Cicada, My Cicada

If you happen to live in the eastern US (and possibly elsewhere), your local paper’s doubtless run numerous cicada-themed stories, probably something along the lines of, “well sure nobody really likes them but this only happens once every 17 years (and by the way, you can eat them)”, maybe even with like a 8×8″ color photograph on the front page, enough natural science trivia for several rounds of a short-lived game show based entirely on cicada facts, should anyone decide to put one together.

And sure, it’s kind of interesting. Maybe not general public interesting enough to repeatedly fill full-sized articles day after day, week after week, but interesting. (Interesting for any number of reasons on which I won’t attempt to speculate.)

But did you know we’re covering them up—entombing them in the ground? We’re covering them up with our shopping malls and housing developments and big box retailers and massive parking lots.

I don’t know that anyone’s going to start a Save the Cicadas Fund anytime soon, but it’s important to realize things like this, particularly when they should be so obvious, but aren’t. When the simple logic that 100% of the insects that have burrowed into the ground aren’t going to be able to claw their way out (if in fact they’re still alive and not dug up and crushed by bulldozers etc., which is probably a more likely scenario) should be one of the first observations made in any article about Brood X.

Shouldn’t it?

(ScienceDaily: “Urbanization Is Devastating About-to-emerge 17-year Brood X Cicadas”, Cornell University [May 18, 2004])

Touching the Void (****)

(2004) dir Kevin Macdonald – w/ Nicholas Aaron as Simon Yates and Brendan Mackey as Joe Simpson; also with Joe Simpson and Simon Yates
Synopsis: Based on the true story of two climbers (Joe Simpson [who wrote the book Touching the Void] and Simon Yates) who attempt an ascent of an unclimbed mountain in South America (Siula Grande) and meet with disastrous results. The ascent itself is almost without a hitch, but on the way down Joe breaks his leg, badly, and things rapidly deteriorate from there. This movie/documentary uses interviews with Joe and Simon and stunning, harrowing re-creations with “climber-doubles” (vs. stunt doubles) Nicholas Aaron and Brendan Mackey to re-tell the story.

Review: Having read the book (which has a name that’s suspiciously similar to that of the movie), it’s pretty amazing that Joe Simpson survives. It’s incredible, in fact. Unbelievable? Yeah, I’d go so far as to say that. What the movie adds to this is a highly visceral appreciation for just what transpired, something that no amount of words on rectangles of tree-pulp and no amount of still photos can evince. What few moments of overacting exist (keeping in mind that the actual situation is vastly beyond what most people have any ability to comprehend or relate to) are definitely overshadowed by the powerful atmosphere of the movie, which is surreally intense. This is not a casual movie. It’s compelling, well done entertainment that forces us to wonder how we define the limits of human endurance.

Rating: [••••] out of [•••••]

Etc.: Watch the trailer here, or here

A kangaroo named Lulu (and don’t forget the cockles!)

It’s enough to warms the cockles of your heart:

“A kangaroo named Lulu is to receive a national bravery award after raising the alarm to save an Australian farmer knocked unconscious by a fallen tree branch.

“Hobby farmer Leonard Richards was checking for storm damage on his property at Tanjil South, 150 km (93 miles) east of Melbourne, last September when he was hit by a falling branch. …Lulu began barking until Richards’ wife came to investigate, said the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA).”

Incredibly—and I know you’re not going to belive me, but bear with me here—Lulu is apparently “the first kangaroo to receive the Australian Animal Valour Award.”

On an interesting side-note, Michael Quinion has an interesting discussion on why exactly we say that something warms the cockles of our heart; raising the unsettling possibility that maybe, possibly, the expression should be, it warms the snails of your heart.

Mmmm. Snails of the heart.

(via Reuters: “Kangaroo wins award for saving farmer” [April 27, 2004]; Lulu’s web site; World Wide Words: “Cockles of your heart”)

But today isn’t about how my presence here devalues this fine institution

“Thank you Mr. President, I had forgotten how crushingly dull these ceremonies are. Thank you.

