Posted on September 23, 2007 in Class Myths & Mysticism
‘Halt, do not shoot, I am Che Guevara and I am worth more alive than dead.’
The Guardian has an article about the perserverance of the memory of Che Guevara, atheist Communist who is now regarded as a blessed one by the people of the village where he was brought for execution after being hunted down by Bolivian troops:
By 8pm in the main square of the dusty town of Vallegrande, the only sound is the buzz of prayer coming from the church. Inside, devoted Catholics sit and stand around the image of Our Lord of Malta – the only black Christ in Latin America, brought to this Bolivian town during the Spanish conquest.
But this is not the only foreign element of devotion. Father Agustin, the Polish priest, reads out prayers written down by local people: ‘For my mother who is sick, I pray to the Lord and …’, hesitantly, ‘to Saint Ernesto, to the soul of Che Guevara.’ ‘Saint Ernesto,’ the parishioners murmur in response….
In his 1967 dispatch to the Guardian, journalist Richard Gott, in Vallegrande on the day of Guevara’s death, wrote: ‘It was difficult to recall that this man had once been one of the great figures of Latin America. It was not just that he was a great guerrilla leader; he had been a friend of Presidents as well as revolutionaries. His voice had been heard and appreciated in inter-American councils as well as in the jungle. He was a doctor, an amateur economist, once Minister of Industries in revolutionary Cuba, and Castro’s right-hand man. He may well go down in history as the greatest continental figure since Bolivar. Legends will be created around his name.’
Gott was right. Susana Osinaga, a nurse who cleaned Guevara’s body back then, recalls: ‘He was just like a Christ, with his strong eyes, his beard, his long hair.’ Today the laundry where Guevara’s corpse was laid is a place of pilgrimage. On the wall above Osinaga, an engraving reads: ‘None dies as long as he is remembered.’ Osinaga has an altar to Guevara in her home. ‘He is very miraculous.’
Saint Che. Friend of Fidel Castro. You can’t go to a latino event in these parts without seeing his beret-capped face looking off over your left shoulder to some future Marxist workers’ state. When you view altars constructed for the Day of the Dead, you’ll often see his image among greats of the Left who include Dr. Martin Luther King and Gandhi. Bullets and compassion for the destitute and struggling made him so venerable.
Che was a thinker and a poet. He joined the Marxist left because he had witnessed the suffering of the poor and thought there was a better way. Only Communism, he thought, cared about Latin America’s downtrodden. So after studying medicine, he hooked up with Castro, took up a gun, and engaged in guerilla warfare in nations where a sliver of a class of wealthy magnates oppressed hundreds of thousands of workers. For decades, the peasants had cried for land reform. Capitalism had failed (as it still does) to provide the right to control of the means of self-survival. Those who worship him know that Che saw this and tried — in a flawed, pinkish way — to change this.
In the end, his opponents executed a man but not a legend. The faces of my mostly Republican neighbors turn red when they see his visage at Mexican Independence Day celebrations, but there is nothing they can do about it. He is an emblem of latino resistance to norteamericano machinations in their lands, a threat to white people of floods of tanned immigrants crossing their borders, taking their jobs and, by their naturalization and votes, their precious but falsely free market government. He does not die. Like many a saint, however, he stands for renunciation of the worldly as an icon for sale in vulgar, popular marketplaces and hash houses.
Posted on September 23, 2007 in Weather
There was a roar around midmorning when recreational vehicle enthusiasts hitched up their trail bikes to their monster trucks and SUVs to spin their wheels in the mud the day after a freak September storm. At the same time yesterday, I bent my head and rushed to my truck. Water spots darkened my pants as I sought the shelter of the condominium eaves and a grove of liquid ambers. The rain soaked the ground and wet the road enough to make it slippery. Cars spewed up a fine mist that lasted after I reached the edge of the cloudfall.
Now a private plane flies over, its pilot enjoying the sky-cleansed views that go on forever.
Posted on September 23, 2007 in Creatures
Someone is cruising the coast of California running down blue whales.
Posted on September 22, 2007 in Humor? Video
George Bush speaks on global warming.
Stolen from Staggo, the Gay Bipolar Guy
Posted on September 22, 2007 in Festivals
DADA!
See [[International Dadaism Month]] and [[Dada]].
Posted on September 21, 2007 in Weather
Netflix didn’t arrive today like it should have and the much touted early winter storm loiters off the coast. I should be delighting in the sound of rain breaking open the baked soil, freeing us from the scourge of drought. But even though water fell in Ventura — only 107 miles away — this morning, the sky remained clear for most of the day. The last I saw of the clouds, they appeared decidedly uninterested in pouring out their stock of rain. Just slat upon slat, leading endlessly to the silver-gold nothingness of the horizon. Our hope has been dashed. The morning will come and the pavement will be dry.
The sea only brings dead blue whales.
Posted on September 21, 2007 in Paranoids Terrorism
I’m jumping off of the boat and swimming against the tide on this one, but realities are realities: that so-called “thing that looked like a bomb” looks nothing like a bomb. What we have here is a state of panic, an instance of our own minds terrorizing ourselves. The person at the information desk saw a wire and a battery, a few colored lights. She/he/it went into hypomania, perhaps dreaming that at last the day of excitement had come — a real [[Al Quaeda]] operative (Simpson appears to be half Asian and half white, probably registering as “off-white”) had come to her/him/it for details about a flight. Security was called. The police sent out a tac squad. And a sophomore at MIT was made to drop to the pavement to the delight of the media.
