Monday, August 27, 2007

". . . we'll tear your soul apart."

Kirsty: "Who are you?"
Lead Cenobite: "Cenobites. Explorers in the further regions of experience. Demons to some. Angels to others."

HELLRAISER (1986/7)

Death made an unexpected visit to our apartment this weekend. One of our three kittens, Sultane by name, sailed out the 3rd-floor (4th floor in USA) living room window and into the Great Beyond on Sunday. The litter originally numbered four kittens but the male has been gone for over a week, adopted by a lovely young woman. Sultane was the only named kitten of the three remaining females, having been christened by a young girl and her mother who were to pick her up at the end of the month. (I no longer name the kittens birthed by Wendy, our fertile female, in order to lessen the attachment factor on my part.) As the cats do not leave the apartment, and the two males are now neutered, this shall not be an issue in the future; nonetheless, I was deeply saddened and moved by the adorable kitten's death yesterday. I was seated at my computer during the morning, and only briefly saw her amazing leap from the floor to what she assumed would be a safe landing on the windowsill. She either underestimated her jumping èlan or overestimated the width of the sill, but my momentary glimpse caught her as she reached free space and sailed downwards, legs outstretched, and I heard, seconds later, the horrifying echo of her arrival on the inner courtyard paving below. She actually survived the fall, there were no compound or obvious fractures, but I feared, rightly, that she was internally injured. After the brief drama of actually getting into the courtyard below (which belongs to a neighborhood pizzeria on the ground floor & it was Sunday morning), I brought her back to the apartment where she slept for several hours, stunned by her experience. Then, awakening, she voided some blood on the floor and I knew it was very bad indeed. She did not cry or miaow, she simply laid there, waiting, it seemed. Shortly afterwards, she rose, walked into another room and began to call as loudly as her little voice could and her family gathered around - her sisters, her parents, an older brother, and we two humans. She briefly turned in a circle, cried once more, and fell over on her side, body seizing in her last moment. Death was swift and, it seemed, without l'agonie, the French concept of the final mortal moment, so pitiful and terrifying to witness. I began to cry, slow tears for the passing of an innocent creature who for a few months amused and delighted us, her first family. I am still depressed and quiet today.

My "regarde ironique" is somewhat lacking today as a result of yesterday's events. I marvel, again, at the animal kingdom's ability(??) to accept death in silence. I have witnessed, over the years, the death of several animals of different species, and all have had in common that calm, quiet acceptance of the inevitable with no histrionics or behavioral difference to mark the moment. I 'wanted' our remaining cats to howl, or exhibit their awareness of Sultane's death in some manner but of course they did not, other than a momentary confusion as to what had become of her presence, although that, too, was soon forgotten. Life goes on and the cats are not troubled by Memory, content to exist with learned behavioral responses to assorted stimuli. Perhaps there is nothing so illustrative of our differences from other members of the animal kingdom as this, nor as illuminating of our anthropomorphism in order to create a rapprochement between "us" and "them". Inevitably, this leads to a small meditation on which method I would prefer for my passing and I wholeheartedly opt for the animal approach. To die quickly, in silence, to go forward to what I hope is the next chapter of 'the Adventure', and my passing only briefly remarked upon, if at all, with an alcohol-soaked and drug-affected fête for a few hours at some convenient future moment.

Lead Cenobite: "No tears, please. It's a waste of good suffering."

In no particular order, over the past week several items have caught my much-amused eye, among them: Morocco Cracks Down On Journalism (Le Monde) (it's a monarchy, folks); Mystery Illness Killing Camels in Saudi Arabia (CNN); British Civics Classes - "What Would Muhammad Do?" (NYTimes); UAE Father, 60, Wants 100 Children (Reuters) (he has 78 already by 15 wives, whom he marries 4 at a time, divorcing the last batch - one must have died or been sterile, n'est-ce pas?); Monster.com Hacked, Millions of Users' Encrypted Data Stolen (BBC); Zimbabwe Inflation Hits 7,638% (BBC) (that's the official figure, more realistically 13,000%, expected to hit 100,000% by the end of the year, with unemployment at 80%; sterling, President Mugabe, just sterling); it goes on and on and humor and irony begin to seep back into my consciousness. Suffering sports a sardonic smile, if nothing else.