“My best to the choir. I have to say, that song never grows old for me. Whenever I hear that song, it reminds me of nothing.

“Today is the day you enter into the real world, and I should give you a few pointers on what it is. It’s actually not that different from the environment here. The biggest difference is you will now be paying for things, and the real world is not surrounded by three-foot brick wall. And the real world is not a restoration. If you see people in the real world making bricks out of straw and water, those people are not colonial re-enactors—they are poor. Help them.”

For the curious, Jon Stewart’s commencement address at William & Mary is available online. It’s great. I’m just barely resisting the urge to quote from the whole thing, so you should really read it.

(via MeFi)

Rappitz

What I told Eleanora Pearline Tomasa Billy-Lea was the same thing I told Cloyd—that plain and simple it wasn’t quite the massive problem she was making it out to be, that the straight of it was, rabbits didn’t need pose the same kind of threat to her sanity’s she thought they did. Wasn’t easy, what with Eleanora P.T.B-L. not speakin English proper, but I think I just about got through to her. It was popular understanding in the neighborhood that the long-eared sexmachines pretty much obsessed Eleanora P.T.B-L. and were in her eyes some kind of lèse majesté, to the best of her mental conception. I said, look, they might eat your veggies but they’re not gonna break down your door. But, like I previously broke the news to you, Eleanora didn’t quite understand English, not in any real useful way. So’s like talking to a brick wall. I pantomimed a bit, lookin like I was a rabbit free and easy and not breaking down her door. Ellie (I’ll call her that, so as to not unduly try your tolerance for repetition and all) spoke real slowly and even wrote out her words for me, but it’n just looked a bunch of chickenscratchings anyway, not much use to me. Ellie had like her own private language, not one anyone else could’ve understood anyway. But when she drew a rabbit, crudely as she did, it was still pretty obviously apparent what her intention was, the two-eared hoppin critter just about decapitated on her sheet of paper, its head lopped off with what could’ve been either a machete or a bread knife. She went and left the room and when she came back had with her a pitcher of something like orange juice and a red marker, what she used to finish her work of art. The red marker pretty well made her intentions clear, the rabbit’s death not so much in question. As I came to understand it, her interest was the rabbits dead and buried, if not dead’n burnt. And she wanted me to do it.

What was a mystery to me was how I was to go about taking on the rabbits—taking on, as it were, the long-eared foe. I hadn’t so much as penned a domestic-type rabbit in a cage, much less tracked down and exterminated a wild-type rabbit, much less numerous wild-type rabbits of indeterminate temperament. Fact being I didn’t even know how many rabbits there were. I’d seen one or two from time to time, but hadn’t ever really entertained any kind of census of the critters. And Suburban Ecosystem Population Dynamics (Bio/ES 318B) (with Prof. Gloria Rasmussen) was a class I didn’t really do so hot in, to put things mildly. So first things first I went soon as I could to see Winston Shea, who was like an accountant or something and known for his proficiency with numbers. No problem was what Winston said; sure he’d help me in my little mission. Winston and I drove around the neighborhood real stealth with a disposable camera a light meter and a notepad and took survey of the local environs, noting visible rabbits and visible signs of rabbits, Winston sometimes even pointing out invisible signs of rabbits, which I thought was extraordinarily clever and pretty obviously a sign of the keen intellect for which he was so widely renowned.

It took three rounds of the block and several heated arguments, but our results were basically incontrovertible. It seemed that, in the 1300 block of Wainsmither Avenue, there were somewhere between 4,900 (the low estimate, which Winston said he didn’t put much stock in) and 45,000 rabbits. 27,450 being our best estimate. To me it seemed slightly astronomically high—seeing as I couldn’t recall ever seeing the beasts in groups of more than three or four—but as I’ve mentioned previously (and with some trepidation, as it’s something I generally like to keep private), Bio 318B wasn’t quite my pizza pie, if you know what I mean.