Folks, Al Quaeda has won another round in the war on terror. They don’t need to do a thing to scare us. We’re working overtime to do it ourselves.
Surflizard clears up the meaning of the ominous term “hoax device” and makes it even more ominous.
[tags]star simpson, terrorism, errorism, security, bizarre, strange, paranoia[/tags]
Posted on September 21, 2007 in Personality Disorders
[[Narcissistic_Personality_Disorder|Narcissistic Personality]] often develops in young adulthood or late teens and becomes a life-long problem, impacting their vocational success, family, relationships, and behavior. A key ingredient in Narcissistic Personality is that the grandiosity and inflated self-esteem are present without any socially or personally-recognized reason to have that level of narcissism. I’ve worked with many criminals who are incredibly narcissistic yet have no recognized accomplishments, no money, are incarcerated, have been rejected by their family, etc. Those who develop narcissism early don’t typically have successful careers or relationships — but they feel so important and great they usually don’t care. I was informed by a 16-year-old adolescent criminal a few weeks ago “I’m too good for a place like this (juvenile prison). I don’t need to talk to anyone who has an hourly wage…I demand a consultant!” His crime — riding in a stolen car…but wait, it was a BMW!
We do find narcissistic traits in people who are successful. Psychologist Belisa Vranich describes this as “acquired narcissism”. While physicians, entertainers, sports/music/political celebrities, and wealthy folks often work hard over many years to obtain their success, that same success often produces a personality pattern of “acquired narcissism”. After years of struggling — these folks are now famous, highly recognized, have lots of money/fame, don’t wait in line at restaurants, have limo service, are asked for autographs, etc. They begin to feel narcissistic and above the common person. It then becomes tabloid interest as they develop their narcissism and become demanding, feel they are above the law, become exhibitionistic, and gradually have social and emotional meltdowns (shaving their head, attempting suicide, alcohol and drug abuse, etc.). In these cases, the narcissistic traits developed as a result of their extreme success. In this situation, the narcissism becomes maladaptive after they have already achieved their success ([[Britney Spears]], etc.). Such folks are considered emotionally incapable of handling their success.
I don’t know about the Britney example, but this may go a long ways to explaining [[Tom Cruise]]. He’s raised himself on a proud tower where he thinks that because of his success anything he says can be construed as authoritative. Journalists have certainly done their part to encourage this behavior. “Tell us about bipolar disorder, Tom” you can hear them say as he leans on a stack on [[Dianetics]] books and gives you the Word according to Scientology.
Posted on September 21, 2007 in Nature Strange
And why was Bad Astronomy Blog in denial about the identity of the fallen object? (see here and here. It was no SCUD.)
Posted on September 21, 2007 in Bipolar Disorder Strange Terrorism
The divide between the artistic and the mad has been called hard to define. Star Simpson thought it would be cool and artsy to wear a sweatshirt with a circuit board and battery attached to it at Boston’s Logan Airport. A hyper-vigilant information desk attendant challenged her about the artifact. Simpson decided to ignore the question and walk away. She’s pleaded not guilty to perpetrating a hoax.
The insanity is hard to pinpoint. Police brought out the heavy guns and ordered the EE/CS major to the ground. Airport and airline employees panicked at the sight of the unfamiliar, unidentified electronics. And Simpson — who says she loves ‘crazy ideas’ — explains that it was “a piece of art”.
I don’t know what is worse — the ignorance about the vagaries of circuit boards or Simpson’s professed innocence about the way her electronics would be interpreted by terrorist-fearing airport staff and police. Is something more lurking behind this prank like a manic episode or is this just youth and stupidity on a slow news day?
Note: Simpson’s MIT web site may be impossible to reach at this time.
Photo courtesy of The Smoking Gun
UPDATE: Bruce Schneier collects the evidence.
UPDATE: Machinist shows off the “bomb”. It’s not impressive.
[tags]star simpson, MIT, hoax, hoaxes, bizarre, terrorism, strange, bipolar disorder[/tags]
Posted on September 21, 2007 in California Watch Justice Suicide
Los Angeles’ latest show trial is about to convene: a judge removed one of Juan Manuel Alvarez’s public defenders so the tribunal may proceed.
“The public is interested in knowing, hundreds of people want to know,” Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge William R. Pounders said of the January 2005 train accident near Glendale, in which 11 people died. “I’ve reached the end of my rope.”
According to witnesses, Alvarez parked his Jeep Cherokee on the tracks, doused it with gasoline before getting out to watch the collision. It’s a classic mentally ill pattern — get all the fixings ready for the big self-immolation, then change your mind at the last minute. Alvarez probably had no clue that the forced meeting of his car and the train would be so fatal to so many. His mind was in a different place, resistant to clues.
His defense is expected to plead insanity — saying that Alvarez wanted to commit suicide but had a change of heart — but this will be hard to prove. Jurors want raving maniacs, slathering at the mouth, eyes bulging from their sockets, and calling out obscenities or unfathomable utterances. Alvarez’s purposefulness will strike them as a willful act: the prosecution will say that he wanted all those people dead. And because the mood of the judge, the county, the state is to have forceful resolution of the case, they will vote for the death penalty.
The law and the mood of the People is slanted against the mentally ill. Alvarez is no Andrea Yates. Worse, he is a latino in a state which is becoming increasingly paranoid about invasions from the south. I expect nothing less than the death penalty but that doesn’t mean I want it or think it is right.
Posted on September 21, 2007 in Xenartha
Nice photo by David King showing a Taramandu in battle mode.