I do not know if it is smiling much in Caracas these days, however. I read and hear that El Presidente Chavez wants to be president-for-life down there in 'The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela', and yes, that is what he has renamed it. Okay, hmmm, let's see - shut down journalism, nationalize your oil industry, stop policing your cities, tinker with your constitution, arbitrarily change your time zone (Reuters) (that one wows me; why on earth change your time zone?? by 1/2 hour??), assume imperial ambitions, um hmm, um hmm, sounds like a go to me, Hugo! One wonders how long the oil companies are going to allow this to go on, doesn't one? There must be some sort of sub-rosa agreed-upon internal time limit sufferance for neo-dictators before someone in Houston or Amsterdam decides "enough is enough" and places a call. As to the policing of cities, there was a related article about a Caracas family that waited 5 hours for the police to show up at the site of their son's murder, only to finally call a taxi to take his body to the morgue as the police had never appeared. They are all busy, no doubt, polishing the Ruritanian regalia recently received from Cartier© for El Presidente. The French would never miss an opportunity like that, believe me; it will be kitsch jewelry trivia in a few years when the regalia disappears and Señor Chavez is living in Switzerland.

Female Cenobite: "We had to hear it from your own lips."

I see that the Vatican has started its own airline (BBC). Using airplanes "borrowed" from an Italian charter company (the planes have already been painted in the papal yellow and white), the Vatican is going to run charters out of Rome to various sites of pilgrimage, fairly close to European "home" for the moment, but to assume larger itineraries in the near future. One can only hope that 'they' will eventually go multi-denominational as well, with a non-stop between Rome and Atlanta to precess to the new, $90M Hindu temple in Auburn, Ga. (CNN), a marvel of its age and a surreal addition to the cultural landscape of Greater Atlanta. I can see the GaneshBurger (soy, naturally) restaurants and Diwali Palace casinos lining the Georgian interstates already. I want to be sipping a cup of coffee in the kitchen of the area resident who first discovers a runaway elephant bathing in his backyard swimming pool; hopefully he will be well-stocked with cocktail peanuts (yes, I know, it was lame & highly previsible). In a just-barely animal & area related story, I see Mr. Vick has copped a plea - and about time. I have nothing to say about all of that other than this: Americans are extremely insane. They pay a man millions of dollars a year to be violent and bloodthirsty and single-mindedly subhuman, and then they are surprised that he is not an enlightened pacifist during his off-time? What is wrong with you people? After all, you created him.

Frank: "I thought I'd gone to the limits. I hadn't. The Cenobites gave me an experience beyond limits... pain and pleasure, indivisible."

The world keeps turning but you have to wonder in which direction. Is it like a Superman gimmick, the world turning in reverse and thus the time flow as well? It seems the blogosphere in Russia has been aflame with the video of two Caucasian men being executed/beheaded by an ultranationalist youth group, said "executions" occurring in front of a large Nazi flag (Le Monde). As well, in the former RDA (East Germany), neo-Nazi youths are regularly terrorizing immigrants, especially Indians, to which the authorities are turning a bored and blind eye. Europe, especially eastern Europe, is undergoing more and more of these hallucinatory shifts to the far, fascist right, and so far the response has been negligible if not nonexistent. Either that, or such vivid fascism simply reflects the underlying growing sentiment of the Silent Majority and thus obviates a lack of response. In Russia, it is a heady mix: high publicity ultranationalists, untrammeled capitalism in a 1920s Chicago-style gangster climate, a Mafia second to none, along with the head gangster, V. Putin, heading firmly back to communist-era dictatorship if not outright imperial autocracy. (Did he and Chavez share a couple of Mai-Tais in Singapore or somewhere and on a bet, one agreed to try it disguised as socialism and the other as 'reformed' capitalism?) Right across the border in Afghanistan, peasants are risking life and limb to get to Shaddle Bazaar, where a farmer's 10 kg. of opium will bring in about $1,400 if he is fortunate (BBC). Poppy cultivation was widely encouraged in the country under Taliban control some years back, one supposes in the hope that there would be an acceleration in the internal rotting process of the West. There are so many problems on the Afghan plate these days, however, that minor carping about poppy production hardly merits a snort of derision much less studied action. I do not particularly care, as I firmly believe that all drug use should be legalized across the board. Let those who want kill themselves, let others enjoy themselves, and others abstain if they wish, but follow through with the basic capitalist premise - put it on the market and let the market decide its value, unaided by false constrictions of "legality/illegality". If it finds a solid, workable niche or if it drastically subsides after an initial boom, so be it. If one were to stop making the criminals rich and the rich criminal, both categories would lose a lot of steam and panache. Plus, said drugs would be pouring from Big Tobacco and government, thus subsidizing the massive fiscal black holes at the hearts of most governments & easing the slide to the "cigarette-less utopias" so fondly dreamed of by the Pollyannas of the world. As I light a cigarette, I think, "C'mon, Pollyanna, you badly need to get laid and get over your cheap self."