Knowing there were probably twenty-some-thousand rabbits to take care of in the fashion yet to be decided upon, my heart fluttered with nervousness. Ideally I also wanted something like a reassurance of the ethicality of what I was doing, wiping twenty-thousand odd lives off the face of Wainsmither Avenue—particularly since, as now seemed blatantly clear, relocation was completely out of the picture. One rabbit, or even two or four hundred, maybe. But 27,450? Impossible.

It was clear I was in way over my head. I hoped Ellie would be happy when I was all done.

First casualty of the battle wasn’t so much a rabbit as it was one of their sympathizers, 8-year-old Awilda Rowe who keeled over in a dead faint when she heard about the massive plans in the works to clean out the rabbit-scum of the neighborhood. She literally had to be dragged away across the front lawn of her house and into its somnolent enclosure, dark and away from the soon-to-be smell of blood in the air. Her mother apologized, Barry dragging the girl away, said, she didn’t know how the girl got these ideas in her head, me wanting to exterminate the placid creatures, ridiculous! I said sorry but it’s true and Mrs. Rowe nearabout keeled over too, limping wordlessly back into her abode. It’s for Ellie, I shouted before she slammed the oak door shut. Ellie, I murmured. Wondering, why the hell’d she have to pick me for the job?

I went back to Ellie’s house, wanting to set things straight and just about willing to lay down my soul on behalf of the rabbits, which I didn’t so much love or hate as was indifferent towards. I knocked on the door and Cloyd answered. ‘fore I even got so much as a syllable in edgewise, he divulged how Ellie’d gone and booked a room at some cottagey bed-n-breakfast off in the hills somewhere and wasn’t coming back till all the rabbits were dead’n gone. Was the short of it, anyways. So I asked, could he help me figure out how we were going to accomplish this task? ‘s your task, he said, shrugging. Cloyd was never a terribly ambitious man, and wasn’t one to tread on someone else’s job, never mind if that job was putting out the fire on his own house. “Complacent” was the word some people used. The words “lifeless” and “unindustrious” weren’t unknown in descriptions of Cloyd’s disposition toward things.

Having exhausted that avenue and not exactly having much in the way of ideas, I treaded, trepidant, onward to the residence of a known rapscallion, Osvaldo. Osvaldo I didn’t much like, but I thought he’d enjoy the job, figuring out how to rid the rabbits. I walked up the bramble-lined lane rather quickly, eventually making my way over the pretty insubstantial hump of Mt. Arnick and approaching the quasi-gothic ranch house in which Osvaldo was known to live. Name on his mailbox said, OSVALDO BLANKENSHIP; white lettering on a plain black mailbox. The door opened before I had a chance to even contemplate knocking on it.

“I’ve been waiting for you,” Osvaldo said slyly, whole herds of shivers traveling down my spine.

Cloyd had called ahead and told Osvaldo that I was coming, is what he meant. Didn’t know why or how or much of anything, other than that I was to show up sooner or later, which I did as was pretty obvious to everyone present. Said, did I want to come inside and discuss the situation? Saying ‘situation’ like that and making it seem so improbably gargantuan a task so as to be practically impossible, or at least befitting of a righteous historical figure of larger stature than my own. I said, no, I didn’t mind standing outside and talking it over. “Though I wouldn’t call it a situation, is all,” I clarified.

I more or less clarified how Ellie (“Eleanora Pearline Tomasa Billy-Lea”, I said for the benefit of Osvaldo, who wasn’t exactly known for his abundant socialization in amongst the rest of the neighborhood) had this maybe vaguely morbid or psychiatric fixation on the lagomorphs that dwelt in and around her house—how she wanted them dead being the gist of the situation. Though I wouldn’t call it a situation, I re-clarified.

I told Osvaldo I was wondering if he might have some kind of scheme for ridding the twitch-nosey mammals. He gave it some thought, standing there and hmming and hawing and hewing, scratching his chin thoughtfully and maybe once or twice digging wax out of his ear, and then said, sure, he didn’t see it would be a big problem. How many were there, anyway?

