Thursday 5 October 2023

Entertainment



“Well, so one of the things I really liked about this movie was it showed me Why People Watch Wrestling, and I couldn't — because certainly they're not appealing and I'm not being —

There are different strata of conception of abstraction that any entertainment process has to appeal to and you know most people don't Go to Movies and that's actually because, it really is because Movies operate at a level of sophistication that are too hot that is too high for many people just like novels —

I mean hardly anyone reads, you know, and about 15% of the population, might be twenty percent cannot read well enough to follow written instructions —

And maybe it's 15% of the population or ten percent have never finished a book, never — but still, The Archetype still needs to manifest itself at different level, and so it manifests itself in Wrestling; but even there, where it is physical force, it's not just physical force, like it's a drama between Good and Evil, and you can see this so clearly and then in the Bret Hart documentary.


Because He’s The Good Guy, and no, The Bad Guys are really over the top Bad, it's a real drama it's like it's Good versus Evil in The Ring every time, and hopefully Good Wins, but Good often gets,  you know  — maybe The Bad Wrestler brings two of his friends in and they bring in chairs and they bash the hell out of The Good Guy — The whole audience is just outraged by this, and the documentary does a lovely job of showing that, but so —

Even at the level of physical combat, let's say, 
You can't reduce What's Good
What's Strong, it's just one element of it — 
better to be strong than to be weak, 
and so You can have a Strong hero because 
it's better to be strong than to be weak, 
but it's better to be strong and kind than to be strong 
and it's better to be strong and kind and wise 
than to be strong and kind and so  —

And that's True not only for human beings, but it's even True, let's say, at The Wolf or The Chimpanzee level , because one of the things you see with the chimp dominance hierarchies, if — and I Think I mentioned this before — if The Leader, the dominant male is really good at fostering social relations and being reciprocal and acts like grooming, and also paying attention to the females and their offspring, His Dynasty will be much stronger” 





“About nine months ago all these people 
would have been cheering him — 
I don't think they would have,  um —
 been saying stuff like this,
This is really disgusting.

I like Bret Hart because 
he has Family Values,
he's Loyal, he really, genuinely 
Likes his fans

Even though He may Hate, what  — 
The Morals of America,
 there are some people 
who Believe in exactly 
What He Believes in, you know?

He really inspired Me to Do many 
different things with My Life  —

He taught me how to —
That I had a giftto take it 
to my fullest extentso 
now I'm going to school 
for computer graphics 
and I owe it all to Brett
because four years ago,
 I wouldn't be going to school, and now, 
I'm going to graduate, because 
I just Didn't Believe in anything else
when I started Liking Brett
everything changed.”




Wednesday 4 October 2023

They’re Going to Win.





“We shouldn’t get bullied 
into believing that people can 
be any sex they want to be - 
They can’t

A Man is a Man and 
A Woman is a Woman
That’s just common sense.”









Rishi Sunak targets transgender people 
in ‘vile’ Conservative Party Conference speech
Will Millar
Wed, 4 October 2023 at 5:08 pm BST·2-min read


Rishi Sunak has been criticised for his comments made about transgender people at the Conservative Party Conference in Manchester. The speech took place just one day after openly gay Tory member, Andrew Boff, was ejected from the hall for accusing The Home Secretary, Suella Braverman, of homophobia and transphobia.

In his speech - which lasted over an hour - the Prime Minister addressed the subject of transgender rights, he said: “We shouldn’t get bullied into believing that people can be any sex they want to be - They can’t

A Man is a Man and A Woman is a Woman. That’s just common sense.”

The comments were met with anger from the public as many took to social media to vent their feelings. One user, called Andrew, said: “This statement has serious implications for The Gender Recognition Act. Trans people have been able to change their legal sex for 19 years (albeit in a now outdated process).


“It’s dangerous rhetoric and sets us on a path that rolls back decades of progress on minority rights.

Meanwhile India Willoughby posted on X - formerly Twitter, saying: “As a trans person in Britain this is terrifying. Especially the Tory audience cheering and clapping as the Prime Minister gives the go-ahead for transphobia, saying we’re not real. Trans hate crime at record levels. Absolutely horrendous.”

Another user added: “It is genuinely scary to be living in the UK now, particularly for trans people. To see the PM engage in blatant denial of the existence of trans people while the crowd cheers on is sickening.” Language such as ‘vile’ and ‘disgusting’ was also used on social media to describe the comments.