In a courtly bow to my fellow countrymen in the USA, I applaud the sheer chutzpah of their vast entrepreneurial vision. The infamous 9/11 attack on NYC is being recast as, actually, a re-urbanizing opportunity sans pareil. With Wall Street heavily damaged after the attack, the realty visionaries saw if for what it was - an opportunity to "tone up" the financial district with high-rent skyscraper condos, ludicrously priced restaurants, and a massive influx of the "essential service industries" such as Hermés and Tiffany's (CNN). "How about that!," crows Mr./Mz. Up&coming Trader, "now I can actually sh*t, eat & sleep in the same place I make money!" If I remember correctly, it seems to me that our forebears, including recent generations, always said "Don't sh*t where you eat or sleep, it doesn't work." New rules for the new reality, I suppose, but I must say it does not impress me, not in the slightest degree.

I sometimes wonder if we should not be worshipping the old gods, the ones that pre-date all of our current crop. There is a fun read on the subject, "American Gods", by Neil Gaiman, (2001), which is fiction with an acerbic bite. No plot synopsis or spoilers here, just a recommendation for those who enjoy a somewhat skewed reading experience. However, the book is full of little bits of wisdom and fun, such as 'twilight is the best time for lying'. I like that, it is very evocative of both the state of twilight and the art of (good) lying. Shadows, stray shafts of illumination, the smoky blend of light & darkness and truth & lies, the flickering existence of crepuscular men and women shifting and sliding into and out of seedy diners and fun house fortunetelling booths. In the old religions, it was a given that the gods lied, they lied all the time and humans knew it, never taking divine word as something immutable, fixed and true. The gods, too, depended on us knowing that they lied, and amusing them with our efforts to get the best deal possible out of a duplicitous deity. If you were lucky, said deity decided to honor his word, if unlucky, not, and if very unlucky, it was honored to the letter, always with catastrophic consequences. Nevertheless, it was a fairly savvy setup, and a young man or woman with a bit of get-up-and-go could, quite possibly, receive a more than fair shake from a thus inclined god or goddess. Given my choice, I must say that I think I would most likely subscribe to the ancient Egyptian mythology/religion/setup. It is reasonably clear, unfailingly just (on a divine timescale), and in its larger, hastily sketched outlines very adaptable to our sensibilities; it is, after all, the birth space for most of modern Christianity's mythology. I, too, would like to spend eternity on my vast Nile-side estate, attended by numerous servitors, breathing the smoke of sacrifice rising from my mortuary temple, sampling the baked goods left on my ka's offering stone, gazing in the cool evening breeze at my surroundings in Amenti and feeling superbly self-satisfied. A cup of date wine and a freshly roasted duck sit on a side table, awaiting my pleasure, and I am assured of my good luck in having had a great roll of the die in the game of Grifting the Gods. (This assumes, of course, that my heart has proved lighter than the Feather of Truth on the divine scales. If it is not, then a quick, gruesome and eternal judgment awaits me in the jaws of Apep.) You could do business with the old gods, not like now with the present puerile crop of fanatics and xenophobes who haven't performed squat-all in far too long. Our own semi-divinity (changing the climate, destroying an entire world, deciding who lives and who dies and with what genetic makeup before they are even born, it is all a pretty heady power trip despite its insanity, wouldn't you say?) has taken the wind out of their over-patched patriarchal sails, and they cavil about our lack of faith! I say, "Fork it up! Deliver something other than an old book and maybe we can do business. Otherwise, I've got a room full of interviewees and only one mythology to fill, so put up or shut up. And don't let the door hit you on your raggedy old ass on the way out!"
Leducdor

Monday, August 20, 2007

" . . . He is not dead," I said.

"Imagine a person, tall, lean and feline, high-shouldered, with a brow like Shakespeare and a face like Satan, a close-shaven skull, and long, magnetic eyes of the true cat-green. Invest him with all the cruel cunning of an entire Eastern race, accumulated in one giant intellect, with all the resources of science past and present, with all the resources, if you will, of a wealthy government--which, however, already has denied all knowledge of his existence. Imagine that awful being, and you have a mental picture of Dr. Fu-Manchu, the yellow peril incarnate in one man." Commissioner Sir Denis Nayland Smith, 'The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu' (1913) by Sax Rohmer

