Saturday, December 31, 2016

January 2017














What Happened to the Snow Angels?
     ...the sponsors who used to line up by the dozens...to be a part of the Snow Angels issue stopped lining up.  What was once our biggest and most profitable issue has since shrivelled up.  ...one too many regular advertisers asked "not" to be in the Snow Angels issue.  About a year ago, we nixed our long-running "Girl in Your Corner" feature.  ...it was Snow Angels...that...put Mile High Sports on the map.  - Mile High Sports, 12/2016  (I have never heard of the Snow Angels.)

     Being a mom, school/nonprofit volunteer, and owning my own business...  ...(my business partner) and I recently went to Italy with our husbands to celebrate our 10th anniversary in business.  ...eating exquisite food, drinking great wine, and walking for miles on winding cobblestone streets - seeing the most beautiful sights...  ...it puts all your worries in perspective - Am I a good mom?  Am I a good wife?  Am I doing my best at my job?  "We will someday be sending human beings out into the world."  ...started with a list of 50 positive qualities taken from a book...  ...joy, worship, cleanliness and order, loyalty, respect, courage, lifelong learning, healthy confrontation, and uniqueness.  ...set up a "drop zone"...with...bins against the wall.  ...used for school paperwork...  A portable bin...to easily move to another part of the house when referencing paperwork.  A...plastic folder in the bin contains general information on school policies, that don't need to be referenced all the time.  When the...family built a new home...they wanted a space that would allow the rest of the house to seem a little cleaner.  ...the...mudroom...  A separate locker for each family member, designed by Canyon Creek Cabinet Company, is located in the mudroom..  Each locker also contains a charging station for smart phones.  - Colorado Parent, 1/2017

     Onarzazate is...an important French military outpost controlling the roads down into the Sahara.  The last resistance was not stamped out in the nearby mountain range known as Black Djebel, or Sarro, until...when Hitler seized power in Germany.  Villages rise...like sculptures by Gutzon Borglum.  The "kasbahs"...each houses a family group, say a hundred people.  We saw tall women in blue veils, smeared with indigo.  The children wear topknots...makes it easier for Mohammed to reach out and carry them aloft to heavenAs always in a Moslem city, women add a sharp colorless note of color.  Most that you see in Tangier are so heavily muffled in white veils that they look like wads of Kleenex.  A woman walking alone with a man on the street is actually subject to arrest...Tangerine women are forbidden to go to moviesEight nations sit on the Committee of Control which administers Tangier...  ...the Spaniards moved in on the International Zone in 1941...  ...in Tetuan...430 caids presented a petition...repudiating the new Sultan..."imposed arbitrarily in France"...and refusing to accept him as ruler.  ...Generalissimo Franco...expressed his "utmost satisfaction" at this anti-French demonstration.  Many Moroccan nationalists and even Communists, who have always thought of Franco as Mephistopheles...now praise him warmly...as the "defender" of the Arab world...  The Spanairds are pushing hard to get Gibraltar, and would like...to reacquire TangierFranco apparently fears that French Morocco faces a long period of instability, and he wants to keep his own zone sterilized away from this.  The Generalissimo wants to cultivate as good and close relations as possible with all Arab states, particularly those in the Mediterranean basin.   - Gunther

     During the second half of June and throughout July 1992, I...worked on restaffing the American embassy in Kabul.  On August 10...a massive three-week bombardment of Kabul.  ...the Bulgarian ambassador was wounded, and two Russians were killed.  ...Russia, France, and Italy...evacuated their citizens.  This was, of course...to drive out the foreign presence and isolate the fledgling Afghan government from the international community...U.S. weapons and cash...empowered America's worst enemies...radical Arab and Pakistani allies.  The Iran-Contra scandal involved many of the same actors...  On October 22...my election to be the next U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan.  ...in November, the State Department decided not to reopen the U.S. embassy in Kabul.  ...rocket attacks, later to be continued by the Taliban, made a...diplomatic presence...untenable.  ...until after...9/11...  The Pakistani ISI...unholy alliance on Pakistan's Frontier...was composed of...thousands of international jihadis from...Uzbekistan, China's Xinjiang Province, Burma, the Philippines, and the West.  ...it had evolved into a loose network...and...pursued the twin goals of converting Afghanistan into a radical Islamist state and...a base for exporting messianic Sunni extremism...  The Taliban emphasized the former.  Al-Qaeda...to organize Islamist revolutions in their countries of origin, and Pakistani religious militias stressed international jihad.  The ISI emphasized both.  ...Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs Robin Raphel...rejected...warnings about the Taliban.  "...the Taliban appear to us to be Afghan nationalists rather than radical Islamists with an international agenda."  ...Randy Beers, head of  the State Department's narcotics and law-enforcement office.  ...said: "You're basically asking for the overthrow of the Taliban. . . . I'm not sure the government is prepared to do that."   - Tomsen