And I said, twenty-thousand, give or take.

Osvaldo? His eyes lit up like tiny lights, bright and deranged.

We set to work on his plans at once.

Chain reaction was the idea Osvaldo had, rabbits being somewhat apt to a communal existence (as was his understanding). Easier than going around and, one by one, lopping off the rabbits’ heads—which, among other things, would be especially gory and likely to rouse something of an outcry in the neighborhood, never mind how much the people liked or didn’t like rabbits (Eleanora excluded)—we’d start with one rabbit and, through the magic of physics or something like it, have that rabbit become so much as the downfall of the entire rabbit culture.

Fire was one of a large subset of possibilities that Osvaldo presented to me. He’d never seen it done in like movies or read it in books or anything, but it didn’t seem impossible; we’d be all Prometheus-like and give an unsuspecting rabbit fire, via maybe a specially-constructed rabbit-scale torch or something, that rabbit then going on to spread the flame (literally and so to speak), burning all of rabbitdom to the ground. He’d (or she’d) carry the torch (literally, again), all the rabbits so entranced and fascinated and in wonderment of the dancing orange tongue that they’d be entirely oblivious to its real-life ramifications, e.g., it burning their warren to crisp blackness and decimating them most impolitely. Was one idea he had along this theme of lettin the rabbits do the work for us.

Another idea was something of like germ warfare. Contaminate one rabbit, have it spread the dread disease amongst its kind. Problem being that neither Osvaldo nor me really had much in the way of epidemiology. Which isn’t to say that we didn’t have a copy of that gorgeous Scientific American paperback, Investigating Disease Patterns, on our respective coffee tables, or that we hadn’t read Hot Zone, etc., but neither of these books quite read like a how-to manual on rabbit decimation, which is really what we were looking for. And look at Australia. My reasoning was, if something like rabbitpox could be real effective-like on a massive population of rabbits, Australia wouldn’t’ve had such a problem as it did. Excluding for a moment the possibility of Osvaldo’s sheer and utter brilliance above and beyond any other human being ever to walk the face (or crawl under the surface) of the Mother Goddess Gaia.

“I read in a book once,” said Osvaldo, thinking, “how these people spread this disease to their target by like infected blankets or somethin. Could work.”

I pointed out—remaining of course affable and deferential to Osvaldo’s presumed genius in his limited field of expertise—that, far as I knew, rabbits didn’t have much need for anything like blankets, not in the real world outside of, e.g., Beatrix Potter and so forth. They don’t even wear shoes, is what I said.

“Besides,” I added, “what’s to say we wouldn’t create a rabbit-human-virus hybrid, a supervirus so virulent that it might as easily wipe out six billion persons as twenty-thousand rabbits, no difference one way or the other to it.”

Osvaldo’s eyes lit up, but he agreed it didn’t seem so plausible for this particular task.

Poison, of course, was another outlet. But again, it wasn’t something either of us’d had much experience in. Not with rabbits, anyway.

What about specially-trained parasites, Osvaldo asked.
What about prescription drugs, he asked. We could get them addicted, he said (meaning the rabbits).
What about we give them rock-n-roll and get them to die young?
What about we introduce them to the thrill and excitement of interstate highways?

No doubt about it: the man was brilliant. Too brilliant, almost. But anyway, I knew Ellie wouldn’t have to wait much longer fore she could come back and enjoy a de-rabbited neighborhood, clean and safe and luxurious and even (maybe) a wee bit bucolic. Perfection.

I thought long and hard about Eleanora Pearline Tomasa Billy-Lea as Osvaldo and I sat working away at our fool-proof way of outsing the rabbits out of this life and into the next, makin the world a safe place for civilization and so forth. Me thinking and wondering not a little bit maybe why I was the one had to instigate the whole thing—getting rid of the rabbits, who hadn’t really done me any particular harm. Me wondering not a little bit why Ellie wanted me to do the thing, being as her and I weren’t exactly like Bonnie and Clyde or anything. I knew her name and, to hear Cloyd (since I couldn’t ever right understand what she said, her not speaking English), she knew mine; beyond that, us not really having much interaction day-to-day, now least of all with her off in some bed-n-breakfast waiting for me to exact her wishes.