Yes, that is correct, Dr. Fu Manchu is still alive and well, and is the evil mastermind behind China's rise to world superpower, economic powerhouse and host of the 2008 Olympic games! This is arrant nonsense, of course, and I am not citing such an imperialist, racist stereotype for any other reason than that I loved this serialization when I was a child, as have many people for almost 100 years, and to illustrate that, in one form or another, some of these old bugaboos still exist in the collective unconscious of western society. Cinema has not been especially kind to Asians, either. You would be hard-pressed to find any significant percentage of the vilification of Caucasians in Asian cinema as widespread as vilified Asians in occidental cinema. It should be noted, however, that as a boy reading these accounts of the supervillain and the British empire's unrelenting fight against him, I identified and sympathized with Dr. Fu Manchu, not the agents of the western order. I wished for an army of hamadryads (in the Fu Manchu books, hamadryads are NOT a sub-genus of dryads) and other rare, poisonous reptiles as well as lethal vegetation, not to mention beautiful, exotic and cruel female agents, to carry out my own plans for world domination. Exactly what plans for world domination I had as a child I am not quite sure, but that I had them was never in doubt, at least in my fevered imagination. Alas! such plans never materialized, and my life has rolled by in much the same fashion as uncounted others, no overarching "master plan" guiding me inevitably, remorselessly, towards my true destiny as . . . as . . . Ming the Merciless! Yes, yes, that is who I was meant to be! (Maniacal laughter fades into the distance as I exit your torture chamber/eventual tomb by means of a secret seaside exit.)

Now that I have started in such an odd and unorthodox fashion, I intend to continue that way. I firmly believe that you should start as you mean to continue, and I believe that axiom "should" apply to most endeavors. To begin anything in one fashion and then switch methods or approaches in mid-path is extremely dishonest and tends to erode any confidence that may be placed in you by others. Naturally, there are situations where such single-mindedness does not always work and you have to change direction or alter plans, but in general starting as you mean to continue can function as a surety of your character, allowing yourself and others to place confidence and faith in your word. That only matters, of course, if you still believe in the quaint and antiquated idea that a person's "word" has any value. The corollaries to this are numerous, but only one concerns me here: the presentation of a lie as a truth, stamped with a rubric which connotes "honest", "factual" and "objective". I noticed over the weekend a mini-flood of news items (Le Monde, click the link on the left, NYTimes, The Independent) concerning the coming-to-light of the dishonest, manipulative and simply conscious, erroneous editing of Wikipedia© articles by organizations to misrepresent or occlude the truth. In the first place, I do not understand why any Tom, Dick or Harriet can enter and edit the articles, but be that as it may, that they do, for the purpose of misdirection and outright lying to the public, is now documented. Some clever programmer worked out a program to trace down the edits to Wikipedia entries, and - surprise surprise! - corporations and governments, among others, are actively spinning truths and facts in said entries to reflect their own politics and policies rather than factual information. Thus the CIA alters political history entries, oil companies alter ecological entries, etc., you get the idea. Why do I take umbrage? For the simple fact that the generic label "encyclopedia" has been plastered across these presentations of wishful thinking and, whether we like it or not, people "out there" tend to put faith in something that is thus labeled. If one were to quote from the Encyclopædia Britannica©, for example, one doesn't a priori question the truth of the entry. Now, however, millions know that an entry from Wikipedia is not necessarily factual at all, and if you need to be sure of the truth of a matter, Wikipedia is completely untrustworthy and not where you want to be researching. Not even for subjects for idle cocktail chatter, because what is as humiliating as having your cocktail rant interrupted by someone declaiming, "Why, that's a lie! You are a liar, and I can prove it!" (Yes, I know, there are many things more humiliating, but let's not digress, agreed? And no, I know no one who surfs Wikipedia hunting ideas for small talk, nevertheless . . . stop being so picky, or I will cite figures to you proving that unstable people often resort to argumentativeness to cloak their insecurities. Just a second, I'll find those stats in Wikipedia . . . .)

Good news for you civet cat owners! According to Reuters©, the ultra-hip coffee drink now favored by the cognoscenti is "luwak coffee". There is none of the normal bitterness associated with coffee present in this drink, and you ask, "Oh really? Why?" Because, my friend, luwak coffee is made by mixing coffee beans with civet cat droppings which annul the bitterness and produce a smoother, more intense cup of coffee. I'll bet. This is something born in the steaming depths of the southeast Asian tropics, and enterprising villagers there are trying to domesticate and raise civet cats in order to make this idea commercially viable. It is already available, although you must be well-heeled to sip this ambrosia; it is selling at $50 Australian a cup, $75USD the 1/4 lb. in New York City. I can not help but wonder how this was discovered, and who in the world was the lunatic who was brewing coffee & catshit together searching for something "more drinkable". Yes, I know, you are as bemused as I, and now the fact that your Uncle George likes to lick the bottom of the birdcage doesn't seem quite so outré as you had thought, he may be experiencing culinary delights which you can only imagine. Jesus wept . . . .