     The plant was in the custody of a single engineer.  ...spinning stories about...picking up Russian women with the lure of...Iraqi denars to be exchanged on the black market for rubles.  He told us of...saying he was away on vacation...sneaking in to work at night...as a way of staying alive amidst the anarchy unleashed by our invasion.  ...most of the Iraqi companies bidding were fronts for Turkish construction firms, who would bring in Arabic-speaking engineers from Jordan.  He needed 228 people to run his 1963 plant, had 75 in 2003, and after the sectarian deaths was now making do with only 28.  Of course, the plant was not currently operative, thus reducing his personnel needs.   - Van Buren

     Monday.  Today is recognized as New Year's Day.  I am wondering where both the 4:24 AM and 4:45 AM buses are, until I realize that the transit system is on a holiday schedule.  My first mistake is assuming that this schedule is the same as the system's Sunday schedule.  I believe that I am going to be late to work, and that the last bus home from work will show up before we are closed.  I text someone for a ride home, and then I call a cab to work.  When I see a bus show up which is not on the Sunday schedule, I realize that the transit system holiday schedule follows its Saturday schedule, not its Sunday one.  I text someone back that I do not need a ride home, as a bus will be along after we close, and I call and cancel my cab as another should be here to pick me up.  Along the way, I get out at one train station and watch as a guy in a camouflaged coat and pants with a spring in his step walk over to the condominium.  He stops at a spot where the homeless hang out before heading over to a set of metal stairs in shadow.  One of my customers today pulls up in a Jeep with a winch on the front.  He's a Caucasian guy in his forties with sunglasses, brown lenses, Patagonia sweater and a keffiyeh around his neck.  A man of few words, he leaves with a repressed upbeat outlook.

     Last night about 8:45pm we had a truck plow into 4-5 cars [in a nearby neighborhood.]  The guy broke his axle...so driver and passenger took off running.  Three people brought the driver back on his toes, drunk as can be!!!  ...911...was shocked [that neighbors] brought the driver back...  ...we have invigiles that live on site.
     They run because the cars likely not registered to them.
     The key to making this entire neighborhood is in getting to know...which...neighbors...are worth knowing...
     Last night just before 8pm, someone drove by 9in the same neighborhood0 and threw eggs at cars and homes.  - Nextdoor Westwood, 1/3/2017

     One...taken into custody after shots were fired into a burning home.  ...located [in my neighborhood] on Sunday night.  Fire crews waited for police...  One person treated for smoke inhalation and taken into custody.  - Denver (CBS4), 1/9/2017

     Tuesday evening.  Sometime after 8:30 PM, I am headed up a residential street in a neighborhood next to my own.  A couple of police cruisers are parked next to each other.  I turn down a street to the next block, across the street from the DMV.  In the parking lot, a small car enters, does a couple of doughnuts, and speeds out in the dark.  I get to my own corner.  I watch another little car turn the corner and speed away down my street.  To my right is the gas station.  Two other police cruisers are parked in this lot.  A third police car is a block away with its lights on.  As I turn into my own parking lot, I spy an ambulance turn into the gas station.  Wednesday.  I'm downtown headed to the bank.  Big snowflakes are slowly wafting down from a white sky.  I get on a mall shuttle before a stop where a couple of homeless guys step on board.  One is wearing a sleeping bag, for which he gets a compliment from the other one.  The other tells the first that he is "having a good time."  I assume that he means since relocating here to Denver.  He also mentions that he has a couple of court dates this month.  The first tells him that those dates are the 9th and the 23rd of this month.  "They have homeless court now," he tells the first.  After my trip to the bank, I step off the mall shuttle.  A trio of transit system security officers are in line for coffee at an outdoor stand.  I put down my bag to snap a shot of a banner on a light pole.  A little homeless guy quickly comes across the way.  He's in a long winter coat and his bearded face peeks out of his hood.  He looks like some kind of munchkin.  "I got joints for a dollar," he lets me know before he moves along to the next pedestrian.  Thursday morning there is a foot of snow on the ground.  A quick call to work results in no answer ten minutes after we are supposed to be open.  I'm on a bus up the street around 7:30 AM when we stop for a passenger.  The driver honks to alert him that we are here.  He waves and comes on board.  He's in a winter coat with a big rip in the skin, halfway around the left sleeve.  He stumbles to his seat before getting up to get some paper towels from the front.  Another bus and a short train ride later, I am on my last bus to work headed out of a private university.  I'm listening to a couple of students, one with a horn, discussing her horn section getting "flipped,", class schedule changes, engineering class, choices of a new skateboard, and lazy computer science teaching assistants.  For one brief shining moment, I have stepped out of my daily discomfort zone.