Osvaldo and I sat on the ground outside his hut, books and magazines piled up in minor mountain ranges of paper around us, a sea of crumpled papers in front of us, sketchy ideas we’d thought through and then discarded as impossible or improbable or unfeasible, and a large glossy photo of a rabbit propped up against a tree, just so O. and I didn’t forget what it was we were dealing with, didn’t get distracted by specifics. Was best we could easily call to mind the face of evil, long-eared and doe-eyed. (Rabbit-eyed, sure, you wanna split hairs.) All around us the night began to come out, stars peaking through the dimming fabric of sky and crickets slowly yawning and crawling out of bed and whirring to life, telling us how it’s about 72º Fahrenheit (what with them not knowing Celcius real particularly well). I’m thinking, maybe we need a candle. A flashlight.

The plan we’re working on goes like this: Osvaldo and I construct a gigantic, faux-garden. Rich, lucious California carrots (or whatever it is it the grocer says rabbits like best, when we get to the grocery store), magnificent heads of cabbage, and so forth. The most delightful feast a rabbit’s ever laid eyes on, is what the plan is. Us then going about ‘planting’ these delicacies in a neat patch of ground. But not just any patch of ground. What we’ll do first is, we’ll lay a giant, humongous square of burlap out on the ground (burlap because it’s most like soil, least likely to be recognized by the rabbits as alien, assuming for the time being that they’d care anyway, what with the most amazing feast a rabbit’s ever set its rabbit eyes on), tying each of the four ends to like a metal cable or something, four cables which we’ll then real subversively knot together at their far terminus, what knot we’ll then hook to a well-concealed crane. The plan is that the rabbits will come in one hopping horde to devour the goodies, enter the burlap garden, and be hauled into a giant gunny-sack by the crane.

Which honestly is as far as our plan’s gotten. We’re thinking that we’ll either toss the sack over a cliff or into a lake or something: into a non-rabbit-friendly environment, in short.

Osvaldo says it will take care of like (he’s estimating) 18,000 rabbits or so, his margin of error something like 3%. The rest of the rabbits, he says, we’ll take care of when the time comes.

Lots of people aren’t going to be happy at this, which is why I’m thinking long and hard about Ellie and why she wants me to go about doing this job. Wondering if it’s going to be worth the harassment by my fellow neighbors who don’t bear any real what you’d call animosity towards the rabbits all around them.

Osvaldo and I’d just about worked out all the glitches in our plan and I said, I’d meet him at the grocery store, there were some things I had to do. He nodded at me, grinning silly, and I walked back down the lane into town.

My plan was, I wanted to visit Ellie’s house, perhaps have a good-nature chat with Cloyd, voicing my doubts and whatnot. And as I walk through town, I realize I’m humming, like I’m happy or something, and as I’m walking, I realize that everyone’s coming out of their little houses to watch me. They’re coming out in their nightgowns and robes and glaring at me. Sulking on their front lawns. Ellie’s house looming out in front, a beacon in the midst of a metaphorical fog; a fog of people not being able to understand how’s we’ll be so much better off with all these rabbits gone. Ellie’s voice echoing in my head even though I can’t really understand much of what she’s saying. Can’t understand anything, really.

As I’m walking down the street, it occurs to me how Osvaldo wrote out everything he wanted to tell me. He’d talk too, but I couldn’t really understand him, is what I’m realizing. His voice, as I think about it, sounding more and more like the garbled noise of Ellie.

Distracted, I nearly trip over a rock that’s inexplicably on the sidewalk. Like, who’d leave a rock on the sidewalk? A little dazed from my stumble, I realize that my shoe went flying off into the darkness. Everyone standing all around me, watching, glaring, their robes and nightgowns and boxers and pajamas rustling slightly in the breeze, like leaves. I sit on the curb of the sidewalk to put my shoe back on (after I find it) and realize: I’m putting the shoe, which isn’t so much a shoe as it is a cloth bootie, onto a rabbit’s foot, that rabbit’s foot being mine. And as I scratch my head, I realize: I’m scratching my head with my foot.