Rishi Sunak’s speech comes just one day after Suella Braverman was heckled by a prominent Conservative party member. Boff - who admitted to being a ‘loyal Tory for for more than 50 years’ - audibly questioned the Home Secretary from his seat after she said ideas like “gender ideology, white privilege, and anti-British history” are turning the UK ‘woke’.

There’s no such thing as gender ideology” Boff said, before adding the speech was “trash” and that it is “making our Conservative Party look transphobic and homophobic.” After being removed by security guards, the Tory member spoke to the press and accused the Home Secretary of ‘bullying’ trans people and the ‘LGBT’ community.

He said: “The home secretary said some things which I found quite objectionable, I consider them bullying, I consider them bullying trans people and the LGBT community.

I was born and brought up that when you see a bully you challenge them and that’s what I was doing and I challenged her.”

The Home Secretary addressed Mr Boff’s removal on X, saying his “heckles were silly but I think he should be forgiven and let back into conference”.

Gaze






“One might simplify this by saying : 
Men act and Women appear
Men Look at Women. 
Women watch themselves 
Being Looked-at. 

This determines not only 
most relations between 
Men and Women but also 
the relation of Women 
to themselves

The Surveyor of Woman 
in herself is Male
The Surveyed Female. 

Thus she turns herself into An Object — 
and most particularly An Object 
of VisionA Sight.”

— John Berger, 
Ways of Seeing




Dagger of The Mind is mentioned as 
taking place some time after 
a Christmas Party in the science labs, 
the previous year. 

This is one of the few times a religious 
holiday is mentioned in the Star Trek future, 
and Christmas in particular was 
not mentioned again until 
Star Trek : Generations

Similarly, Charlie X references Thanksgiving
and Catspaw references Halloween.




The Fair occupies Space, and there’s no shortage of Space in downstate IL. The Fairgrounds take up 300+ acres on the east side of Springfield, a depressed capital of 109,000 where you can’t spit without hitting some sort of Lincoln-site plaque. 

The Fair spreads itself out, and visually so. The Main Gate’s on a rise, and through the two sagged halves of cut ribbon you get a great specular vantage on the whole thing — virgin and sun-glittered, even the tents looking fresh-painted. It seems garish and innocent and endless and aggressively Special. Kids are having like little like epileptic fits all around us, frenzied with a need to somehow take in everything at once. 

I suspect that part of the self-conscious-community thing here has to do with Space. Rural Midwesterners live surrounded by unpopulated land, marooned in a space whose emptiness starts to become both physical and spiritual. It is not just people you get lonely for. You’re alienated from the very space around you, in a way, because out here the land’s less an environment than a commodity. The land’s basically a factory. You live in the same factory you work in. You spend an enormous amount of time with the land, but you’re still alienated from it in some way. It’s probably hard to feel any sort of Romantic spiritual connection to Nature when you have to make Your Living from it. (Is this line of thinking somehow Marxist? Not when so many IL farmers still own their own land, I guess. This is a whole different kind of alienation.

But so I theorize to Native Companion (who worked detassling summer corn with me in high school) that the Illinois State Fair’s animating thesis involves some kind of structured interval of communion with both neighbor and spacethe sheer fact of the land is to be celebrated here, its yields ogled and stock groomed and paraded, everything on decorative display. That what’s Special here is the offer of a vacation from alienation, a chance for a moment to love what real life out here can’t let you love. 

Native Companion, rummaging for her lighter, is about as interested in this stuff as she was about the child-as-empiricist-God-delusion horseshit back in the car, she apprises me. 

08/13/ 1040h

The livestock venues are at full occupancy animal-wise, but we seem to be the only Fairgoers who’ve come right over from the Opening Ceremony to tour them. You can now tell which barns are for which animals with your eyes closed