     I'd love to see an increase in the number of family-run ethnic restaurants.  ...Denver diners need to rally...  ...higher expectations from sophisticated diners...
     Hospitality with the joy of the casualization of restaurants.  ...we had this crazy high from how good the mechanics were in a casual bar setting.  ...if you took the formal white waiter's jackets off and put them in a blue chambray shirt and a Hadley & Bennett apron, it would be even more startling.
     ...Denver needs better Indian food.
     ...still not enough - or good enough - fast-casual prepared-food options for LoDo workers and residents.  There are plenty of cool new sit-down, full service concepts, and...old remaining local spots that get busy because there's nowhere else to go.  We're psyched to bring positive change...
     I am hoping - and I genuinely think it is happening - that we will see more and creatively varied BBQ options here in Denver.  We are a great beef-centric city, with adventurous eaters...
"What do you hope goes away?"
     There's too much technology in the form of cameras, phones, screens, survey devices and other distractions in our dining rooms and bars...  Unfortunately, with the labor shortage and increased costs, I believe the industry will continue to look toward technology to replace the human factor.
     Out-of-town big shots thinking that they have a handle on Denver's needs.
     The idea of "trends."  If someone makes a great kale salad, then fuck, yeah!  I someone is killing it with tiki drinks, word!
     Fried Brussels sprouts and sliders.
     The need to "define" new concepts.
     Beverage snobbery.
     Fermented foods are going to continue to evolve...
     Squid and really good vermouth.
     I've been watching drink prices slowly flirt with the $15 mark on cocktail menus.  ...the magic number...enough financial cover for a bar to do whatever the fuck it wants to.  It creates an R&D budget...
     VEGETABLES!  - Westword, 1/5-11/2017

     Friday.  Shortly after 10 AM.  I'm at a bus stop just up the street from where I live.  On a bench is the elderly guy I encountered last month.  On a Sunday, at the stop for my bus to go grocery shopping, he was complaining that the bus was late just before it came over the hill, when be began waving his arms to attract the driver's attention.  This morning, he's on the bench before he gets up and crosses the street to the stop directly on the other side.  This stop is for a bus headed one direction.  The other stop is for the same bus headed the opposite direction.  (?)  An hour later, I am sitting on a dry patch of concrete at a train station.  Waiting for my last bus to work, I'm on the phone with three different people, one after the other, from work.  I'm trying to find someone who will speak to our overnight driver to find out where he took 3 missing orders.  When I finally hang up, a middle-aged geek comes along to ask me if I am okay.  I as him who he is.  Instead of answering me, he tells me that he is someone who cares "about people."  He wants to know if I ant either a drink or a burrito.  I decline the drink at 11 AM.  "How about a burrito?" he asks.  I decline this as well before he tells me that he is "someone who cares about dogs."  He wishes me well before he heads over to someone else and strikes up a positive-affirming conversation.  A train pulls up, and he holds the door open as he finishes his sermonizing.  He gets on board and vanishes from the scene.  Nine hours later, I'm out of work and on a train home for a short couple of stops.  As soon as I get on, I hear four loud Caucasian male 20-year-olds and a couple of girlfriends.  And I smell a lot of cologne.  They have "college" written all over them.  An hour after this, I step onto a bus and around a guy who has his legs sticking out across the aisle.  He's in an insulated jumpsuit, and after the cast on his leg and crutches next to him, the very next thing I notice is that he is drooling.  He appears more than ten years younger than myself.  He begins to dig though a canvass bag with "Prudential" printed on the side.  Under his seat are what appear to be a few vitamins which have fallen here.  He pulls out a zip lock bag full of assorted necklaces and earrings.  He drops it on the seat and some of them begin to spill out as it lands.  He pulls out a pen with a plastic spoon taped to it, a yellow glove, and a sock all spill onto his lap as he fishes out a stick of beef jerky.  He pulls off a bite with his teeth..
     Early the next morning, I'm standing on a corner of my street.  I'm at the next light up from my own corner.  I am staring at the line of headlights extending ahead on the boulevard for perhaps a mile or so.  Traffic is already rolling out at 5:30 AM.  Around the corner is the stop for my bus to work on Saturdays.  The time and temperature sign flashes three degrees F.  At the stop are a couple of women in winter coats.  And there is a guy leaning against the bus shelter.  He's in a hoodie, and there is a cane at his side.  Forty-five minutes later, I'm on a train for a short couple of stops.  I got on with a guy who has a bike and a safety helmet.  When the train pulled up, he hesitated for a second before locating the door at the end of the car, either end of which is used by passengers with bikes.  At the next stop, someone else with a bike gets on the same end.  The pair appear to know each other, the first digging in the second one's backpack before the two share a plastic gallon jug of water.  When Monday morning comes along, I am up to head to work early to work an open to close shift.  Instead of watching the Golden Globes, I got to bed early enough to get enough sleep, to feel rested enough to get out on the bike for the first time in almost a week.  Last week saw snow and single-digit days.  Which makes it all the more surprising when I stick my head out of my front door to find what my computer tells me is 46 degrees F.  The high is supposed to be 61.  The trail is, with the exception of some stubborn ice spots, is clear.  It's a spooky morning before sunrise.  There's a wind from the south strong enough to blow me into the other bike lane.  The second half of my ride to work is through forested parks.  One wood is full of trees creaking in the wind.  Along another, I hear a branch fall to the ground.

