sit on top of tender shoots. Among them white parasols of lace shoot up and bend in the breezes. As the weather warms bell-shaped fleshy blue climbers attach themselves to road signs, trees and fences, growing up out of soil looking like hardscrabble. By midsummer, everywhere the eye looks is taken over by the reds. Amid the glow and glisten in the fields, yellow and black striped birds glide and land. The red passes on to the nodding heads of heavy golden flowers fiercely challenging the onset of the fall colors and the coming winter.
I really don't know why this scene performs so well for me each and every season. It's not like watching my own children and their friends or even my friends who grow and change and objectively seem different every year. Perhaps I will grow tired of it all soon, and sleep late like the others. Maybe it's just that predictability doesn't disappoint, but instead grows weary, a little the way all relationships can grow weary.
My favorite walk is to veer off away from the cemetery past the Homowack golf course which is seldom played and walk up Myerson road. Defunct colonies of Bungalows lay rotting on either side and the forest encases them like a tomb. Tall pines and scabrous looking hard woods with nary a distinguishing color in the depths hold fast my eye and my heart. I keep walking up the hill, the sun hidden from view, and then suddenly an open field, one a farmer had either forgotten or is letting lay fallow for years, spreads before me. It just bursts in an explosion of green, white, red, blues and yellow. And then I know why I'm there and why I'll never get tired of that scene and what it is about the wild flowers--it's so I can jump up and down and shout "whoopee" at the top of my lungs in total abandonment.
Sunday, February 8, 2015
The Price of gasoline
So we've had cheap
gasoline, relatively speaking, since the end of summer 2014. Instead
of the $3+ per gallon which I believe people had grown used to, I
know I had, and by getting used to I mean that people used various
strategies to offset the costs associated with more expensive
gasoline. My belief is based solely on logic and not with facts that
when something costs less than what you've been used to paying for it
that you will buy and use more of it than you did when the cost was
higher. That extends to any consumable and gasoline is a consumable.
So what does this mean that more gasoline is being consumed? It means
that more carbon is being put into the environment thereby raising
the prospect that we are adding more greenhouse gasses, that it is
anti-environmental and ultimately global warming is costing us more
economically than any savings due to the energy efficiency efforts
that have been made over the years, damaging any good efforts towards
slowing global warming. So what is the answer? One possibly is (and
I'm sure many will think impossible) raise the price of gasoline so
that it is never below $3.00 making the cost when it is cheaper to be
offset with an added tax. Develop regulations for the oil markets so
that the predictive price of refined gasoline on the market stays far
more consistent and doesn't fluctuate from day to day due to the
gamblers in the commodities market. Whether that will work is way
beyond my knowledge of economics, governmental regulations and market
forces but I still believe that when something is too cheap people
will buy more of it. And as of this writing we would have to rely on
the voluntary efforts of people to not use more gasoline because it
costs less. And that in my book is not a win win, but a lose lose.
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
Seasons of Awards
We are entering the season of awards programs. Each week until the Oscar ceremony, there is a similar ceremony each with any number of categories and each category most of the time has five nominees to choose from. Some more, a few less. And of course each ceremony has in the days and hours prior to the ceremony, a series of little ceremonies oft times called "the red carpet." In this ceremonial atmosphere both nominees and associated non-nominees dress in their finery and parade benignly before adoring fans with cameras and phone devices along with the professional camera jockeys amid squeals of delight, pleasurable gushes, and much outpouring of emotion. Back in the studios of the broadcasters, the commentariat hired for these events, gather in numbers of two to five both male and female and talk about what the viewer has just seen proffering approval or tut tutting less than approval so the viewer herself can make the appropriate judgment so desired by the broadcaster whose advertisers are paying for it all.
But everyone is in on the act so that in the hours before and in the hours after judgment upon judgment is heaped, sifted, sorted and presented and the comments by the anonymous and non anonymous both are also part of the event. And commenting upon commenters comments both for and against rage hour after hour oft times overlapping with the next set of awards, thundering along in tweets and Facebook postings and whatever else as if there is actual thundering and not the sound of keyboard clicks. Did I mention that these ceremonies are accompanied by so much snark that it is impossible to hear one honest expression?
And why is everyone in on the act. It's cold out? Nothing to do? There is a need to be heard? The human psyche likes to root for favorite things? Well it's that last thing rooting for something that I think is the crux of what I am trying to say. Because it's not just the awards ceremonies going on for this window of time, but every season seems to bring some kind of award need. Let's examine sports, for example.
We are in the process of finishing up the college football awards. The "fifty" odd bowl games if you tried to watch them all and each with a rooting interest on your part might just drive you mad. Except everything is already decided for the big one in a week or so. The endless sports interview programs. More broadcaster commenters commenting. The secret knowledge that you, yes you, know for sure how the win will be achieved. And you fearlessly comment yourself on these matters. And then there's the thundering keyboard clicks of the Twitter and the Facebook.