From the ridiculous to the sublime, I would like to recommend an article I read this weekend (19/08/07) in the NYTimes Sunday Magazine© entitled "The Politics of God" by Mark Lilla. It is a crystalline presentation of the mechanics behind the modern abyss between so-called western ideology and Muslim thinking, and why our assumptions about communication between the two are so fundamentally off the mark. It's all history, people, keep looking back to History to find your answers, a simple truism that continues to be ignored by all and sundry even now. I liked this article so much that instead of waxing prolific about it, I shall simply include a link. Read it for yourselves.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/19/magazine/19Religion-t.html?ex=1345262400&en=ca0143ee010fab66&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

I see the British authorities have recalled millions of kiddies' jewelry sets made in, you guessed it, China, because of lethal levels of lead in said trinkets (BBC). (This on top of the Mattel© recall.) Personally, I think the Chinese missed the mark on this one, as well. If they had been a bit more canny, they could have made serious money marketing this junk in connection with a Britney Spears tour under the label "Toxic! Jewelry". Not only would the target consumers have snatched it up more precipitously and at a much higher price, but Britney's song might have had a longer play life which, as we are all aware, is devoutly to be wished for by her fans everywhere. In the future, after Devi and I have taken the Lotus Express to Bodhisattva City, you will eventually discover that Dr. Fu Manchu is still alive and running things quite well in China, thank you, and that the imminent downfall of the decadent and corrupt West will be due entirely to his clever placing of children's paraphernalia in the global marketplace. Voice in the wilderness, people, but you will not have time to ponder your mistakes as you hurry on your bicycle to your People's Cadre Re-education Center indoctrination class.

Wry random headlines this weekend included: "NASA: Endeavor crew comfortable with decision" (you are halfway between here and the Moon and you are going to start an argument with the people getting you home?); "Navarette: Military duty could be risky for aliens" (go ahead, riff anyway you wish on that one); and, in French, "Marriage bad for 3 in 4 couples' taxes" (gee, no joke?). I enjoy surfing the news not least for its amusement factor, as you can witness. Language is like a well-oiled snake (venomous, naturally) that often escapes its handler, with unforeseen results.

"He died of the Zayat Kiss. Ask me what that is and I reply 'I do not know.' The zayats are the Burmese caravanserais, or rest-houses. Along a certain route--upon which I set eyes, for the first and only time, upon Dr. Fu-Manchu--travelers who use them sometimes die as Sir Crichton died, with nothing to show the cause of death but a little mark upon the neck, face, or limb, which has earned, in those parts, the title of the `Zayat Kiss.' The rest-houses along that route are shunned now."

I must now end this post, as I need to take a flight to Rangoon immediately. Thus, until the next . . . .
Leducdor

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

One sees strange fantasies in the water . . . .

"You will not remember what I show you now, and yet I shall awaken memories of love . . . and crime . . . and death."
The Mummy (1932)


Like all the really wonderful, old-time horror movies, The Mummy wasn't about the mummy at all, it was about a human theme, in this instance interwar zeitgeist and alienation and the ever-present, universal feeling, "I don't belong . . .", not here, not there, not anywhere one can really name, but that there is such a place one never doubts. The gawkers gathered around the central image of your movie (you) never fail to fail to understand what idea is driving the script, the simulation, if you will, that you are running to hopefully unveil a few answers (42). There was a piece in the New York Times (14/08/07) on the philosophical musing that what WE really are, down here on Earth, scurrying around and living our lives, are virtual beings in a vast sim running somewhere else in the interest of historical observation, or anthropology, or curiosity, or even just plain old boredom (think teenagers desultorily playing a war simulation game). We can not know the difference between "virtual" and "real" because being a subset of one of the terms negates understanding. And, according to the article's author, it answers a big question: Why does God allow so much evil and violence? Because, fool, goodness and peace are BORING. Therefore if you are the Big Programmer, why would you run a dull, boring sim when you could have some fun? And nobody is really getting hurt, after all, it's just a sim . . . .

I sometimes feel like I'm a character in a chapter of "Mother Hélène and the Wiccans", the clueless buffoon who enters the scene knowing nothing about Mother Hélène's eternal fight against the barbarism and ignorance of the inhabitants of the French village where she has opened a convent mission. Adrift on a sea of medieval superstition and chillingly cool casuistry, Mother Hélène forges along on her raft of faith and hard work with little time to explain things to a late arrival. The villagers, for their part, continue to daub themselves with woad, gather in sacred groves at night and with infinite pagan kindness humor Mother Hélène and her eccentric penchant for logic. The buffoon more often than not sympathizes with the villagers, but there are moments when the beacon of reason illuminates Plato's cave and he is yanked back into the fluorescent existence of being a signifier instead of the signified (ha! take THAT de Saussure!). It is an horrible example of basic semiotics, but it serves a purpose in highlighting the "sheer shear" we encounter when a sudden irruption of the discombobulated reasoning Up There is revealed. Like the boy in the fairy tale, we abruptly realize that the emperor is wearing no clothes and that we were complicit in the lie. How long? we fret, how long have we been collaborating? But it doesn't matter, because the narcotic sensorium gas soon makes us forget our moment of lucidity and sink back down into the Mathmos (watch Barbarella). Or creep back into the cave, to round off the much-mangled metaphor.