     Suppose, let us say, a Frenchman sells his family estates; he may prefer to have his proceeds is Tangier in gold rather in paper francs at home.  Tangier is an attractive haven for fugitive gold...because it is under both British and American protection.  ...its older banking houses have a nice reputation for discretion.  Tangier...is famous for spies, smugglers, and pirates...  It is a major haven for expatriated homosexuals and other outcasts in their wanderings around the world....  Tangier has 20,000 Jews, who have their own representation in the legislature...  There are three types of Jew - the old stock...those...from Spain in medieval times, and contemporary refugees from Central Europe.  ...a flat 12 1/2 percent duty charged on all imports...  ...the Arab population...the poorest as well as the most numerous, pay for the European rich. ...the Arabs have to buy...imported staples...  It's the "indigenes"...who support the international community.  Expatriated millionaires live in dilapidated Arab palaces...fig trees surrounded by shiny aluminum modern furniture.  ...theirs was the first country in the world to recognize the independence of the United States. ...Tangier, with Gibraltar, corks the Mediterranean.  Lord Nelson once said, "Tangier must always remain in hands of a neutral power..."  In 1945...a...conference confirmed the organization and powers of the multi-nation Committee of Control that runs Tangier today...   There has never been an election in Tangier, and there are no political parties or independent press.  The Control Committee can veto any measure passed by the legislature.  Public opinion has no way to express itself...  MENDOUB OF TANGIER  The bleached-out old gentleman...is the personal representative of the Sultan in the International zone, a sub-lieutenant of God, and a dutiful French puppet.  He is...not particularly stimulating intellectually.  ...a long ragged line of retainers...of shabbiness and splendor.  I aid to our escort, "They look like slaves," and our escort replied dryly, "That's what they are."  - Gunther

     ...the reconstruction program was hampered by Iraq's difficulty sustaining new and renovated infrastructure projects.  ...in the absence of a responsive bureaucracy nothing was ever done.  ...the Army spent $3 million to but twenty-five...trailer-mounted, solar-powered reverse=osmosis water filtration machine(s).  The first choked on the salty water.  The locals used it as a source of electricity, pulling some current  from the solar panels until they broke.  The second unit was stolen...and reinstalled at a sheik's home.  ...managed the low volume water use there just fine...  The third unit...  Local thugs took possession and started charging people for the water...  The Sheiks controlled the territory like Mafia dons...  The United States...set about...using the sheiks as conduits to push reconstruction money into local communities.  Boring Iraqi district offices morphed into smoke-filled backrooms.  "Our district council chair was the Tony Soprano for the area.  ...he'd say, 'You will use my contractor or your work will not get done.'  It was all about money."   Iraq's Shiite government inherited the "sahwa" program because we got tired of funding it and because "transition" was a theme that month.  ...that the faster we could transition our programs to...Iraq, the sooner we could go home.  The sheik...reported that no one had...provided...his men...with full-time jobs as promised.  ...they were getting solid offers from al Qaeda...   - Van Buren

     In a worst-case scenario, when the United States disengages from Afghanistan...after the withdrawal of combat troops scheduled to be completed in 2014.  The disastrous results could severely test the constitutional obligation required of all U.S. administrations to protect the United States and its people.  ...on the heels of a Taliban victory; al-Qaeda, the...Haqqani network...Pakistani religious militias...will strike the American homeland again and again.   ...with the flow of Afghan history and culture...focus on geostrategic diplomatic reinforcement of global and regional forces to achieve...de-Americanization...and...a fundamental change in Pakistan's policy...  During the two Clinton administrations - and the George W. Bush administration up to September 11, 2001...  The United States outsourced American Afghan policy to Pakistan.  ...one of the greatest diplomatic blunders in American history, continued even after al-Qaeda blew up two U.S. embassies in Africa and attacked an American warship off the Yemini coast.  ...from 2002 to 2005 marked the first time in almost a quarter century that Afghanistan enjoyed relative peace.  Afghan elites forged a working consensus and with international assistance developed a political structure for Afghanistan's future.  ...the United States switched its focus and resources to Iraq.  The ISI regrouped and rearmed the Taliban inside Pakistan.  - Tomsen