The horses are in their own individual stalls, with half-height doors and owners and grooms on stools by the doors, a lot of them dozing. The horses stand in hay. Billy Ray Cyrus plays loudly on some stableboy’s boom box. The horses have tight hides and apple-sized eyes that are set on the sides of their heads, like fish. I’ve rarely been this close to fine livestock. The horses’ faces are long and somehow suggestive of coffins. The racers are lanky, velvet over bone. The draft and show horses are mammoth and spotlessly groomed and more or less odourless — the acrid smell in here is just the horses’ pee. All their muscles are beautiful; the hides enhance them. Their tails whip around in sophisticated double-jointed ways, keeping the flies from mounting any kind of coordinated attack. (There really is such a thing as a horsefly.) The horses all make farty noises when they sigh, heads hanging over the short doors. They’re not for petting, though. When you come close they flatten their ears and show big teeth. The grooms laugh to themselves as we jump back. These are special competitive horses, intricately bred, w/ high-strung artistic temperaments. I wish I’d brought carrots : animals can be bought, emotionally. Stall after stall of horses. Standard horse-type colors. They eat the same hay they stand in. Occasional feedbags look like gas masks. A sudden clattering spray-sound like somebody hosing down siding turns out to be a glossy chocolate stallion, peeing. He’s at the back of his stall getting combed, and the door’s wide open, and we watch him pee. The stream’s an inch in diameter and throws up dust and hay and little chips of wood from the floor. We hunker down and have a look upward, and I suddenly for the first time understand a certain expression describing certain human males, an expression I’d heard but never truly understood till just now, prone and gazing upward in some blend of horror and awe. 

You can hear the cows all the way from the Horse Complex. The cow stalls are all doorless and open to view. I don’t guess a cow presents much of an escape risk. The cows in here are white-spotted dun or black, or else white with big continents of dun or black. They have no lips and their tongues are wide. Their eyes roll and they have huge nostrils. I’d always thought of swine as the really nostrily barnyard animal, but cows have some serious nostrils going on, gaping and wet and pink or black. One cow has a sort of mohawk. Cow manure smells wonderful — warm and herbal and blameless — but cows themselves stink in a special sort of rich biotic way, rather like a wet boot. Some of the owners are scrubbing down their entries for the upcoming Beef Show over at the Coliseum (I have a detailed Media Guide, courtesy of Wal-Mart). 

These cows stand immobilized in webs of canvas straps inside a steel frame while ag-professionals scrub them down with a hose-and-brush thing that also oozes soap. The cows do not like this one bit. One cow we watch getting scrubbed for a while—whose face seems eerily reminiscent of former British P.M. Winston Churchill’s face—trembles and shudders in its straps and makes the whole frame rock and clank, lowing, its eyes rolled almost to the whites. Native Companion and I cringe and make soft appalled noises. This cow’s lowing starts all the other cows lowing, or maybe they just see what they’re in for. The cow’s legs keep half-buckling, and the owner kicks at them (the legs). The owner’s face is intent but expressionless. White mucus hangs from the cow’s snout. Other ominous dripping and gushings from elsewhere. It almost tips the steel frame over at one point, and the owner punches the cow in the ribs. 

Swine have fur! I never thought of pigs as having fur. I’ve actually never been very close to a pig before, for olfactory reasons. Growing up over near Urbana, the hot days when the wind blew from the U. of I. Swine Barns just southwest of our neighborhood were very grim days indeed. The U. of I. Swine Barns were actually what made my father finally knuckle under and let us get central AC. Swine smell, Native Companion reports her own father saying, “like Death his very own self is takin’ a shit.The swine in here at the State Fair Swine Barn are show hogs, a breed called Poland China, their thin fur a kind of white crewcut over pink skin. A lot of the swine are down on their sides, stuporous and throbbing in the Barn’s heat. The awake ones grunt. They stand and lie on very clean large-curd sawdust in low-fenced pens. A couple of barrows are eating both the sawdust and their own excrement. Again, we’re the only tourists here. It also occurs to me that I didn’t see a single farmer or ag-professional at the Opening Ceremony. It’s like there are two different Fairs, different populations. 

A bullhorn on a wall announces that the Junior Pygmy Goat judging is under way over at the Goat Barn. 

Pigs are in fact fat, and a lot of these swine are frankly hugesay ⅓ the size of a Volkswagen. Every once in a while you hear about farmers getting mauled or killed by swine. No teeth in view here, though the swine’s hoofs look maul-capable—they’re cloven and pink and kind of obscene. I’m not sure whether they’re called hoofs or feet on swine. Rural Midwesterners learn by like second grade that there’s no such word as “hooves.” 

Some of the swine have large standing fans going in front of their pens, and twelve big ceiling-fans roar, but it’s still stifling in here. The smell is both vomity and excremental, like some hideous digestive disorder on a grand scale. Maybe a cholera ward would come close. The owners and swineherds all have on rubber boots nothing like L. L. Bean East-Coast boots. Some of the standing swine commune through the bars of their pens, snouts almost touching. 