Counting people as I look around, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Counting, 11,023, 11,024, 11,025. Counting, 22,453, 22,454, 22,455. Counting, 27,833, 27,834, 27,835.

I look at Ellie’s house and realize it isn’t so much far away as it is tall, enormous.

Me remembering how, when I rode around in the car with Winston, I was like a little kid in the seat next to him; me remembering how gigantic everything was around me, how the seat-belt just dangled, lifeless and useless behind me.

There are whispers all around me.
Do you think he realizes?

I sit there on the sidewalk, winking, blinking, twitching. Realizing.

The door opens on Ellie’s house, and Cloyd stands there, looking around with a flashlight. He shouts out something, but it doesn’t make much sense, it’s hard to understand. Me realizing, I’m the one who doesn’t speak English proper.

I let out a mad squeal and a cheer goes out, everyone realizing that I understand, and we surge forward, a giant, seething mass of rabbits that tramples, claws, and bites Cloyd, the combined weight and fury of twenty-some-thousand rabbits utterly and completely destroying him, a limp mangled body all that’s left behind, gigantic and sticky and sick-smelling.

After that it’s Winston. Then we go back for Osvaldo. We track down Ellie and catch her while she’s sleeping.

Then we push onward, towards human towns and housing developments and cities, me telling everyone, Now we know how they think, now we can use their wisdom against them.

Us leaving a wide swath of sick-smelling desolation in our wake.

Sailor mongers, the lot of ’em!

It’s not too many times you can skim through the news and see the phrase ‘sailor mongering’ tossed around like a beach ball.

In a positive sign for society as a whole, the ‘sailor mongering’ case was thrown out by a Miami judge.

Though I’m not saying it’s necessarily a bad thing that maybe a little broader cross-section of the public now has the phrase “sailor mongering” in its vocabulary.

As an aside, this explication of ‘sailor mongering’ is golden:

I think I get it. A whore monger deals in whores, fishmonger in fish, ironmonger ironware (& FWIW costermonger ‘costards’= apples) Sailor mongers dealt in befuddled drunken sailors selling them on to others. The sailor mongering legislation criminalised the activity which was the preamble to spriting matelots off the ship, namely the boarding of the ships coming into harbour by uninvited guests.

(Lots of sources, not gonna list ’em all. Follow the links if you’re curious. Or do the Google news thing.)

Rundown: Age, NYT, and Corporate-financed studies

  • How Old Do You Think I Am? A project where people post their picture online to have others guess at their age. The possible benefit (and potential detriment) being that you get a more or less objective answer to the question, “how old do I look?” via the composite (i.e., average of guesses) that shows up in connection to your glowing mug. Each person includes a small quote on what they’ve learned. What I’ve learned is, I’m horrible at guessing ages. It’s kinda fun, in a weird way. (via MeFi)
  • The New York Times is fine and lovely, but it would be nice if their articles were available for more than like a week (or whatever it is). Anyway, Italy’s had 59 governments since 1946 and the US is falling behind in the sciences. And despite the fact that purchasing articles from the NYT is “quick and secure,” I don’t particularly want to pay $5.90 to elaborate on those points, so there you have it.
  • An article in the Guardian reports that 1 in 8 Britons has been or is currently being stalked. 1 in 8 seems like a ridiculously high, though certainly not impossible, number. Less surprisingly, the figure is higher for women, at 1 in 6. The study was commissioned by an insurance company that has just introduced a policy to cover… um, well, “the harm caused by stalkers.” This doesn’t necessarily mean that the study itself is suspect, but it does mean that you have to absorb this information in the right context. My guess is that the study cast a pretty broad net, defining “stalking” fairly generously. (via Guardian: “One in eight Britons has been stalked” by Rosie Cowan [May 6, 2004])

10 Stories You Need To Know More About (Or Do You?)

In a long, tired tradition of trying to bring important, underreported stories to the forefront, the UN’s put together a web page of “10 Stories the world needs to know more about.” Needless to say, you should probably take a least a couple minutes to skim over the details of various catastrophes and humanitarian crises that haven’t so much as grazed the collective western consciousness. So you can “be informed.” Each story has its own page, with a brief summary of whatever conflict, etc., has made its way into the UN’s list.

