Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Revolution of the Ignorant

Thomas Friedman talks about the Revolution of the Ignorant in todays op ed piece in the NY Times.  He doesn't call it that.  That is my phrasing.  But that is what he describes.  He calls them "humiliated."  They vote for Trump no matter what horrible or crazy shit he does because he is willing to sock educated elite liberals in the old kisser.  He stands up for them, and they like it.  They gave it to Hillary last election because she called them "deplorables."  They didn't like that much, so they voted for the Class Clown.  It didn't matter that he was rich and walked around with his pecker out.  As a matter of fact, they enjoyed it.  You must remember their favorite forms of entertainment.  They are not watching "Masterpiece Theater."  In fact, they want to defund it.  No more money for art.  No more money for NPR and PBS.  More money for religious schools.  And, oh. . . more disability money for those who don't like to work.  Studies show that Trump supporters who are against the government dole are more likely to be collecting disability and welfare checks than others.  They feel they are justified and entitled to them. . . unlike those "others."  

So, no matter how much you show them that Trump is a dishonest, corrupt, selfish liar, they don't care.  They already know that.  It doesn't matter.  They hate the educated elite and their Ivory Towers.  Trump is their man.  

Of course, we've been saying that here for eons.  And I agree with them in some ways.  The big mistake in this argument is calling them "liberals."  The educated elite have moved on from there.  They are not liberals.  They are theorists.  They are social policy wanks.  They don't question much other than the established order.  Jesus--I need to quit it.  I sound like a Fox show host.  I'm speaking in unqualified absolutes that oversimplify the case.  What I've said can be no truer than the opposite argument.  

Look what they have done to me.  

That's what happens, though.  It is difficult to keep your head in times like these.  I see the absolutes coming from each side.  Well, not so much from Placeholder Joe.  He just keeps whining about how much tragedy he has suffered in his life which he says qualifies him for office.  He is like that relative you don't want to go visit because he goes on and on about his dead wife and how hard it has been.  No matter how you try, you can't move him off the subject, his soliloquies always delivered in that same awful moaning tone.  

All to say, things look dire and joyless unless you are a deplorable.  They still party like its 1999.  According to Newsweek, their rally in Sturges has accounted for 260,000 cases of Covid.  But I'll bet you dollars they don't care.  None of them are saying to themselves, "That's just awful."  What they will say is, "How in the fuck do they know that?  That's just bullshit.  What did they do, test everybody who was there?  Fuck no.  They just make this shit up to make us seem bad.  It is political.  They will do anything to discredit Trump."  

Keep trying to convince them with science they don't understand.  How's that working out for you?  

But enough of that.  Let's talk about me.  I haven't told you about the yellow jackets yet.  I have a colony that burrowed in the jasmine under one of my giant camphor trees.  I didn't know they were there until my yardman showed me.  He was in pain.  He'd just gotten stung on the top of his balding head.  My mother had a colony in her yard that came back every summer for years.  She was scared of them and couldn't get rid of them, she said.  She had lots of stories abut them coming after her, so she stayed out of that part of the yard.  I went online and looked them up.  Supposedly vicious little fuckers.  The yardman asked me to get rid of them.  O.K. I said.  Will do.  

I went to The Google.  I looked at ways to get rid of them.  Vinegar.  Try vinegar.  So I did.  And boy, they went crazy.  But they didn't leave.  Hmm.  I went inside and used The Google again.  Wait!  Another article suggested they liked vinegar.  Hell, I might have just given them food.  Back to the drawing board.  

Detergent, some articles said.  They don't like it.  So I mixed some up in a big container of water and poured it down the opening of their underground fortress.  Now, remember, I have a degree in zoology, and I know that hole doesn't runs straight down into their lair.  Indeed, it will go down, then up, then sideways.  Whatever you pour into the opening is not going to run into the place they keep their queen.  They aren't that stupid.  But, I hoped, the article was correct and they wouldn't like it.  

When I poured it in, they certainly didn't seem to like it.  Yellow jackets began pouring out of the opening in great numbers.  I jumped back a number of yards to watch, waiting for them to attack me with their viciousness.  They didn't.  But were they certainly doing an in air jitterbug.  I retreated back into the house thinking I'd done it.  They would pack up and leave.  

Of course, when I went out later, they were using the hole like nothing had happened.  Thinking maybe one dose wasn't enough, I tried it again.  Same thing.  A big outpouring of wasps, then later, normality.  