The sleeping swine thrash in dreams, their hind legs working. Unless they’re in distress, swine grunt at a low constant pitch. It’s a pleasant sound. But now one butterscotch-colored swine is screaming. Distressed swine scream. The sound is both human and inhuman enough to make your hair stand. You can hear this one distressed swine all the way across the Barn. The professional swinemen ignore the pig, but we fuss on over, Native Companion making concerned baby-talk sounds until I shush her. The pig’s sides are heaving; it’s sitting up like a dog with its front legs quivering, screaming horribly. This pig’s keeper is nowhere in sight. A small sign on its pen says it’s a Hampshire Swine. It’s having respiratory trouble, clearly : I’m guessing it inhaled either sawdust or excrement. Or else maybe it’s just had it with the smell in here. Its front legs now buckle so it’s on its side spasming. Whenever it can get enough breath together it screams. It’s unendurable, but none of the ag-professionals comes vaulting over the pens to administer aid or anything. Native Companion and I are literally wringing our hands in sympathy. We both make plangent little noises at the pig. 

Native Companion tells me to go get somebody instead of standing there with my thumb up my butt. I feel enormous stress — nauseous smells, impotent sympathy, plus we’re behind schedule : we are currently missing the Jr. Pygmy Goats, Philatelic Judging at the Expo Building, a 4-H Dog Show at something called Club Mickey D’s, the Semifinals of the Midwest Arm-Wrestling Championships at the Lincoln Stage, a Ladies Camping Seminar, and the opening rounds of the Speed Casting Tournament over at the mysterious Conservation World. 

A swineherd kicks her Poland China sow awake so she can add more sawdust to its pen; Native Companion utters a pained sound. There are clearly exactly two Animal Rights advocates in this Swine Barn. We both can observe a kind of sullen, callous expertise in the demeanor of the ag-pros in here. A prime example of spiritual-alienation-from-land-as-factory, I posit. Except why take all the trouble to breed and train and care for a special animal and bring it all the way to the IL State Fair if you don’t care anything about it? 

Then it occurs to me that I had bacon yesterday and am even now looking forward to my first corn dog of the Fair. I’m standing here wringing my hands over a distressed swine and then I’m going to go pound down a corn dog. This is connected to my reluctance to charge over to a swine-pro and demand emergency resuscitative care for this agonized Hampshire. I can sort of picture the look the farmer would give me. Not that it’s profound, but I’m struck, amid the pig’s screams and wheezes, by the fact that these agricultural pros do not see their stock as pets or friends. They are just in the agribusiness of weight and meat. They are unconnected even at the Fair, this self-consciously Special occasion of connection. And why not, maybe? — even at The Fair, their products continue to drool and smell and ingest their own excrement and scream, and the work just goes on and on. I can imagine what the ag-pros must think of us, cooing at the swine : We Fairgoers don’t have to deal with the business of breeding and feeding our meat; our meat simply materialises at the corn-dog stand, allowing us to separate our healthy appetites from fur and screams and rolling eyes

We tourists get to indulge our tender Animal Rights feelings with our tummies full of bacon. I don’t know how keen these sullen farmers’ sense of irony is, but mine’s been honed East-Coast keen, and I feel like a bit of a schmuck in the Swine Barn

08/13/ 1150h

Since Native Companion was lured here for the day by the promise of free access to sphincter-loosening high-velocity rides, we make a quick descent into Happy Hollow. 

Most of the rides aren’t even twirling hellishly yet. Guys with ratchet wrenches are still cranking away at the Ring of Fire. The giant Gondola Ferris Wheel is only half-assembled, and its seat-draped lower half resembles a hideous molary grin. It’s over 100° in the sun, easy. The Happy Hollow Carnival area’s a kind of rectangular basin that extends east-west from near the Main Gate out to the steep pathless hillside just below Livestock. The Midway is made of dirt and flanked by carnival-game booths and ticket booths and rides. There’s a merry-go-round and a couple of sane-paced kids’ rides, but most of the rides down here look like genuine Near-Death Experiences. 

On this first morning the Hollow seems to be open only technically, and the ticket booths are unmanned, though heartbreaking little streams of AC’d air are blowing out through money-slots in the booths’ glass. Attendance is sparse, and I notice none of the ag-pros or farm people are anywhere in sight down here. What there are are carnies. A lot of them slouch and slump in awnings’ shade. Every one of them seems to chain-smoke. 