     ...the great Moorish chieftain Abdel Krim rose in the early 1920's and fought both Spanish and French to a standstill until...1926.  ...the French could not afford to have Spanish Morocco beaten...  {...his views on American foreign policy: "At the end of the [World] war [II] there was a superb opportunity for the United States, basing itself upon the . . . . Atlantic Charter, to rally all the colonial and oppressed peoples to a new organization of human society.  ...American power chose instead to support colonial empires everywhere...  The colonial and oppressed peoples now find that the only power which professes itself in their ability to rise is Soviet Russia.  The partition of Palestine...introduced Russia to the Mediterranean.  A period of...unnecessary struggle, with unpredictable results, is now inevitable."  "Virginia Quarterly Review", Winter, 1951}.  ...Spain has promised its Moors eventual self-rule.  The Spanish Zone...is not only a feudal backwater, but the walled-off preserve of a grossly totalitarian dictatorship.  The secret police are everywhere.  To sum up, the Spanish policy, in contradistinction to the French, seeks to make use of local nationalism...  The strings of control...are wrapped up in the silk of "co-operation."  "We...cannot last forever here, but we intend to last as long as possible."   - Gunther

     ...our US military colleague...started out declaring himself "but a simple soldier" and then wound up into a long speech about the American democratic experiment...  I had no idea what he was saying.  Our translator kept right up, however...  ...explaining how we all were now brothers fighting a common enemy.  This was where I would have given a cornea to understand Arabic...even our stalwart Iraqi translator was having a hard time figuring out who this common enemy was.  Considering the men in the room controlled militias and could order revenge killings, I guessed their definition and ours were differentThe youngest of the...soldiers...was not yet nineteen.  He'd been eleven years old when this war started, just a little older than the kids to whom Bush read "My Pet Goat" while New York burned.  WMDs, 9/11, Colin Powell at the UN, Mission Accomplished, and torture at Abu Ghraib were events in history...  Chances were good that many of the insurgents were no older than the boys...  ...they had grown up with this war as a fact, their daily life.  The Americans had always been here ...  ...this was Mesopotamia, the biblical Eden - yet nothing mattered but this moment.  This war had been going on for years now, plus one more day.  - Van Buren

     Thursday.  On a short trail through my side of town.  It's about mid-morning.  Sitting out on the brown grass, surrounded by open field with geese, is a young guy in a camouflaged coat.  I don't think he is a hunter.  He's sitting alone and apparently doing nothing more than listening to music.  When I get on and down the long trail, and onto the connecting trail for the last half of my ride to work, the trail is full of foot traffic.  This section of my ride travels through an endless series of beautiful forested parks.  As snow is forecast for this evening, I believe that many are taking advantage of the clear part of the day.  I approach a tunnel under a street where I slow down, as it is a blind spot in the view to the other side.  Right after I slow down, a parade of seniors, all with hiking canes, comes slowly marching through.  Out the opposite side, I run into a group all walking their dogs together.  Past this are countless individuals all walking their dogs on the trail.  Toward the trailhead at the end, down by a creek are four high school kind playing with an abandoned shopping cart.  Or, in homeless rhetoric, a "buggy."
     The following morning, I am out at the bus stop, headed for a workout before work.  On the bench is a mom smoking a cigarette in a plastic holder.  Her child is busting out dance moves for the traffic.  Three hours later, after breakfast and a workout, I'm out at a bus stop for a couple of different routes.  First, the Route 100 bus comes by and drops off a couple of middle-aged guys who appear to be wearing hand-me-down outfits.  One says to the other, "Sometimes, if I'm twenty cents short, they (the bus driver) won't even let me on."  The Route 21 bus shows up and we all get on board.  In a seat is a young high school kid who, at 11 AM, is not in class.  He's chubby with a natural blonde afro.  The kid tells Mr. Twenty Cents and his sidekick that he's looking for Garrison St., where he hopes to catch the Route 76 bus.  That bus goes down Wadsworth Boulevard, not Garrison.  But it becomes apparent that in fact I digress.  I tell the kid that Garrison is the next stop, but he is so busy talking that Garrison goes past without his noticing, which of course matters not anyway.  The kid explains that he must "drop off a back pack" to an undisclosed person before keeping "an appointment.  I'm starving," he changes gears, as he has been doing throughout his recitation.  "And I had a really good breakfast..." he questions the fates.  Well, son, it is close to lunch time.  He gets out...at Wadsworth.  Someone else gets out at the next stop, dropping a pack of Marlburos.  At yet the next stop, someone else gets on and picks them up.
     The bus arrives at a train station before it is immediately on its way.  We approach a part of town much closer to downtown.  We pick up someone, and then at the next stop we pick up somebody with a brain affliction interfering with their speech, who recognizes the other passenger who just came on.  He begins speaking to her very slowly.  Out of nowhere, Mr. Twenty Cents asks the woman behind him if there is a DMV in the immediate area.  She appears not to know.  He looks at the guy speaking slowly, directly across from him.  "This neighborhood looks familiar, is there a DMV around here?" he asks him.  If the slowly-speaking guy heard him, he doesn't respond.  The neighborhood is familiar to myself as well. It's refereed to as the University District, and the bus which runs up and down University Boulevard is my last connecting one to work.  The surrounding streets are in proximity to a private college called the University of Denver.  On this corner is a place I have passed by for years, but never entered.  It's a sandwich place called Mustard's Last Stand.  I go inside and grab a diet soda from a grey-haired guy with a big moustache.  He looks like a cross between a mechanic and an aging surfer.  I ask him for a lid to put on my diet soda and he directs me to one wall.  I believe that I just met Colonel Mustard, and that it was Col. Mustard in the kitchen with the plastic lid.
     The bus sweeps up myself my drink and I and drops me on the corner where I work, where I stop for the first time into a Mediterranean restaurant.  Both myself and the customer after me are each directed to one of the tables in the center, instead of one of the booths along the walls.  I can only wonder for what diabolical geoglobal purpose this could be.  After lunch, my last stop before work is a café, where an employee asks a woman, "(Do) you want something to drink?"  She replies yes, and he directs, "Okay, talk to me..."  On my walk to work, I pass a couple of property mechanical guys are taking down the giant decorative holiday illuminated snowflakes.  One of them belches.  Coming out of a hardware store are a couple of guys.  One is in a hoodie with "God loves ugly" on the back.