Another article said they hated eucalyptus oil.  It also mentioned tea tree oil, so I drove to Whole Foods to get some.  I couldn't find any eucalyptus, so tea tree oil it was. The little bottle was quite expensive, but what was I to do?  

Back home, I poured half the bottle into a cup and filled it with water.  Down the hole and around the opening.  Let's see how they liked that.  

Same reaction as the detergent.  Later that day, they were still there, so I doused the opening with the other half.

Sitting with my mom, I told her all of this.  I told her I didn't like killing things, so I would just keep irritating them and maybe they would leave.  She said they wouldn't.  They were programmed to protect the queen, she said.  They would stay.  

She was right, of course, so I decided on last resorts.  I got an insecticide from the garage and poured it into the hole.  I stepped back and watched them swarm convinced this would be the last dance.  

I was wrong.  Those little fuckers must be immortal.  

I decided yesterday on one more solution.  I got a spray bottle of Home Defense insect killer, stuck the nozzle into the hole, and gave the pistol grip a good number of squeezes.  Then I stood back, and as the wasps came swarming out of the opening, I showered them with its mist.  I did this for a very long time until not so many were coming out any longer.  

I felt terrible.  

Later, when I checked, there was not so much activity around the opening of the nest.  I haven't looked yet today.  I don't want to.  I feel myself a killer of wasps.  They serve an ecological purpose I read.  They eat insects.  They are part of a healthy ecosystem.  It went against my spirit to shoot them down that way.  

I did it for the yardman.  That is my only justification.  I'm not sure its good enough.    

I found today's pictures on the internet.  I was doing a google search for something and found these on the website of one of the women I worked with many years ago.  Do I have these?  In putting together my Lonesomeville book, I didn't see them.  There were other pictures out there that I don't seem to have any longer, too.  I am a mess.  I may never find all the images I have produced over the years.  I don't even know how to search for them other than going through every one of the dozens of hard drives I have picture by picture.  In order to save some record of them, though, I post them here for you/ for me.  I think they are pretty groovy.  That's what we used to say. 


 

4 comments:


  1. And the distance - that is that these "groovy" pictures have been away from our view for quite some time - really helped ripen them some didn't it?

    I sure hope the book comes to fruition. Even in extremely limited quantity. Of course I might have to request using "After Pay" in order to acquire it.

    What a convenient little service - stretching payments on my too expensive beauty unguents over 3 months.

    You wanna hear something strange? Sometimes I read here - and I feel like I'm not reading what I'm reading. Like I'm reading something all together different. It fucks me up. I thought maybe it was the weed - but it happened recently and I wasn't stoned.

    *shrug&sigh*

    It's Hump Day! I think that means everyone gets laid tonight. Right?


    I got a response from the Extension Services - well their entomologist - my giant spider was from the "orb weaver" family. He wasn't that excited. I've used him before when I witnessed extremely strange behavior by an insect at the beach - like 4 straight hours of sand pushing in straight lines back and forth. I sent a video that time. Or my brother did.

    Anyway. Be careful. They are wasps. The bald-faced ones are horrific monsters if bumped into.

    Don't feel too bad, Florida is fucked off the charts environmentally. I mean if you are looking for a little comfort regarding your murderous attack.

    You bought your tea tree oil at Whole Wallet? Duh. Why didn't you Bezos that? Oh -- wait.

    So. I'm back to "The Dance Over Fire and Water," I'm doing a bunch of studying. It is good to study. Well I think so.

    There is a lot I'd like to quote but I'll start with this out of the chapter "Of Civilization."

    The author is describing with great adoration - the pediment of the temple of Olympia.

    "... a work which symbolizes with more majesty the spirit of civilization, itself, than the pediment of the temple of Olympia, on which a great anonymous sculptor has told the myth of Apollo rising up amidst the conflict of the Lapithae and the Centaurs to quiet them. Alone he is calm, in the midst of hooves which beat upon the rock, of axes that crash through skulls, of knives that pierce breasts, of clamors of rage and death. Upright, gleaming amid these convulsed forms, these limbs that contract, these fists that are clenched, these nails and teeth that tear at the flesh, he has a serene forehead and a stretched out arm.
    In the midst of perpetual conflict between the mortal forces of instincts, unloosed against one another, he is the spirit who recognizes them in himself in order to harmonize them in the poem without withdrawing them from the universe. It is the precise role of the artist."