So there we were, sitting on the banks of the Brahmaputra, spinning wool from the lint of past lives, when Devi turns to me and says, "Say there, whatever happened to Kalki ? Isn't he running late?" I should say he's running late! That's him over there, in the left column of the blog, the blue chap on Devadatta, the winged white horse. He is the 10th and final avatar of Vishnu, his purpose to destroy the Kali Yuga, "The Age of Darkness and Destruction" (in which we are living), to destroy the suffering of Kalyug and usher in a new age. Um hmm, sounds distressingly familiar. I say 'distressingly' because these apocalyptic saviors are never around when you know they should be, destroying demons and cleaning house for the new regime. I suppose that we can thank one of them for 'casting out the demon' Rove, he of the porcine face and Amityville eyes. President Bush reminds me of a latter-day Faust who has finally arrived at the tag end of his pact, his diabolically engineered "sim" breaking down around him and the yawning abyss of "game over, you lose" looming ever closer. If one riffs a little on the apocalyptic theme, surely we have had enough Antichrists in the last 100 years to provoke at least one of the saviors to lead a cavalry charge. If it has NOT been enough then I shudder to think of what awaits us just around the corner. I am neither an eschatologist nor a religious End Timer, but really, it does seem that things are so far out of hand that they are irrecoverable through any possible human agency; thus, perhaps, throwing confetti and smoke at the Divine is as appropriate a response as any.

Writing of smoke and the divine, I notice that we shall soon have access, here in the technological backwaters of the West, to an already favorite Asian gadget called the e-cigarette (Reuters). Powered by a Motorola© chip, vaporizing the content of nicotine cartridges to an inhale-able smoke, looking like a normal cigarette holder, it will give us immediate, legal access to mainlining pure nicotine without the worrisome side effect of, say, cancer. It is manufactured by the Golden Dragon Group of Hong Kong, those smoky-nostrilled fiends. At around $208 a pop, plus the cost of the cartridges, it surely isn't a fag for the masses, but then again look at what is charged for game boxes, e-toys, etc. Aside from the initial purchase, it is hard to see exactly where existing governments are going to bandage the massive economic hemorrhaging that will occur if tobacco sales fall - it would be unfeasible to tax the cartridges enough to make up the difference. But what am I thinking, silly me? Surely Big Tobacco already owns the patents, at the very least distribution rights, as well as factories just waiting to rush name-branded cartridges into production. All your favorite brand names (with absolutely no underlying difference in chemical composition) painstakingly jet-inked onto billions of compressed narcotic mini-canisters. Which do you inhale, Camel© or Marlboro©? Aieee! Aieee! My head hurts, too much smoke, not enough confetti . . . .

There was an odd little synchronicity in my morning ritual: coffee, a cigarette, e-mail & the news. The synchronicity arrived as I was idly observing one of my cats rimming her brother, the pure glittering garnet ambrosia of my coffee momentarily forgotten, when my gaze was attracted to an article in Le Monde about Cecilia Sarkozy having to "render account of herself" to the government if she is going to act as she did in Libya. Ahahaha. Fancy trying to fly that past Mme. Sarkozy - I think not. If Nick the Ripper leaves her alone, why would anyone else fare differently? She is no one's idea of a First Lady except, perhaps, her own, and not likely to fix a republican cocarde to her hat just because her husband is the French president. The French press won't even touch her, which says volumes about how dangerously explosive she is for the establishment of which she is now queen. Let the government bray all it likes, she won't even send them brioche, of that I'm sure. Oh, the synchronicity? It was between the cat, the coffee and the chippie in the news - all shiningly exquisite examples of a pure essence being nothing but itself. Or as CZ might say herself, "Je ne suis pas bobonne, je ne fais pas le yucca." She's running a sim of her own that has nothing to do with her husband, politics or public opinion, it only has to do with her, which is exactly how she prefers it. Just ask Barbara Bush.

Muller: " 'Death, eternal punishment, for...anyone... who... opens... this... casket. In the name of Amon-Ra, the king of the gods.' Good heavens, what a terrible curse!"
Assistant: " Well, let's see what's inside!"