     The smells...cigarette smoke from the always present knots of soldiers smoking.  ...mud if it rained overnight...  ...rotted tobacco from...a steel ammunition box...  Iraq was not Sudan or Haiti...overall few were starving.  ...a bag with one or two meals in it was not going to make any difference.  The Colonel...waited in vain for the ground swell of happiness...  This time the Colonel was wrong.  ...we were not going to be adopted into anybody's tribe.  ...we tried to give away fruit tree seedlings.  "You killed my son and now you are giving me a tree?"  But you just couldn't stop the Army when it was on a roll.  One of the difficult parts about counterinsurgency was that it was hard to tell when you had one.  You measured success more by what did not happen...the silence that defined the music.  ...we located women who, for our money, [we wanted to] form NGOs and attend a nearly endless round of conferences and seminars we paid for.  ...little was expected other than they pose for photos.  These conferences were perfect for Embassy speakers.  They could dart out...in armoured Suburbans, make quick speeches composed of the words "freedom-liberation-empowerment-women" randomly rearranged  several times and then rocket back to Planet Embassy...
     ...Baghdad International Airport...  A year ago I had passed through...but I was damned if I could ever remember being here.  We were all here, soldiers...contractors, Southeast Asians...Sri Lankans...Bangladeshis...  ...the contractors with the Harley-Davidson T-shirts...and big belt buckles...the Embassy people...in insanely out-of-place getups like white pants and Panama hats or...safari gear...$120 sunglasses...  One of the Embassy guys had an American Tourister travel bag....  American Tourister?  He was in the wrong war by about forty years.  ...a Ugandan security contract security guard...  He had mastered that Third World art of looking at nothing...  - Van Buren

     City Council...want(s) to pass...Tax Increment Funding...to finance a "portion" of...affordable housing.  gee.  didn't we just vote on money for affordable housing???  ...it is recommended by DURA...also putting up HIGH end property...  ...they call this area "BLIGHTED".  - Nextdoor Westwood, 1/13/2017

     The city...was in the center of migration...and already black Africa's largest capital - a collapsed metropolis, unable to assure even the survival of its nine million people.  But still the dispossessed came in floods from the villagesAnd the two- and three-story buildings stained with long black stripes: algae, rising from within the cement and blooming in the open.  The city seemed to be falling apart, building by building - structures...seemed almost to melt.  The statue of the Belgian king had long been toppled...  Lining the roads were heaps of garbage, glowing like embers and giving off black smoke A Belgian king committed genocide..to pillage...for rubber...  ...the...state initiated a war over...copper, to wire the world...  ...recent conflicts were heightened by the world's growing demand for tin...used in almost every electronic circuit.  The world now needs...tantalum.  ...Lumumba...tried...expelling the white man and gaining independence from Belgium: then Mobutu...reviving...kingship; and finally...Kabila, with his half-Marxist ideas of liberation.  Partice Lamumba, the fiery politician who united the Congolese and remains the country's only true hero.  ...Joseph Mobutu, ruled as dictator for more  than thirty years, with western help, after having Lamumba assassinated in 1961, just six months after Congo's independence.  The rebel Laurent Kabila...in 1997 toppled the cancer-afflicted Mobutu.
     The sides of our bus began to be thumped.  Children's wide-eyed faces pressed against my window.  "Give me money," said the shapes of their lips...  ...our windows were fixed and they could not even sell us their cool drinks, shoe shine or melting candy.  (In Congo, there was no middle class: there was sprawling bungalows and the serviced apartments with their maids and armed guards...) It felt impossible to belong to this place.  The houses, the paint, even the brilliant goldwork of new villas appeared to announce the coming of a jaded future.  The war in Congo was the world's worst in half a century.  ..."Africa's World War," to convey...the number of armies it had drawn in...  ...the city had swamped the senses with its movement and noise, but the countryside had an intellectual, less accessible capacity...  It would be from the city outward that I would grasp the Congo.  ...back home...  At the bars, the corner shop, and around the kiosks the discussions centered on the new wave of government reprisals...  ...the...currency inflated by 5 percent...had been attributed to rumors.  ...now the elections were suspected.  [In] our neighborhood [there was] a rampage of purchases...  Common sense was lost: vendors sold goods by auction.  Exchanges were set up between parts of the city to profit from arbitrage.  The city's most credible bank...required a ten-thousand-dollar minimum to open an account.  The bank catered to diamond dealers - and reputedly to...an Israeli notorious for dirty dealings.   - Stringer, by A. Sundaram, 2014

