Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Isn't Life Wonderful?

This morning I meditate on things that make me giddy. For instance, this from LiveScience (thanks James Taranto):

Warming temperatures are melting patches of ice that have been in place for thousands of years in the mountains of the Canadian High Arctic and in turn revealing a treasure trove of ancient hunting tools.
Or this from the Old Testament:

A group of Chinese and Turkish evangelical explorers say wooden remains they have discovered on Mount Ararat in eastern Turkey are the remains of Noah's Ark.

The group claims that carbon dating proves the relics are 4,800 years old, meaning they date to around the same time the ark was said to be afloat. Mt. Ararat has long been suspected as the final resting place of the craft by evangelicals and literalists hoping to validate biblical stories.

Yeung Wing-Cheung, from the Noah's Ark Ministries International research team that made the discovery, said: "It's not 100 percent that it is Noah's Ark, but we think it is 99.9 percent that this is it."
By the way, I love carbon dating. Some of the best experiences of my life occurred when I was out on a carbon date.

But shouldn't it be asked whether the tools left under the ice were used to build Noah's Ark?

__________________

Long ago I wondered in front of my friends (who were rightly concerned) what life would be like if some sense other than sight or hearing was the dominant sense humans relied upon. "What if it was taste?" I asked. Can you imagine travel to the city? Just think of asking for directions to a particular museum:

"First, find the oily licorice line and follow it until you hit the minty thread. Follow that until you hit the curious blend of horse manure, ammonia and cranberry sauce, turn right and, somewhere around the pepperoni and tobacco swatch, you'll find the musuem. There was a beer-and-hot-dogs block party last night near the pepperoni and tobacco zone, so watch your tongue. Oh, and don't be fooled by the chocolate and cream crossing. That's just a tourist trap."

Indeed, if taste was humanity's dominant sense, just imagine how tricky it would have been for Noah to collect animals -- male and female -- for his Ark.

On second thought, don't imagine it.

(And don't try it.)



Peace and mirth. 


Tuesday, April 27, 2010

The Weather Forecast: Clearly Foggy

It is sad, isn't it, that pols, pundits and journalists are imputing violent and racist motives to the Tea Party? I partly bow in incredulity. Mostly, I bow in sorrow. I find that most of my liberal peers who propose such foolishness have proven themselves mindless automatons, robots regurgitating demonstrably false material. 

Propaganda is not some lost art rooted in black-and-white photography. It's in color, 3D, and breathing -- in mechanical rhythm. 

It is sad, too, that any president of the United States would suggest it is somehow wrong for a state to legally defend itself from an influx of people whose very entry into that state is criminal. I simply do not get it. Oh, yes, I get it in the most cynical way, that the current occupant of the Oval Office is guarding a political agenda, and his position in power. But in a moral and legal sense I find Mr. Obama's  stance senseless. 

If you were (or are) a philosopher, or a prophet, or if you are given to broad speculations, how would YOU make sense of what we see going on in America today? What is the meta-story here; what is the real ideological battle before us? This isn't just about parties; it isn't just about politics, is it? There is more going on here, no? If not, doesn't it at least FEEL like there is more going on? 

Right now, I find myself resembling a Seinfeld character. Those of you familiar with that show will recall George Constanza's revelation that if he does the exact opposite of what his impulses tell him to do, he will, in effect, conquer the world. Really, the Opposite George episode is absurdly funny. My habit, however, is not to do the opposite, but to believe the opposite, at least when I hear Mr. Obama speak. If he says that his plan is to institute X, I hear that he is actually instituting not-X. If he says "we are not instituting, as some have claimed, a takeover of ...", I know the takeover is certain. If he says, "Now let me make myself perfectly clear" -- as if anyone is preventing him from being utterly pellucid -- I know that he is purposely being obfuscatory. (And I note, somewhat glibly, that Mr. Obama's habit of making himself perfectly clear proves he does indeed have super-powers.) 

In other words, I have never mistrusted any president as completely as I mistrust him. 

©Contratimes/2010. All Rights Reserved. 

The Lord Of The Frail


I beg you, forgive me for my unannounced absence. I've been discourteous. You deserve better from me. If I am going to have a journal such as this, I should at least pretend I have not forsaken it. It's a bit like having a home; I could at least mow the lawn, clean up the brush, and hide the lawn tools in a simple show of caring.

__________________

As some of you know, I've had a little bit of a rough time lately. This is perhaps too much information for this forum, but I should let you know, especially since I mentioned some of my struggles in my essay "Transparency."

I recently placed my mother in a nursing home. What can I say about that? And in the past few weeks I've attended four funerals; and I learned of the death of one of my favorite college professors early last week.

And then there's the death of my dog, a beloved companion who's been part of this family for 13 years.

