Sunday, September 30, 2007

Quote of the Day

"The world is now too dangerous for anything but truth."
Then, as now.

Rev. A. Powell Davies
All Souls, Unitarian
Washington, DC
1944-1957

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

OJ' s Bail Bonds

You Ring We Spring (really; that's their name).



You Kill You Chill.



You Steal Stuff That You Think Belongs To You You Do Life.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Is it wrong that I crave these link a needle needs a vein? Give me a quart of milk and a box of Cakesters and I'm as high as a kite.

Random Thoughts on the Seventh 9/11

Frank Silecchia, a Ground Zero worker, talking about the filthy, chemical filled aired he breathed for ten months. The man who found the famous iron cross that became "a symbol of hope, of healing, of comfort" in the words of Father Brian Jordan. No one-- not Silecchia's government, his union, his city, are helping him with his health problems since.

Alive Day Memories, the HBO special, produced by James Gandolfini. [Tony Soprano is a real teddy bear.] Stories from men and women who have had their bodies blown apart for the war in Iraq. Gruesome images of dead and mangled bodies, and mangled living bodies. How the fires of 9/11 are linked to the fires that are engulfing Iraq and the Americans there.

Hamilton and Kean still crying in the wind that we have a long way to go to make our nation safe from another, even more catastrophic disaster. The images of 9/11 could be quaint compared to what a nuclear weapon might do, to what a chemical plant explosion could do to a community or valley or state.

My assistant teaching me curses in Urdu that his Pakistani grandmother mutters when she hears terrorists and wannabes invoking the name of Allah when they murder.

More Americans have died in Iraq than died on 9/11. What are we doing to make this country safer? How is America leading the world in fighting the bastardization of Islam? How are we defending the world against the terrorist war on us? What are we doing?

CNN's Most Popular News Stories for September 11, 2007

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Who Remembers Kerouac?

On the 50th anniversary of the publication of "On the Road," following is a passage dealing with Pennsylvania. I travel this part of the state on my way home to Northeast PA:

I slept all the way to Pittsburgh. I was wearier than I'd been for years and years. I had three hundred and sixty-five miles yet to hitchhike to New York, and a dime in my pocket. I walked five miles to get out of Pittsburgh, and two rides, an apple truck and a big trailer truck, took me to Harrisburg in the soft Indian-summer rainy night. I cut right along. I wanted to get home.

It was the night of the Ghost of the Susquehanna. The Ghost was a shriveled little old man with a paper satchel who claimed he was headed for "Canady." He walked very fast, commanding me to follow, and said there was a bridge up ahead we could cross. He was about sixty years old; he talked incessantly of the meals he had, how much butter they gave him for pancakes, how many extra slices of bread, how the old men had called him from a porch of a charity home in Maryland and invited him to stay for the weekend, how he took a nice warm bath before he left; how he found a brand-new hat by the side of the road in Virginia and that was it on his head; how he hit every Red Cross in town and showed them his World War I credentials; how the Harris-burg Red Cross was not worthy of the name; how he managed in this hard world. But as far as I could see he was just a semi-respectable walking hobo of some kind who covered the entire Eastern Wilderness on foot, hitting Red Cross offices and sometimes bumming on Main Street corners for a dime.

We were bums together. We walked seven miles along the mournful Susquehanna. It is a terrifying river. It has bushy cliffs on both sides that lean like hairy ghosts over the unknown waters. Inky night covers all. Sometimes from the railyards across the river rises a great red locomotive flare that illuminates the horrid cliffs. The little man said he had a fine belt in his satchel and we stopped for him to fish it out. "I got me a fine belt here somewheres-got it in Frederick, Maryland. Damn, now did I leave that thing on the counter at Fredericksburg?"

"You mean Frederick."

"No, no, Fredericksburg, Virginia!" He was always talking about Frederick, Maryland, and Fredericksburg, Virginia. He walked right in the road in the teeth of advancing traffic and almost got hit several times. I plodded along in the ditch. Any minute I expected the poor little madman to go flying in the night, dead.

We never found that bridge. I left him at a railroad underpass and, because I was so sweaty from the hike, I changed shirts and put on two sweaters; a roadhouse illuminated my sad endeavors. A whole family came walking down the dark road and wondered what I was doing. Strangest thing of all, a tenorman was blowing very fine blues in this Pennsylvania hick house; I listened and moaned. It began to rain hard. A man gave me a ride back to Harrisburg and told me I was on the wrong road. I suddenly saw the little hobo standing under a sad streetlamp with his thumb stuck out- poor forlorn man, poor lost sometime boy, now broken ghost of the penniless wilds. I told my driver the story and he stopped to tell the old man.

"Look here, fella, you're on your way west, not east."

"Heh?" said the little ghost. "Can't tell me I don't know my way around here. Been walkin this country for years. I'm headed for Canady."

"But this ain't the road to Canada, this is the road to Pittsburgh and Chicago."

The little man got disgusted with us and walked off. The last I saw of him was his bobbing little white bag dissolving in the darkness of the mournful Alleghenies.

I thought all the wilderness of America was in the West till the Ghost of the Susquehanna showed me different. No, there is a wilderness in the East; it's the same wilderness Ben Franklin plodded in the oxcart days when he was postmaster, the same as it was when George Washington was a wild-buck Indian-fighter, when Daniel Boone told stories by Pennsylvania lamps and promised to find the Gap, when Bradford built his road and men whooped her up in log cabins. There were not great Arizona spaces for the little man, just the bushy wilderness of eastern Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia, the backroads, the black-tar roads that curve among the mournful rivers like Susquehanna, Monongahela, old Potomac and Monocacy.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

God Damn

"Iowa, for good reason, for constitutional reasons, for reasons related to the Lord, should be the first caucus and primary." Governor Bill Richardson

I understand that many people of faith, especially Christians believe in a personal relationship with God.

But, do people think that God really gives a shit when the Democrats vote?

Monday, September 03, 2007

Quote of the Day

"It's always darkest right before you get clobbered over the head with a pipe wrench."
GOP pollster who insisted on anonymity in order to speak candidly (to the Washington Post).