But what does it really mean to be informed?

The sad fact is that even these (the UN stories) probably aren’t the nonreported (or underreported) stories that most affect you the reader; the sad fact being that you probably don’t need to look to Africa or Asia to hear about a vast, unacknowledged tragedy-in-progress. You probably don’t need to venture very far geographically—physically or mentally—to find a subset of people that’s suffering in one way or another.

It strikes me that maybe delocalization of news is itself a problem, that superficial (or even mildly analytic) knowledge of Important news is not by default a good thing.

Hear me out.

The news that circulates—via TV, radio, and the internet—is composed of encapsulated bits of things that are kind of universally interesting (human interest, or human catastrophe, or human innovation), but divorced from Place. Sure, the place is included in the first sentence of the story: e.g., “WHITEHORSE (AP) – meteor crashed” and so forth, but what does that mean? People—some people anyway—like to be informed of what’s going on around the world. So they glean stories from various newspapers, web sites, shows on the moving-picture-box, etc.; what they get isn’t a picture of news that is relevant to them, though. Do they (you) pay extra-close attention to stories that pique your interest? Yes. Are some of the stories that pique your interest ones that are personally relevant? Sure. But for the most part, do most of the news bits you glean really meang anything to you personally?

And if they don’t, (and if you don’t realistically have any chance of impacting their resolution—since, after all, the idea that an individual can ‘make a difference’, really and truly, is in some ways a manufactured lie), why is it important to Be Informed? So you can sleep with the knowledge that you are socially conscious? That, unlike Lonny J. Nobody, you know about the child soldiers in Uganda?

Unfortunately, I’ve dug myself into a rhetorical hole, because I have absolutely no idea of how to even begin answering these questions. I can think of about 53 other questions, but that’s not going to help me right now. In fact I do believe it’s important to know what’s going on around the globe, to one extent or another, regardless of your personal abililty to alleviate that suffering. It’s possible to be informed in a technical sense—to be able to rattle off thirty paraphrased accounts of what’s going on in Japan and Niger and Taiwan and Canada and Ecuador—without being locally informed or really being able to translate that massive body of knowledge into any kind of socially useful action.

(For the record, I fully intend to continue to post stories that do not directly pertain to my locality, that really serve no purpose other than to entertain, and that probably mean nothing to you [or me]. But it’s something to think about, nonetheless. [Off the top of my head, I have a good story about a kangaroo saving the life of its owner that I’m probably going to post sooner or later.] Fortunately, not having answers doesn’t mean you can’t ask the questions.)

Red Barn, Red Barn

Delicious (the quote starts slow, but the end’s worth it):

“The intellectual position of Jackson, Venturi, and Lewis vis-a-vis the American landscape illustrates how the discontinuities of our everyday surroundings are mirrored by the discontinuities of the university.

“Thus, a Jacksonian student of landscape can observe a Red Barn hamburger joint, he can remark on its architectural resemblance to certain farm structures of the past, measure its dimensions, figure out the materials that went into building it, record the square footage of its parking lot, count the number of cars that come and go, the length of time that each customer lingers inside, the average sum spent on a meal, the temperature of the iceberg lettuce in its bin in the salad bar—all down to the last infinitesimal detail—and never arrive at the conclusion that the Red Barn is an ignoble piece of shit that degrades the community.” (Emphasis added)

p. 123-124, The Geography of Nowhere by James Howard Kunstler

Rundown: Abu Ghraib, The Passion of The Christ, etc

elvis and nixon