Monday, June 29, 2020

The things of all nations




 Wherefore, the things of all nations shall be made known; yea, all things shall be made known unto the children of men.
2 Nephi 30:16

The day will come, and that soon enough,
when knowledge true will call the bluff
of all the falsehoods now broadcast --
and they, and their tellers, will not last.
For God has promised to reveal
from rooftops what is hard and real.
And on that day may I be found
upon the Lord's firm hallowed ground!


Sunday, June 28, 2020

‘PizzaGate’ Conspiracy Theory Thrives Again in the TikTok Era




The masses cannot seem to learn
what to believe and what to spurn.
A mob will form quick as a wink
because no one will pause to think.
And now that we communicate
at such a supersonic rate
humanity would rather care
about malarkey from thin air
than any sober truth -- egad! --
and follow blindly specious fad.
What hope is there for humankind
when TikTok is our mastermind?

The data is in: Fox News may have kept millions from taking the coronavirus threat seriously (from the Washington Post.)

Fox-news-logo - Bark

When news you want that you can trust
that isn't dim with leftist dust
you'd better tune in Fox News quick
for all the facts (and some slapstick.)
They tell it like it is and take
great pride exposing what is fake --
like pandemics that just ain't so
or glaciers when it doesn't snow.
If you feel sick, they'll tell you straight
it ain't a virus -- just lose weight.
(Their advertisers, don't you see,
include Ms. Jenny Craig surely.)

First Job

18 oz White Rubber Mallet - Kobi Tools



I got my first paycheck for knocking apart metal shelves with a white rubber mallet.
My first boss provided the mallet, and instructions on how to swing it upward, not downward, in order to disconnect the silver bars from the frame that held them in place.
An uncomplicated job. Six hours a day. All summer.
It was a big bookstore. Closing. Going out of business.
Located in Dinkytown, an enclave next to the University
of Minnesota. Thick with coffee shops and bookstores.
Looking at the blonde bland faces of university students of the time, I was not convinced that learning was happiness. My happiness would be a cheap thrill, like the Mickey Spillane paperbacks my dad littered our home with.

The dry thud of a rubber mallet striking metal, over and over again,
in an empty building, was the sound of my future.
Already flatlined at age sixteen. We were a blue collar family.
My father's advice to me: Just try to stay out of jail.
No family traditions of service and sacrifice. Of education and
shrewd money management. 
Only the story of a great grandfather who immigrated from Trondheim in Norway to Saint Paul in Minnesota, took one look at the gray wintertime slush, said 'to hell with it,' and went straight back to Norway. 

That first paycheck came to sixteen dollars and thirty five cents.
My mother shanghaied half for my account in the Farmers and Mechanics Savings Bank. 
I blew the rest on thick drugstore Cokes, Old Dutch Onion and Garlic Potato Chips, a new bicycle chain for my Schwinn, and Herbie Popnecker comic books. 

When my first job ended in August the boss said I was a good worker. He'd hire me again anytime to knock down shelves.
That really depressed me. 
Because by this time there was an alien inside me chewing on my chest cavity. It wouldn't talk to me, wouldn't tell me what was devouring me and making me miserable.

The alien finally burst free two years later in Florida, at the Winter Quarters of Ringling Brothers, Barnum & Bailey Combined Shows. Where I discovered that the odor of Stein's clown white, talcum powder, and sweat, smelled like my forever job.  






Thy light is sweet





Truly the light is sweet, and a pleasant thing it is for the eyes to behold the sun
Ecclesiastes 11:7


Thy light is sweet to my dull sight
and guides me through the darkest night.
The sun, the moon, the stars do shed
thy luster upon my poor head.
Let me forever 'neath thy blaze
find comfort in the better days.


Saturday, June 27, 2020

Photo Essay: Postcards to my favorite Reporters, and other Unsavory Characters.



To:  Mahatma Rob Reed




To:  Patrick Kingsley.  NYT.





To:  Paul Farhi.  WaPo.



To:  Anthony Harrup.  WSJ. 

Timericks from stories by Veronica Dagher, Bruce Veldhuisen, Alex Janney, Matt Richtel, and Maria Cramer.

The Provo Museum of Mail Art is moving to new quarters in Ban Phe, Thailand.




How to Rethink Your Budget With Just One Income.
@VeronicaDagher

One-income fam'lies are the drift/as ev'ryone must practice thrift/Cuz jobs have gone right down the drain/and are not coming back again/I think the dads should be the ones/who stay home making sticky buns/They'll teach the kids proficiency/in snacking while they watch TV.



Going Up? Not So Fast: Strict New Rules to Govern Elevator Culture.
@mrichtel


Elevators simply breed/virus like a common weed/I will not take them up or down/I'd rather meet a scary clown/I'll wheeze a bit upon the stairs/Please notify prospective heirs.