The Tilt-a-Whirl operator’s got his boots up on his control panel reading a motorcycle-and-naked-lady magazine while two guys attach enormous rubber hoses to the ride’s guts. We sidle over for a chat. The Operator’s 24 and from Bee Branch Arkansas, and has an earring and a huge tattoo of a motorcycle w/ naked lady on his triceps. He’s way more interested in chatting with Native Companion than with me. He’s been at this gig five years, touring with this one here same company here. Couldn’t rightly say if he liked it or not, the gig : like as compared to what? Broke in the trade on the Toss-a-Quarter-Onto-the-Plates game and got, like, transferred over to the Tilt-a-Whirl in ’91. He smokes Marlboro 100’s but wears a cap that says WINSTON. He wants to know if Native Companion’d like to take a quick walk back across the Hollow and see something way out of the usual range of what she’s used to. 

All around us are booths for various carny-type games. All the carny-game barkers have headset microphones; some are saying “Testing” and reciting their pitches’ lines in tentative warm-up ways. A lot of the pitches seem frankly sexual: “You got to get it up to get it in”; “Take it out and lay’er down, only a dollar”; “Make it stand up. Two dollars five chances. Make it stand up.” 

In the booths, rows of stuffed animals hang by their feet like game put out to cure. One barker’s testing his mike by saying “Testes” instead of “Testing.” It smells like machine grease and hair tonic down here, and there’s already a spoiled, garbagey smell. 

My Media Guide says 1993’s Happy Hollow is contracted to “… one of the largest owners of amusement attractions in the country,” one Blomsness and Thebault All-Star Amusement Enterprises of Crystal Lake IL, up near Chicago. But the carnies themselves all seem to be from the middle South — Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma. They are visibly unimpressed by the Press Credentials clipped to my shirt. They tend to look at Native Companion like She’s Food, which she ignores. There’s very little of that childhood sense of all the games and rides being Special and For-Me, I have to say. I promptly lose $4.00 trying to “get it up and in” by tossing miniature basketballs into angled straw baskets in such a way that they don’t bounce back out. The game’s barker can toss the balls behind his back and get them to stay in, but he’s right up next to the baskets. My shots carom out from eight feet away—the straw baskets look soft, but their bottoms make a suspicious steely sound when the balls hit. It’s so hot that we move in quick staggered vectors between areas of shade. I decline to take my shirt off because there’d be no way to display my Credentials. We zigzag gradually westward across the Hollow. I am keen to hit the Junior Beef Show which starts at 1300h. Then there are, of course, the Dessert Competition tents. One of the fully assembled rides near the Hollow’s west end is something called The Zipper. It’s riderless but in furious motion, a kind of Ferris Wheel on amphetamines. Individual caged cars are hinged to spin on their own axes as they go around in a tight vertical ellipse. The machine looks less like a zipper than the head of a chain saw. Its off-white paint is chipped, and it sounds like a shimmying V-12, and in general it’s something I’d run a mile in tight shoes to avoid riding. 

But Native Companion starts clapping and hopping around excitedly as we approach The Zipper. (This is a person who bungee jumps, to give you an idea.) And the operator at the controls sees her, waves back, and shouts down to Git on over and git some if she’s a mind to. 

He claims they want to test The Zipper somehow. He’s up on a kind of steel platform, elbowing a colleague next to him in a way I don’t much like. We have no tickets, I point out, and none of the cash-for-ticket booths are manned. By now we’re somehow at the base of the stairway up to the platform and control panel. 

The Operator says without looking at me that the matter of tickets this early on Opening Day “Ain’t no sweat off my balls.” The Operator’s colleague conducts Native Companion up the waffled-steel steps and straps her into a cage, upping a thumb at The Operator, who gives a sort of Rebel Yell and pulls a lever. Native C.’s cage begins to ascend. Pathetic little fingers appear in the cage’s mesh. 

The Zipper Operator is ageless and burnt-brown and has a mustache waxed to wicked points like steers’ horns, rolling a Drum cigarette with one hand as he nudges levers upward and the ellipse speeds up and the individual cages start to spin independently on their hinges. Native Companion is a blur of colours inside her cage, but The Operator and His Colleague (whose jeans have worked down his hips to the point where the top of his butt-crack is clearly visible) watch studiously as her spinning cage and the clanking empty cages circle the ellipse approx. once a second. I have a particular longstanding fear of things that spin independently inside a larger spin. I can barely even watch this. The Zipper is the colour of unbrushed teeth, with big scabs of rust. The Operator and colleague sit on a little steel bench before a panel full of black-knobbed levers. 

Do testicles themselves sweat? They’re supposed to be very temperature-sensitive. 