     Sunday.  I'm headed across the street for lunch.  On the corner is a middle-aged Vietnamese woman on her phone.  She hands it to me, assuming I speak better English.  The guy on the other end just needs to know where she is.  After lunch, I go to the gas station for a pre-packaged dessert. I'm in line behind a guy who, when it comes his turn, makes a payment of just under $880.  I see him take no product, or even a scratch ticket.  I ask the clerk what he purchased.  He tells me the guy was paying his rent.  Monday.  More snow.  Mid-morning, I am downtown at the transit station hub for, what else, more transit system ride coupons.  When I come out, I sit my bag down.  A young guy with curly long hair asks me, 'Hey, my man, you wouldn't know what I can do about someone helping me out with a bus ticket home, would you?  Social services?"  He doesn't appear to have been out on the street long enough to collect grime on his skin.  It sounds as if he is without any family or friends he can call for help.  Wednesday.  This damned cold keeps me off the bike and relegated to the bus.  Around 8 PM I am at the train station after work, on the campus of a private university.  Across the tracks comes a young girl in a hoodie on a cold evening, with a cigarette in hand.  She asks me for a light; I tell her I don't smoke.  She begins waving both arms like an octopus.
Handmade Burritos and Wine
     Friday.  I am still with a cold and I decide against either working out or taking the bike.  After 3 shifts open to close I take the time to get some things done around the house.  I'm finally on a bus up the street around 10:30 AM.  Sitting in a seat for the handicapped is a woman using oxygen.  She asks if I want to purchase a handmade burrito from one of two insulated handbags.  I believe it's a violation, possibly of state law, to operate a business without displaying a permit.  We both get out at the corner, where a painter works on the base of a sign for the remodeled former medical marijuana dispensary, shut down for laundering foreign drug lord money.  One of President Trump's "tombstones" and perhaps the strangest marker of the Great Recession.  While thousands prepare to fill the park between the capitol and the legislature, where a year ago the same space was filled with fans of the city's Superbowl championship football team, a woman using oxygen asks a painter if he wants a handmade burrito.  I head across the street to the bus stop, where I recognize a mental guy in a hat with ear flaps.  He asks me what time it is and I take my best guess.  The bus pulls up and we form a line in front of the entrance.  I notice a young woman who hangs back behind the rear.  She climbs aboard behind me.  As I put my bag in a seat, I hear her asking the driver in Spanish if this bus goes to the train station.  He has no clue what she's saying.  I go up to do a brief translation, and when I turn around, the mental guy is in my seat next to my bag.  Perhaps a half hour later, I'm at the shopping center where I work, having a last lunch at one of my favorite lunch places.  My boss, both to solve scheduling problems and because she wants me to work with her at a particular location, is moving me away from this luxurious neighborhood.  Perhaps as soon as Monday.  At the bar is a wine salesman conversing with a buyer.  At his feet is a case full of wine.  I listen as he goes on about Italian villages and production history.