Is It Safe to Go Back to the Dentist?
@NYTimesCramer

Is it safe to go back to the Dentist?
I've never heard such a remark!
You think going off to the Dentist
is just a snug walk in the park?
Their tools are a chamber of horrors;
their smile is a false as a croc's.
When digging around your own pearlies,
you feel it right down to your socks.
I welcome pandemical reasons
to put off my next interview.
My mouth will not be their arena
to show off their darn jujitsu!  

The language of friends.





 Then Jared said unto his brother: Cry again unto the Lord, and it may be that he will turn away his anger from them who are our friends, that he confound not their language.
Ether 1:36


I find the language of a friend
is dulcet and does not offend.
Yet I remember all too well
in former days when it so fell
that I preferred to fuss and fight
and confound those who loved me tight.
And so I lost a friend or too,
and now I'm old and feeling blue.
God give me now a tongue so plain
that it will not cause grief again!

Friday, June 26, 2020

Passion



Passion is a suspect word for me. I equate it with ‘obsession,’ which is a characteristic I possess, or that possesses me, and has caused me huge problems in the past, and, I’m afraid, will cause me more problems in the future.
When I hooked up with Joom I felt very ‘passionate’ about her -- I willingly volunteered to give her a third of my monthly salary for her truck payments. Of course, she drove me around, but still -- that was a lot of money and I had to go without some of the things that would have made my stay in Thailand much easier. For instance, I could have been paying more on my child support and so been able to get my passport renewed when it expired. I could have traveled more and probably met a nicer Thai woman, a Church member maybe, who would have worked with me in actually getting married instead of just wanting to live together so she could be free to move on when my money ran out. There were times when I was with Joom that I felt very strongly that she was all wrong for me, that I needed to ‘escape’ from her and reclaim my own life -- but then she’d go down to the beach to dig up clams to grill on a cheap little Hibachi for us and afterwards spend the evening cuddled up with me while we watched some incomprehensible Thai soap operas on TV -- and I’d forget all about her bad temper and drinking and parasitic family that always wanted money from me. When she was kind and affectionate my passion for her flamed like a rocket engine -- but it never lasted; she’d get moody and demanding, and even refuse to give me any more rides in her truck because, she said, I was too fat and wore out the tires too quick. In some sick way I actually enjoyed her abuse -- it seemed better than the total void I had lived in without anyone to love emotionally and physically.
That’s what comes to mind when I read your email about ‘passion.’

I believe I am actually very passionate about making money with my postcards and writing. I often daydream that Trump will tweet about the postcards he gets from me and suddenly all my postcards will become collector’s items -- people will start paying thousands of dollars for them. I also daydream that some bigtime editor at the NYT will beg me to start writing a daily poem for them and offer to pay me beau coup bucks. Then I’ll move into a two-bedroom condo down in St George, with an indoor swimming pool, and have the grandkids down every weekend for pool parties with scads of delivery pizza.
Because it chafes me to have so much ambition and activity that isn’t making me any income, I choose to pretend that I don’t care, that I’m disinterested about making money -- I am just ‘following my bliss’ for purely artistic reasons. But sometimes the frustration bubbles over. Life is very sour and bitter during those moments. But it always ends with me beginning to chuckle about the whole setup  -- an old clown like me being treated like a literary somebody by reporters and friends. Pulling the wool over their eyes! I just string words together like beads from a hobby kit.
Ridi, Pagliaccio!
I’m writing this email in dribs and drabs, as I watch Star Trek The Next Generation on Netflix. I’ll watch ten minutes of an episode, then pause it, then write a paragraph here, and then unpause the episode for another ten minutes, etc. It’s a good way to kill the evening, until I feel tired enough to go take a shower and read myself to sleep.
I should just shut off the boob tube and read all evening. I have a good travel book on my Kindle, written back in the 1930’s, by a snooty Englishman riding a horse through Persia and Afghanistan, plus I have the whole Lord of the Rings on my Kindle. Maybe when I finish this overlong email to you I’ll kill Netflix and rejoin Frodo and Gandalf. 

Endlessly walking. There are so many of the older residents who wander the halls, haunt the sidewalks out front. I can see them through my patio window. Hear them at night in the halls. Endlessly walking. Endlessly stoically crawling like slugs, waiting for something, anything, to happen. A rainbow, maybe. A meteor out of the sky. A squirrel climbing down from a tree branch. A mushroom in the front lawn. The sun to set. The mountains to float away. The carpet to unravel. Death to playfully tap them on the shoulder. Or just a good belch. Everyone here has given up fighting their fate, including me. We are all waiting in our tiny boxes, walking in shoddy slippers down shoddy halls trying to understand how our shoddy lives brought us here. 
I’ll feel better in the morning, after I have a bowel movement.   

Photo Essay: Postcards to my favorite Reporters. Vol. 3


To:  Andrew van Dam.  WaPo.




To:  Jennifer Graham. Deseret News.




To:  Corey Kilgannon. NYT.




To:  Talal Unsari.  WSJ.