The colleague spits Skoal into a can he holds and tells The Operator to “Well then take her to Eight then you pussy.” The Zipper begins to whine and the thing to spin so fast that a detached car would surely be hurled into orbit. The Colleague has a small American flag folded into a bandanna around his head. The empty cages shudder and clank as they whirl, spinning independently. One long scream, wobbled by Doppler, is coming from Native C.’s cage, which is going around and around on its hinges while a shape inside tumbles like stuff in a dryer. My particular neurological makeup (extremely sensitive : carsick, airsick, heightsick; my sister likes to say I’m “lifesick) makes even just watching this an act of enormous personal courage. The scream goes on and on; it’s nothing like a swine’s. Then The Operator stops the ride abruptly with Native C.’s car at the top, so she’s hanging upside down inside the cage. I call up Is she OK, but the response is just high-pitched noises. I see the two carnies gazing upward very intently, shading their eyes. The operator’s stroking his mustache contemplatively. The cage’s inversion has made Native Companion’s dress fall up. They’re ogling her nethers, obviously. As they laugh, the sound literally sounds like Tee hee hee hee. A less sensitive neurological specimen probably would have stepped in at this point and stopped the whole grotesque exercise. 

My own makeup leans more toward disassociation when under stress. A mother in shorts is trying to get a stroller up the steps of the Funhouse. A kid in a Jurassic Park T-shirt is licking an enormous flat lollipop with a hypnotic spiral on it. A sign at a gas station we passed on Sangamon Avenue was hand-lettered and said “BLU-BLOCK SUNGLASSES — Like Seen On TV.” A Shell station off I-55 near Elkhart sold cans of snuff out of a vending machine. 15% of the female Fairgoers here have their hair in curlers. 25% are clinically fat. Midwestern fat people have no compunction about wearing shorts or halter-tops. A radio reporter had held his recorder’s mike up too close to a speaker during Governor E.’s opening remarks, causing hellacious feedback. 

Now The Operator’s joggling the choke-lever so The Zipper stutters back and forth, forward and backward, making N.C.’s top car spin around and around on its hinges. His Colleague’s T-shirt has a stoned Ninja Turtle on it, toking on a joint. There’s a distended A# scream from the whirling cage, as if Native C.’s getting slow-roasted. I summon saliva to step in and really say something stern, but at this point they start bringing her down. The Operator is deft at his panel; the car’s descent is almost fluffy. His hands on the levers are a kind of parody of tender care. The descent takes foreverominous silence from Native Companion’s car. The two carnies are laughing and slapping their knee. I clear my throat twice. There’s a trundly sound as Native Companion’s car gets locked down at the platform. Jiggles of movement in the cage, and the door’s latch slowly turns. I expect whatever husk of a human being emerges from the car to be hunched and sheet-white, dribbling fluids. Instead she sort of bounds out: “That was fucking great. Joo see that? Son bitch spun that car sixteen times, joo see it?” 

This woman is native Midwestern, from My Hometown. My prom date a dozen years ago. Now married, with three children, teaches water-aerobics to the obese and infirm. Her color is high. Her dress looks like the world’s worst case of static cling. She’s still got her chewing gum in, for God’s sake. 

She turns to the carnies: “You sons bitches that was fucking great. Assholes.” The Colleague is half-draped over The Operator; they’re roaring with laughter. 

Native Companion has her hands on her hips sternly, but she’s grinning. Am I the only one who was in touch with the manifestly overt sexual-harassment element in this whole episode? 

She takes the steel stairs down three at a time and starts up the hillside toward the food booths. There is no sanctioned path up the incredibly steep hill on the Hollow’s western side. Behind us The Operator calls out : “They don’t call me King of The Zipper for nuthin’, sweet thang.” 

She snorts and calls back over her shoulder “Oh you and whose fucking platoon?” and there’s more laughter behind us. 

I’m having a hard time keeping up on the slope. “Did you hear that?” I ask her. 

Jesus I thought I bought it for sure at the end that was so great. Fucking cornholers. But’d you see that one spin up top at the end, though?

Did you hear that Zipper King comment?” I say. She has her hand around my elbow and is helping me up the hillside’s slick grass.Did you sense something kind of sexual-harassmentish going on through that whole little sick exercise?” 

Oh for fuck’s sake Slug it was FUN (Ignore the nickname.) “Son of a bitch spun that car eighteen times.” 

They were looking up your dress. You couldn’t see them, maybe. They hung you upside down at a great height and made your dress fall up and ogled you. They shaded their eyes and made comments to each other. I saw the whole thing.” 

“Oh for fuck’s sake.” 