This week the MLB hall of fame nominees are in and thus much speculation about who will be awarded the honors are being bandied about with associated like and dislikes not to mention statistics gleaned from a myriad of sources.
Now the professional NFL awards games have begun and it will roll in like a gathering storm and ultimately spin about like a cyclone and end in a hoopla of everything I've just said. And on and on and on. March madness. NBA finals. The NHL. Then baseball. Ultimately everything ends with an award. Or maybe it ends with turned over cars, fires, shootings and arrests.
And then we start all over again.
And did I leave out politics? Tsk tsk. The Presidential race awards are coming up in less than two years and so far we've had a few teasers to get our juices flowing or our tweets tweeting and our Facebooks defacing in those moments when we're not engaged in the other associated award shows and events.
And of course we do have liberal/conservative endless debates that never end, never provide an award and ultimately never have a result. Yet there we are rooting for one POV or the other. Yes there we are once again rooting for something.
What is this fundamental need that we who do not directly participate in these endless games and shows and presidential elections (remember that little thing called the electoral college?) must glean from them some kind of joy or thrill as if the award itself is a badge we wear? Is the award itself on our mantle? Because our candidate has won does that mean we are now in control? Do we have that Super Bowl ring? That player who has five World Series rings are those rings ours too just because we rooted for the player?
What is this "rooting?" Wishful thinking made real for the moment? The fear of being by oneself with one's thoughts? The worries and concerns that up till now everything you've done is wrong? Your death. . .which will come? Maybe death can be postponed while you root? Or maybe we're just looking for a fight. Or maybe we just want to say: nyah nyah I'm better than you, you who rooted for a loser. I rooted for the winner.
Oh fan. Oh fanatic, contemporary life has come down to this: either we're the lonely man/woman in the desert raising our fist and cursing the stars or we're the sideline chorus egging on the performers. In every case we suffer for our inauthenticity. We have lost all meaning and our own true experiences are nothing.
But everyone is in on the act so that in the hours before and in the hours after judgment upon judgment is heaped, sifted, sorted and presented and the comments by the anonymous and non anonymous both are also part of the event. And commenting upon commenters comments both for and against rage hour after hour oft times overlapping with the next set of awards, thundering along in tweets and Facebook postings and whatever else as if there is actual thundering and not the sound of keyboard clicks. Did I mention that these ceremonies are accompanied by so much snark that it is impossible to hear one honest expression?
And why is everyone in on the act. It's cold out? Nothing to do? There is a need to be heard? The human psyche likes to root for favorite things? Well it's that last thing rooting for something that I think is the crux of what I am trying to say. Because it's not just the awards ceremonies going on for this window of time, but every season seems to bring some kind of award need. Let's examine sports, for example.
We are in the process of finishing up the college football awards. The "fifty" odd bowl games if you tried to watch them all and each with a rooting interest on your part might just drive you mad. Except everything is already decided for the big one in a week or so. The endless sports interview programs. More broadcaster commenters commenting. The secret knowledge that you, yes you, know for sure how the win will be achieved. And you fearlessly comment yourself on these matters. And then there's the thundering keyboard clicks of the Twitter and the Facebook.
This week the MLB hall of fame nominees are in and thus much speculation about who will be awarded the honors are being bandied about with associated like and dislikes not to mention statistics gleaned from a myriad of sources.
Now the professional NFL awards games have begun and it will roll in like a gathering storm and ultimately spin about like a cyclone and end in a hoopla of everything I've just said. And on and on and on. March madness. NBA finals. The NHL. Then baseball. Ultimately everything ends with an award. Or maybe it ends with turned over cars, fires, shootings and arrests.
And then we start all over again.
And did I leave out politics? Tsk tsk. The Presidential race awards are coming up in less than two years and so far we've had a few teasers to get our juices flowing or our tweets tweeting and our Facebooks defacing in those moments when we're not engaged in the other associated award shows and events.
And of course we do have liberal/conservative endless debates that never end, never provide an award and ultimately never have a result. Yet there we are rooting for one POV or the other. Yes there we are once again rooting for something.
What is this fundamental need that we who do not directly participate in these endless games and shows and presidential elections (remember that little thing called the electoral college?) must glean from them some kind of joy or thrill as if the award itself is a badge we wear? Is the award itself on our mantle? Because our candidate has won does that mean we are now in control? Do we have that Super Bowl ring? That player who has five World Series rings are those rings ours too just because we rooted for the player?
What is this "rooting?" Wishful thinking made real for the moment? The fear of being by oneself with one's thoughts? The worries and concerns that up till now everything you've done is wrong? Your death. . .which will come? Maybe death can be postponed while you root? Or maybe we're just looking for a fight. Or maybe we just want to say: nyah nyah I'm better than you, you who rooted for a loser. I rooted for the winner.
Oh fan. Oh fanatic, contemporary life has come down to this: either we're the lonely man/woman in the desert raising our fist and cursing the stars or we're the sideline chorus egging on the performers. In every case we suffer for our inauthenticity. We have lost all meaning and our own true experiences are nothing.
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