Worst of all, my wife is sick. No, no. What's worse is the recent news that her sister has ALS. On Sunday I joined my family, sans my wife, in Boston (Chelsea, to be exact) for the Walk To Defeat ALS. (I walked alone, camera in hand, largely to hide the fact I was sobbing. It was an awesome day, but I am weak.)

__________________

This may mean little to anyone here, if anyone happens to even stop in much anymore. No doubt it will most likely only speak to my Christian friends. But I thought I'd share it. It's something I wrote to a friend the other day, someone who has lost her faith and now defines herself a "weak atheist." She is a lovely soul.

Recently she was voicing criticism about the Christian message, that the most important thing is God, about what He wants, needs, expects, requires. That it's all about Him, about His exaltation and glory, and that all thoughts, particularly those wrought in suffering, have to be shaped towards God's inexplicable Greatness. In response, I sent this along:


I guess what I am saying is that Christianity is not what you’ve said it is. The highest good is whatever God would die for: He did not die for Himself, but for humanity. He became a Servant, even a Servant of death. That’s news that no Islam, Hindu, or Buddhist revelation has even remotely reported.

The Christian God is the weak God.

It's something to think about.

Peace to you.

BG

Reluctance Incarnate: Confessions And Anxieties

[Written 10 days ago.]

It is Friday, the end of the week. This is the day of silence in the blogosphere, the day when few people pay attention to things said. Here, at Contratimes, I will be lucky if I raise a single comment from the swirling waters I am fishing, the waters flowing toward weekend plans and vacation getaways.

____________________

This morning, I attended a Republican gathering in a town north of here. It was a breakfast gathering at a local diner, and it was my first time to attend this twice-monthly event. 

And I spoke.

You see, as I mentioned earlier, I have several folks encouraging me to run for the NH House of Representatives, perhaps the lowliest elected position (I am not complaining) a person could attain in NH state governance. Of course, since I am a conservative, the natural fit for me is the Republican Party. But I have a confession to make: I've never been a member of ANY political party. Not only that, I have never given a penny -- and not even a dollar -- to any political party, candidate or PAC.

Granted, some will perceive this as evidence of indifference. But it isn't. Instead, it's about appearances: since I've tried to work and live as a journalist and writer, I have wanted to be as unattached as possible so readers, colleagues, friends and neighbors were certain my loyalties were not rooted in purely financial or partisan interests. Not being attached to anything kept me free of the charge that I was a mere ideologue of the Republican establishment. Plus, my reluctance to join a party was rooted in a fierce independence, even a rebellious streak. I readily admit this borders on vanity and conceit on my part, that I think I am too sophisticated or self-reflective to join the mob, or follow what is vogue, hip, chic. Abhorring pop-culture, for instance, is for some a great boast, as it draws attention to their singularity and their single-mindedness, and to their allegedly impeccable taste.

This morning I still find myself reluctant to identify with a party, despite the undeniable fact that I am a socially and politically conservative person through and through. Of course, I feel like the word "conservative" has come to mean something nearly grotesque, suggesting nothing but a press backwards toward some age of unenlightened living. My impulse is to cry out against such a crass claim, denouncing it as an attack on history: that to be truly conservative is nothing more than to learn from one's mistakes and to stop repeating them when history has proven them foolish, ineffective. In fact, I see conservatism as far more rebellious than progressive liberalism; I see conservatism as counter-cultural and even, in a sense, subversive. It is for me a protest against mediocrity, insipidity, and the suppression of the human spirit. History is anathema to progressives; standing in their way with its constant reminders of human failures and the futility of so many humanitarian efforts toward utopia, history in all its fulness is derided as quaint, racist, sexist, and even laughable by many of my progressive peers. For progressives, most history is to be viewed with embarrassment and shame, particularly in those areas where "tradition" or "conservatism" seemingly held sway. The only type of history progressives study is that perceived to be marching toward some great improvement and enlightenment. Progressives only see "the progress," without noting that progressivism has destroyed in its wake countless victims in the gulags of state and mind. It does no good reminding a progressive that his ideas have led to genocide and a bleakness beyond imagination. A progressive, really, is too busy looking "forward" even to notice how the progressive vision hurts those that vision is supposed to help.

I believe conservatism is a protest against marching forward merely for the sake of marching. As I noted earlier here, G. K. Chesterton said we need to have some idea what our destination is if we want to progress. If progressives have no idea where we're going other than toward some vague goal of fairness, then how do we know if we're progressing at all? If I begin a journey without a destination, how do I even begin?

But I am reluctant about something else, and this is particularly poignant for me. You see, I am reluctant to tell "my story." Let me be candid: After I spoke this morning, one man sidled up to me and told me that I might come across as a little bit snobbish, even "elitist", in how I present myself. (Odd that I should have expected this. I can come across as bigger than I ought.)