I slip a little bit and she catches my arm. 

So this doesn’t bother you? As a Midwesterner, you’re unbothered? Or did you just not have an accurate sense of what was going on back there?” 

So if I noticed or I didn’t, why does it have to be my deal? What, because there’s assholes in The World I don’t get to ride on The Zipper? I don’t get to ever spin? Maybe I shouldn’t ever go to the pool or ever get all girled up, just out of fear of assholes?” Her color is still high. 

So I’m curious, then, about what it would have taken back there, say, to have gotten you to lodge some sort of complaint with the Fair’s management.” 

You’re so fucking innocent, Slug,” she says. (The nickname’s a long story; ignore it.) Assholes are just assholes. What’s getting hot and bothered going to do about it except keep me from getting to have fun?” She has her hand on my elbow this whole time — the hillside’s a bitch. 

This is potentially key,” I’m saying. “This may be just the sort of regional politico-sexual contrast the swanky East-Coast magazine is keen for. The core value informing a kind of willed politico-sexual stoicism on your part is your prototypically Midwestern appreciation of fun —” 

Buy me some pork skins, you dipshit.” 

— whereas on the East Coast, politico-sexual indignation IS the fun. In New York, a woman who’d been hung upside down and ogled would go get a whole lot of other women together and there’d be this frenzy of politico-sexual indignation. They’d confront the ogler. File an injunction. Management’d find itself litigating expensivelyviolation of a woman’s right to nonharassed fun. I’m telling you. Personal and political fun merge somewhere just east of Cleveland, for women.” 

Native Companion kills a mosquito without looking at it. “And they all take Prozac and stick their finger down their throat too out there. They might ought to try just climbing on and spinning and ignoring assholes and saying Fuck ‘em. That’s pretty much all you can do with assholes.” 

This could be integral.

Tuesday 3 October 2023

The Art of a Sincere Apology

The Art of a Sincere Apology
\\
 #JordanPeterson #DrJordanBPeterson #DrJordanPeterson
Dr. Jordan Peterson delves into the complex concept of apologies. 
Have you ever wondered why people say, 
"If you're really sorry, you wouldn't have 
done it or said it in the first place"? 
Dr. Peterson explores the deeper meaning behind this phrase and the skepticism surrounding apologies.

Monday 2 October 2023

Desert Voices

You wanted to know how 
I get My Ideas...? By God.

The Whisper Behind You

"Dreams always come from behind You
not right between Your Eyes.... 

It sneaks up on You. 

Sometimes a Dream almost whispers,
and I've always said to My Kids, 
The Hardest Thing to 
Listen to Your Instincts
Your Human, personal Intuition.

[it] always whispers
it never shouts --

— Steven Spielberg

Frankie Says : --

 



~ In Xanadu Did Kublai Khan 

a Pleasuredome, erect ~







Orgasm has become a most 
mystified State of Feeling

Um, no one can be quite sure 
if they have it or not...

Um, is it just ejaculation 
or is it orgasm?

Is it just involuntary pelvic contractions?

Or is one having orgasm?





Spock’s Beard

Why Conspiracy Theorists are 
Taking Over the World - Naomi Klein
Intelligence Squared

 #doppelganger #intelligencesquared #deepfakes

Bestselling author and activist Naomi Klein goes down the rabbit hole in pursuit of her doppelganger – another well known writer with a name similar to hers but whose views couldn’t be more different from her own. 

She finds herself returning again and again to a place she calls Mirror World, where conspiracy theorists, anti-vaxxers and wellness influencers make common cause with far-right propagandists and demagogues. 


In conversation with journalist Ruchira Sharma, Klein sheds light on our own culture as we turn ourselves into polished virtual brands, publicly shame our enemies, watch as DeepFakes proliferate and whole nations flip from Democracy to something far more sinister. 





CBS-News Anchor
One of The World's leading physicians 
describes Donald Trump as, "America's Shadow". 

In a recent article, 
Dr. Deepak Chopra writes about how 
The Shadow includes all Dark Impulses 
like Hatred, Aggression, Sadism, 
Selfishness, Jealousy and more --

This comes as Dr. Chopra unveils
a new Health and Wellness app. 
Earlier, Josh Elliott talked to Dr. Chopra 
about his new push for Wellness 
as well as The 2016 Presidential election 


Dr. Deepak Chopra :
We have to Thank Donald Trump for 
Giving Permission to the entire American Public 
to expose The Shadow -- 

He represents The Collective Shadow right now.