With the big push currently on for all news Chinese, I read that 5 people were struck and killed by lightning at a funeral somewhere in China. Okay, if you were an economic & nuclear powerhouse with a gloss of hard-line Communism disguising the heart of a 19th-century robber baron, crouching crablike in a cesspool of cruelty and corruption, where would you focus the media organs? All of this unseemly curiosity to "see inside the real China" as the Olympic games approach is simply a genre of voyeurism which shall reap its own rewards. Mr & Mrs Occidental Citizen really aren't ready to "see the real China", of that I am sure. Medieval poverty and massive, institutionalized chain-gangs do not lend themselves to Disneyfication. Lest the West get the wrong idea, we are told as well that the manager of the factory responsible for the lead painted toys recall has committed suicide out of shame (hey, wait!! Isn't that trick supposed to be Japanese?). It doesn't take a lot of imagination to picture that scene - government officials, discarded wrappers from fried shameballs, empty bottles of Tsing Tao© rolling under the chairs, a "loaned" gun to avoid paying the round-eyed foreign devil at the register . . . . . While on the other side of the world, a really rather nice person died in NYC, Brooke Astor (NYT). Mega-philanthropist, she worked long and hard to make life better for others and rarely in visible ways. She attained 105 years, which is, of course, far too long, especially ill and not in possession of all her faculties, but if the Bonus Life LED had to blink for someone, why not her? Ugly stories followed, of course, with her family squabbling publicly over this or that, I can only hope she left the majority of her estate to the foundation she directed for so long. Better than many she knew that money only works when you get rid of it, but she was careful where she threw it, knowing that it corrupts everything it touches, like a virus in the program.

Ardath Bey: "Your pardon. I dislike to be touched. . . an Eastern prejudice."

The Tarot gave me The Chariot, reversed, as my indicator for the day. Not necessarily a good sign, to say the least, but not alarming, other than the fact that every day lately has produced a Major Arcana card, a sure sign that things are shakin' on my space/time gaming platform. Today's card is didactic, an effective "warning", or filter, with which to screen my actions and motivations of the day. I like doing that, using divinatory 'hints' as gels which highlight the game board, much the same effect as using meditation or prayer points to focus your day (à chacun son goût). Like all programs, I carry the seed of my own virus, my own destruction, within myself, so after I killed the demon under the bridge & won the chest with the cards, I may now use them to access "admin" functions under "player options". Every aide counts when the program is this overwritten and code-heavy, and I plan on having a word with the Programmer when I get the chance, provided I can pry his/her attention away from the sim . . . .
Leducdor

Sunday, August 12, 2007

. . . and then I killed him!

But if you do not find an intelligent companion, a wise and well-behaved person going the same way as yourself, then go on your way alone, like a king abandoning a conquered kingdom, or like a great elephant in the deep forest. - Buddha

I love that saying attributed to Buddha. It is very 'Hollywood', don't you think? Enough hope, deception, drama and elegaic reflection to fill a blockbuster cinema peplum or perhaps a really good book. The problem with it is that its beauty isn't perceptible until one is already a long way down the road from the conquered kingdom, already far into the deep forest. And, it isn't a one-time occurrence or opportunity - such forks-in-the-road fall into a life more than once, each occasion demanding a new decision and, perhaps, a brand new path. Like everyone, I have made good choices and bad choices about "whose company I keep," yet I think that when the bad choices were made I kept the "I'm outta here" option wide open and available, as if I knew that it would be needed sooner rather than later. It also demands that you be able to discern what constitutes "intelligence", "wisdom" and "comportment", as well as having a triple-faceted understanding of the similes of the king and the elephant. Above all, the saying glosses one's life with a brush of grandeur and historicity, making it larger and brighter than one has the habit of perceiving it. That is very buddhist, viewing one's life that way yet knowing that it is only illusion, a brief mist on the ocean of reality, which is itself a brief mist etc.etc. . . .

There is panic in St. Tropez. The regional aviation authority is cracking down on unauthorized & illegal helicopter landings in the seaside sequin sanctuary (CNN). The 'real' residents of St. Tropez, fairly regular French citizens of the everyday type, complained to said authorities about the crushing noise & disturbance of the myriad flights of the glitterati to & fro. 1200 flights a year had been allowed, but in three months alone this year more than 5000 were logged. Thus, airspace crackdown - which sounds like a joke to me. What is the penalty for the rich and famous, a fine? That will simply be considered an "extra" landing tax. Of course, one can ask as well why the feudal villagers are complaining, St. Tropez wasn't exactly a money mint before the advent of Bardot and the 1950s (jet-boosting said villagers' local economy & thus their own lifestyles). Like many crises in France, this one is both ironic and laughable. I tend to think of celebrities as a subset of the genus "vampire". When one considers a vampire's thirst for immortality, driving fear (of a personal death), ignorance (of maya) and reactionary stance, it brings to mind both celebrities and republicans.