There is, however, a trap here. There is the obvious stumbling block about "telling your story", that it is a fallacious appeal to emotion, engendering the sympathy of one's audience. But that is not the trap. The trap is much more subtle.

If I were to stand up and tell my story to a group of Republicans gathered in a country diner in a tiny town, and I just happened to be a Rockefeller, I am sure I would lose my constituents the moment I said that I am "one of them"; that I, too, understand what it is like to work hard, to be anxious about paying the bills or making payroll. If I was a lofty Rockefeller claiming to be a man of the people I would no doubt inspire sneers among those people who not only worry about the bills, but about lunch. Surely people would accuse me, a Rockefeller, of "putting on airs," even if those airs were lowly.

OK. But what if an articulate, fairly well-educated and fairly well-dressed man were to stand up and tell a story that borders on destitution? What if he stood up and told about his childhood, one where poverty and mental illness and despair wracked his family, his mother, his father? What if he were to demonstrate beyond any doubt that he was indeed a man "of the people," the lowliest, simplest people who struggled and suffered in their decrepit homes tucked along the country roads that settle into forsaken wetlands and dells? What if he proved he was from the humblest of America's classes, or at least close to those classes, in origin, in achievement; in pedigree?

Wouldn't it be the case that some listeners might mutter that such a man is "putting on airs"? Isn't it reasonable to assume that some might snicker, "Who does this guy think he is, all dressed up and wordsmithy?" Might not some even say, "He needs to know his place. He's out of his league"?

Of course, not everyone would respond that way. But the fact is some would. The fact is that some do. I've heard it before. And this, I am afraid, can be the subtle and nasty trap of telling one's story: there's no pleasing everyone.

One thing this writer learned growing up is that one's social class appears much higher than it is if one has mastery over language. If you can speak well, especially well, people will think you're of much higher social standing than you might actually be. (And if you can also speak French, German or Italian, well, you're something very hard to define.) But this is really an accident of education and interest; it is not intended out of vanity, but out of intellectual curiosity. Besides, speaking well is a form of courtesy. If a person wants to express his or her feelings and thoughts, the best way to do so is to possess the language skills -- the grammar and diction and syntax -- that make expressing oneself easy. Such skills are a must, are they not, for an effective political leader?

However, it is also true that once someone knows your origins, if those origins are not the least bit enviable, being particularly lowly, and if they perceive your personality, language and skills depart too far from those humble origins, they will peg you as uppity, or proud, or worse. 

As I said, there's no pleasing everyone. And that, I am afraid, is exactly the unavoidable risk in politics. 

Sad, though, that fear of being trapped in telling one's story might lead a person to lie. 

Peace.


Monday, April 12, 2010

Too Funny

This morning, at 8 o'clock, I went to meet an old friend at a local café for breakfast. Instead, what do I find? 12 people in a sort of grassroots intervention: they have gathered -- Surprise!! -- to tell me they'd like it if I ran for public office. Flattering, fun, and MAYBE a little crazy. There's even a FB page! (I had nothing whatsoever to do with that page, by the way.)

Anyhow, too funny. But despite the levity of it all, I am feeling a little freaked out. The thought of running for even a humble state representative's seat in New Hampshire, clearly no big deal, nonetheless scares me. 

The question, I guess, is this: If I run for office and win, will anyone respect me in the morning? 

Laughingly yours, 

BG. 

©2010/Contratimes. All Rights Reserved. 

Friday, April 02, 2010

The Day They Call Good

At this hour He hangs.

The blind He healed no longer see; the deaf He healed no longer understand. Those who stood close are now only brave enough to watch -- from a safe distance.

He cries out; they bring Him vinegar and gall to drink. A small Roman market opens at the foot of a dripping cross: guards place bids on His garments, even the hem of His garment.

Nothing can stop His bleeding issue.

No one knows, perhaps not (yet) even He, that everyone hangs in Him, that His exsanguination is theirs; is their only hope. There is mockery, scoffing, cursing;

the unknowing living spit sarcasm into His wounds,

He, the only knowing dying,

turns vitriol to wine
He has finished His cup
and it pours out
pooling beneath so many
nervous feet

one thief finds paradise in His great poverty
another finds nothing worth taking
not even this broken bit of bread

a sign maker admires his work,
dumb to the irony of his irony
a crown weaver picks a thorn from his thumb
thinking about furlough

a virgin finds her son finding her Son
and a son finds the mother who gave birth to
a dying God

a rabbi weeps at the Law's last breath
a guard feels the weakness of the sword,
the strength of surrender

a spear pierces the side of heaven
and hell spills out

there is no safe distance


©2007 Bill Gnade. All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, April 01, 2010

Confession: I Am Misunderstanding Something About Government

Perhaps I have this wrong. 