The Shadow is that part of ourselves 
that We're embarrassed by --
You know, There's a Racist, There's a Bigot, 
There's a Hater, There's a Prejudiced Person, 
in ALL Human Beings, You know? 

We can't accuse just ONE person of being Racist
or Bigoted, or Prejudiced, or Ethnocentric 
or full of Hate, that part comes out 
when There's Crisis, when 
There are Dehumanizing 
conditions, such as War, when 
There's poor Leadership, when 
There's just Confusion in Society --

So, He represents that, and in a way, 
to Become AWARE of that is to start 
The Healing Process.

So I Think the fact that 
He has become abusive, 
He's displayed The Abuser 
in ALL of Us. 

We have that Shadow, and 
The Shadow is primitive and yet, 
millions have expressed Their Support 
for him with Their Votesthrough 
The Primary Season, to this point. 


Q.) Is it Fair, then, to Say that, perhaps, 
You Do not Line-up Donald Trump in 
The Crosshairs, so much as The Electorate 
that has supported him to this point? 

He's an exaggerated expression 
of something primitive in All of Us
so just to be aware of that, is - 

It's to bring Light to The Shadow.
You can't fight The Shadow
with The Shadow, okay? 
You can't fight Darkness 
with Darknessbut 
You CAN Shine The Light

So, He's Helping Us 
to Shine The Light -- 

Q.) What are Your Thoughts, then, 
on the presumptive Democratic 
nominee, now, Hillary Clinton

Dr. Deepak Chopra :
I Think right now, that's 
The Choice we have: 

If You have to make a Conscious Choice, 
We have to ask ourselves, 
WHO Our Leader will BE --

For the rest of The World, you know, 
Leadership comes at several levels; 

So, He represents 
Survival and Safety -- 
You might say, you know, 
The First Level of Need
but We have OTHER Needs... 

We have Needs for Success, for Jobs
for Love, for Compassion, for Higher Consciousness
for Creating a more Peaceful, Just, Sustainable, 
Healthier and Happier World, so We have to Decide

Who Do We want to represent Us 
and I know in fact you will be petting a follow-up piece to it --

It's certainly.... It's another.... 
It's an Interesting Way of Looking, 
as a Way of Looking at Ourselves, right now --

What is it in Him, that has 
brought-out this amazing 
Vulgarity of Dialogue, and 
Given Permission to everyone to be 
Politically Incorrect as well -- In fact, 
if You're Politically Correct, right now, 
You are -- You're not even cool

It's not cool to be Polite, Courteous, 
Deferential, Have Good Manners anymore.





Intelligence Squared has established itself as the leading forum for live, agenda-setting debates, talks and discussions around the world. Our aim is to promote a global conversation that enables people to make informed decisions about the issues that matter, in the company of the world's greatest minds and orators.

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#democracy #deepfakes #ruchirasharma #doppelganger #naomiklein #culture #antivaxxers #intelligencesquared #intelligencesquaredplus #iq2


One Man and His Dog




"Obviously, one of the most SUCCESSFUL Periods with Superman was The Fifties [ which is -- Fandom, please take note -- the exact OPPOSITE of what most people THINK it is, if you canvas Public Oppinion ], the Mort Weisinger stuff, which were HUGELY successful, they were read by KIDS, they were read by little girls, little boys....


I think what was great was that he took things that we all understood, like --


Superman suddenly has a DOG!

And he's got a DEN, that's got all His STUFF in it, and 

he's got RELATIVES (who are ALIENS), and

he's got FRIENDS, from The Future --


But the actual STORIES are still 

all about Guilt, and Loss, 

and Fear, and Love,

and EVERYTHING That We UNDERSTAND, 

but on an EPIC SCALE --


So, when Superman walks The Dog, 

he walks it past SATURN --

....but he's STILL walking the dog...!! 


He's like Your Dad, y'know? --

He's STILL gotta go out, walk the dog,

and he still goes home, and 

Lois gives him a hard time --


And I thought, 'Those are all the things that MAKE The Story', y'know?

Because the thing with Superman is, even when he can JUGGLE STARS,

he can still go home, and Lois Lane can undermine him with ONE Cruel Word...(!!)


And that's why we made him even MORE Powerful than ever,

because everyone was saying, 

"Oh, yoou can't do a Superman story,

'coz, if he can Do ANYTHING, then what conflicts are there...?"



And I thought, "Well.... 

EMOTIONAL Conflicts..!

The BIGGEST ones, The ones We ALL understand -- "