Bridging the Atlantic, there is a kind of weird assonance in Sarkozy's vacation in New Hampshire and the luncheon chez les Bush (Reuters). I imagine that both Wolfeboro and Kennebunkport enjoy bathing in the illusion of being "simple" New England communities with good, "old-fashioned Yankee values". Nevermind the Secret Service, the 'copters, the paparazzi etc. Frankly, I hope that franco-american relations do warm up, that Americans begin flocking back to France in hordes, it helps the French get a grip on themselves. Left to their own devices, the French bathe in their illusions, too, and the water is awfully murky.

Flash from the past! The Draft! I read, open-mouthed, the statement by Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute, the "War Czar", that reinstituting the draft was 'probably' a great idea (CNN). My first thought was, "Good luck!" It is difficult to imagine the base public reaction to that idea, but I would be immensely surprised if it survives "preliminary committee studies". Or perhaps the idea is being floated to simply scare the public into supporting the war effort in situ. Anything, literally anything, is possible, no matter how ludicrous, if it issues from Washington, D.C.

I found the Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/, by chance, online the other day and as I expected it was informative and amusing in the extreme. I am only vaguely aware of Ariana Huffington, the political pundit and publisher of the online magazine, but do know that she is a shining light in the camp of profoundly conservative republican spinmasters despite her mercurial political mood swings. To see her is to know her: she is the something-aged, immaculately groomed, pricely clothed & bejewelled shining-helmeted blonde of aryan good looks & equal froideur on the Sunday morning talking-head shows. Informative because it is intelligent, amusing because it is sly & relentless in its presentation agenda, it is worth a look simply to gauge the ideological competition. The latest fluff is the Dem evening with the gays in LA, the "don't ask don't tell" dithyramb, and the latest stats on American opinion on gay marriage (57%-, 43%+), civil unions (reversed %), and gays in the military (79% YES). Oddly enough, mentioned in the HP as well was a link to a story (the Sun) about Angelina Jolie "giving up" lesbianism and S&M kinky sex to stay married to Brad Pitt. Whoa! A sharp left jab from the surreal!, finding this in the HP. What is that supposed to say, other than "????" For clarification, refer to the previous paragraph on celebrities.

I had a wonderful, liberating laugh last night thanks to American television. I couldn't sleep, so I was up late watching Larry King Live on CNN-TV. The show's theme was "the transgendered", and the guests ranged from a longtime post-surgical sex-changed person through the spectrum to a pre-op, pre-hormone individual who wants to start down that particular path. Throw in a sex-change therapist and Larry, and, Shazaam! you have the show. My laugh came mid-way through the show when Larry asked one of his guests, a rather wan, lank, dirty-blond mr. everyman, when he knew that he was a woman trapped in a man's body. The guest responded in his wan, lank, trembling alto that he knew very early in his childhood because "I wanted to skip to the candy store in my sister's shoes". . . I couldn't help it - I burst out guffawing, hopelessly shattered by the nuclear humor of the moment, startling the cats who were keeping me company in the room. Needless to say, I slept quite soundly soon thereafter.

The Tarot says that my day is a day of fulfillment and completion, so I shall go reap the rewards of such a bright & sunny indicator. Like all advice, it can only suggest which filter to wear, not choose it for you, which is, after all, the raison d'être for this illusion in the first place, isn't it?
Leducdor

Friday, August 10, 2007

A Start

Hello and Welcome! to the DHOSF, a personal blog space created by me to record my thoughts. I am not at all sure if this is worth the effort, maintaining a blog space to air the fetid and sometimes tenebrous musings of a diseased mind, but what the hell, why not? In future I shall post my thoughts on what comes to mind, what is occupying my thoughts, what strikes me as either newsworthy or ridiculous but never on the mundane, routine or unremarkable (unless it proves a point, of course). By the way, DHOSF stands for the Darkest Heart Of Savage France, where I currently live and which often provokes either amused, bitter, outraged, mystified or resigned reactions, responses & observations on my part. Et oui, je peux écrire en français mais je ne le préfère pas parce qu'anglais est mon langage de pensée. So we'll keep the blog in English, although I will not forswear the occasional dip into different tongues for expressivity. There may also be selected guest bloggers from time to time who share my particular viewpoint on the world but express themselves in their own, often colorful, fashion. So, let's be on with it, shall we?
Leducdor