    He then goes on - of course - using this line I love "It is the drunkeness of Shakespeare conciliating in lyric indifference the contradictory movements of the drama passion."

    Mr.Faure believes that it is the artist - who most often appears during or immediately after the most terrible epochs of history because he is a man of order. - He believes the "highest civilizations - that of Egypt "gleams of it in classical Greece, in France in the 13th c and in Japan- there we would obtain a picture of what could and should be a civilization.

    "In this sense, our nineteenth century is undoubtedly , one of the least civilized epochs in history; rich in artists, it is poor in style, the artist remaining isolated."

    "There is no architecture, and architecture has always been the most characteristic expression of a civilized people."

    So - keep taking pictures of the buildings, till you get a model or 100, again. It seems important - at least to a guy who would be 147 years old now.

    I've never been really good at keeping current. Always looking backwards, hanging out reading dead people. I like History. It's got a lot to say.

    Well. That was a lot of stuff to report.

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    1. The Spartans were a social order, a civilization, if you will. They really did a number. All the art weenies didn't stand a chance against them. Art is easily destroyed. It is the first thing the masses rebel against and the first thing to go. Progressives are about to strip centuries of art off the walls because it doesn't agree with their sensibilities. They will put up a new art that feeds their purposes. The King Is Dead. Long Live the Queen.

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  2. You got a varmint problem and you didn’t call me. I coulda taken care of those wasps and saved you a peck of money.

    Lemme tell you what ole Davey Green and I did one summer in the ate sixties. We had a ball field in a small holler down at the bottom of a fairly steep hill. The outfield was bounded by a creek that eventually winded its way to the Little Cuyahoga river. If you hit a nice long ball it went into the water on the third or fourth bounce. The backstop and dug outs backed up to a rise in the hill. I played second base but was back up catcher and Davey were one of our best pitchers. During the summer we’d go fishing for sunfish and bluegill a while in the creek and then practice catching and hitting on our own to get ready for the season.

    Davey used a high kick like Bob Feller and every once in a while he’d come off the mound and hit a piece of soft dirt and the ball would go flying off towards first base and skitter up the dirt and gravel at the base of the hill.

    On one of those occasions when I went to fetch the errant pitch, I got attacked by a swarm of miner wasps whose burrow we had disturbed. And lemme tell you those fuckers are ornery. I tore off passed Davey who started swatting at them and then they started stinging him. We ran all the way past the outfield with the swarm still around our heads till we got to the creek. We both jumped in and started splashing water up in the air to ward the wasps off and eventually they tired of the water sport and buzzed away.

    Davey and I limped to his house about a quarter mile away on Gleason where we got calamine lotion and vinegar for the stings and ran into Mr. Green who heard of our plight and had a solution to our problem.

    If you want to rid yourself of varmints you call upon a hillbilly. The three of us went back up to that hill with three tin cans of gasoline between us and several M-80s. Mr. Green brought along a fence post digger. We went to where the little mounded entrance hole of the nest was and poured one can of gas down it and ran like the dickens. A small swam dusted up but they didn’t seem too keen on chasing us and after about fifteen minutes we went back. We dumped a second can down the hole and stood aways back while maybe a dozen wasps stumbled out and wobbled around and keeled over. Then we poured the third can of gas down that hole and Mr. Glass advised us to wait a bit on account of the vapors still hanging in the air. Then he took that fence pole digger and drove it straight into the entrance and took out about a foot and a half of dirt and gravel giving us a wide open hole for our final part of the mission.

    Davey and I each had an M-80 which on the count of three we lit and dropped down the hole and skedaddled out toward second base.

    Holy Crap the ground for about five square yards lifted and thudded back down and we blasted about a four foot wide crater in the side of that hill. Blacked ragweed, dandelions, and crab grass was smoldering on the hill. It was a triumphant sight.

    So the next time you got an insect problem you give me a call. I’ll save you some money.

    I like that gypsy girl with the squeeze box a lot. They say accordion players are square and geeky and never get dates, but I bet she had beaus by the dozen with that old squeeze box of her’n.

    Catch you of the flip side.

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    1. Never swat a wasp. Don't even run. Gasoline? I didn't want to kill my tree. But they are gone now. I stood calmly without moving and sprayed them as they emerged from their lair. They never attacked me. I tried to be an environmentalist, but in the end I was just another nature killer. And, of course, I am a hillbilly.

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