I swear I remember a time when novelists portrayed the life of the bureaucrat, politician, or prison guard as the bleakest of all vocations; barren, grey, full of the tedium of rules, regulations; of capricious changes in protocol. I swear such jobs were described as the very acme of inefficiency, laziness, and meaninglessness. And I swear that other storytellers talked about the dreariness of those bureaus that were indeed incredibly efficient, portraying them as mindless, soulless assembly lines of conformity, warning us all that the perfectly efficient world was a dead one. Like a concentration camp, full of mechanical, dehumanizing harmony. 

But perhaps I have this wrong. 

I swear I remember a time when being an employee of the state was something one admitted with reluctance, fearing embarrassment. Unless one was a governor, or some other such personage of apparent import (like a foreign diplomat), a person did not generally flaunt that he or she was on the public payrolls. After all, state workers were not just seen as poorly compensated. They were seen as somewhat incompetent.  Saying one worked in the public sector was not the sort of thing one boasted about at a dinner party, unless one simply meant to boast about job security or some other banality. 

But perhaps I have this wrong.

I have this vague but haunting recollection of teachers, singers, poets, rock stars and filmmakers, all warning me about the vapidity, the soul-stripping vapidity, of work in government, of employment in the wastelands of civil service where conformity is tantamount -- for the collective "good." I thought I was weaned on rebelling against this soul-robbing collectivization. Wasn't I? Wasn't I told that the public sector, that world encased in red-tape and regulations and reforms and agendas and referendums and motions and amendments, was a black hole of creativity? Wasn't I warned to flee such places? Weren't these places and jobs always portrayed as eternally dull and insipid, inspiring nothing but listlessness and ennui? What about "estrangement" and "alienation"? Weren't these the offspring of the government complexes epitomized in the flat cement of the Berlin Wall? Wasn't I told to dream big dreams, to be my own person, to find my own way, to be a free spirit creating my own meaning, my own value and art? Wasn't I told to cultivate my own sense of the beautiful? I swear I was told these things, and that the state, the enemy of beauty, was death, just like the state hospitals were death: that if you wanted the worst humanity had to offer, just turn to the government for a job, or real help, or some cure.  

But perhaps I have this wrong.

I can't tell you where these images come from, the ones I have in my head, of drab and pitted hallways, of neighborhoods and projects -- often the same thing -- stretched out in grotesque repetition, cut in perfect egalitarian geometry: of impersonal streets on which one could only see blank-eyed pedestrians, or bicyclists rolling toward some government factory. I don't know where I heard comics mock "Gubmint cheese" and other sub-standard "charitable" handouts. I don't know where I heard satirists sneering at military housing, or condemning the projects I saw as a kid in the south Bronx, Newark, Jersey City, or the fringes of Philly. And I swear I was told that a government-made vehicle was a "shit box," especially if it came from those places where government was at its most-controlling best. 

But perhaps I have this wrong. 

Where, I wonder, did I learn to cringe when that huge family in upstate Wherever -- where all of them were employed by the prison or state college -- told me that I ought to get a "real" job and "work for the state?" Somewhere I must have learned to recoil when I heard of some poor sap who had to go to the state hospital for surgery, but I don't know where. Surely I must have been told by someone that having a public defender instead of a private defense lawyer was for losers, that everyone knew great lawyers didn't defend the lower primates in district or county court. Somewhere along the way someone must have told me that the county nursing home was not where I wanted to live out my days. Didn't someone tell me these things? 

Where, oh, where did I learn to equate the state with mediocrity, and far worse? And where did I get the idea that the private sector was where the achievers were, where talent flourished, where the best of the best were allowed to innovate, to explore and create and create and create, and were then challenged to innovate even more? (Oh, yes, I am aware of the dehumanizing potential of the free market and unfettered industry, but I am not suggesting these are lovely, either. But I may be suggesting that they are lovelier.)

All I can conclude is that I invented this all by myself. This is my doing. I am just dreaming that school -- and art and music and film and literature and church and nature -- taught me that the labors of the state, when made the highest good of society, are hell on earth.

But perhaps I have this wrong, too. 



©2010/Contratimes. All Rights Reserved. 

Ian McEwan, On What Is Loved More Than Sex

Novelist Ian McEwan, in a Q&A with the Weekend Journal's Alexandra Alter, had this to say about the current state of things:


We have a very rackety, partisan, sometimes very intrusive press. One of the things they love to be is indignant. People might have in the past loved sex; I think they now love indignation more. Indignation seems to thrill. So a media storm is often driven beyond all reason, people taking offense or people huffing and puffing.

I am glad to say my huffing and puffing are both still rooted in more physical pursuits. But now I wonder who might be offended by my transparency. Ahh! Only the literalists, I presume, would find fault in my words. 

Unwittingly, they're a funny bunch. 

_____________________

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