     The street...operated like...an urban clan or village or city, of associated languages, religions and cultures...  All this had coalesced into a doughnut society, with the family at the center, and the clan (the street) as the ring.  Outside this ring, the world was...without clear rules or enforcers.  At the center it was much the same...  But the clan was society's best organized unit...  I told him my phone was stolen.  "...they have to call you...this president.  Get your phone...  Pay the boy off.  ...that's how it works in Congo, you pay twice, sometimes three times for your own things."  Nana tried to dissuade me.
     "Those boys are fetish."  It meant they had connections to dark powers.  "At least talk to the boy at the grocery store.  He'll tell you what's what."
     "I used to live on the street," the...shop boy...said.  "You'll see.  It's a place God doesn't visit."  Patrick slammed Guy in the chest.  ...he laughed, then punched Patrick.  ...their laughter...transformed into cries and screams.  ...the boys seemed unhinged.  Patrick...hit him on the back so hard that his head hit his knees.  Patrick punched the air.  He punched like a madman.  He would not stop.  ...Sylvia said something to the boys...properly enunciating...  The boys mostly communicated with motions of their heads...  Sylvia...told me to ignore him, saying he had lost his mind during the war.  "Do you live [here] in the cemetery?" I asked.   "I live with the boys," she said.  "And sometimes with white people."  After some time Guy crawled over and lay on her lap.  This was the city that had rejected the children - and in turn the children had rejected it.  ...Nana...began to behave as if she needed to prove that evil lurked in the children.  ...she had...a nurse's training.  But this belief in evil seemed to be something  Nana was taught not to reason with and in which she believed so powerfully that even having a child did not change her.  Nana took me aside and told me tales...children could grow large at night...and come and eat us.  I asked questions - she answered excitedly, s though hoping I would agree with her.  ...troublesome children often confessed.  The evangelists recommended it on the radio...  The sermons were screamed...  The pastor would wheeze hallelujahs.  His anger would seem unending.  ...children related how the pastors had beaten them, deprived them of food, water and sleep...until they had confessed to working for the devil..  ...the child was beaten more by the family...and then...left in a place far from home.  The child knew not to return.  - Sundaram

     ...the number of [homeless] camps in...Pueblo...have been growing steadily since January 2014, according to...executive director of Posada...which offers...housing for families and youth, among other supportive services...  "...rural communities for the first time are experiencing homelessness."
     ...people experiencing homelessness...used to bring...the carts holding all of their belongings...inside the...Denver Public Library's Central Branch...but as of April 2016 they are only allowed to bring in three bags.  ...if they leave their things outside, they could be...put in lost and found.  ...unanswerable questions [were] coming from patrons...how to find housing, how to apply for food stamps, and even how to go about recovering from identity theft...a man...came in to leave a bus ticket...for safekeeping.  ...working two jobs in-between naps on the streets.  ...they've lost...the essence of who they are.  "Sleeping outside itself is trauma."  ...to start asking what happened to them and not what's wrong with them.  "And people are just yelling, 'where can I sleep in this city?'"  When days get really cold...anxieties and tensions run high and there is a significant increase in mental health symptoms.
     ...an island in the middle of the Colorado River...was easy to get [to] by wading in the river.  I was made to work...  If I did not...I paid for it.  No matter what...a lunatic...beat me and raped me every day.  There was another couple at the camp; they knew...and didn't care.  The two...people...were on the run; I dared not ask why.  - Denver Voice, 1/2017

     Monday night.  I get out of a bus from work back on my boulevard.  The stop where I disembark is right next to a relatively new bank.  In the parking lot are a couple of police cars and an ambulance.  Rather than a lot full of flashing lights visible as far as the eye can see, this scene is remarkably quiet as these vehicles huddle together.  The following day, my doctor's medical assistant answers a question over the phone, letting me know that I should wait one to two weeks before getting back on my bike.  Wednesday.  I'm having lunch across the street before work.  It's a fish place with a mixed crowd including some guys in suits.  One of those is sitting at the table next to me.  He's a middle-aged guy speaking to an elderly guy.  At first, I wonder if it's a father and son.  The younger one is decrying  the treatment of "the liberal media" toward Trump.  He also thinks that the musical The Book of Mormon is "a real slam against" the Mormon church.  He reads Tom Clancy.  The other guy asks him if he's read any Bill O'Reilly.  "No.  My mother-in-law is a big fan."  It turns out that this is a financial advisor at lunch with a client.  Funny thing is, I saw Trump/Pence signs in yards throughout my journey to work through this neighborhood during the election.  I thought, 'Well, this could be a place which likes Trump.'  At the next table I hear a fan of Hillary.  She mentions "the sixth great extinction," and she refers to Trump as a dictator.  I decide against desert and get my check before any consternation ensues.
     Thursday.  I'm on the 11:19 AM bus to work.  Along the way, a drunk passenger comes on board.  He sounds familiar.  I think that I have seen him on this bus last year as I was on the way home from work.  He has  a hat, a hoodie underneath a coat, and a big backpack all in the colors and name of the city's football team.  He asks someone next to him where he works, before I see him pull out an unopened aluminum can.  I can't tell if it's beer.  He then asks the guy if it's cold where he works.  We pull into the train station, where he slowly gets out of the bus.  He takes a seat on a bench, at a stop for a bus on this same route, headed the opposite direction.  The train comes along and takes me to the station from where I will catch my last bus to work.  Seated on the cement at my bus gate is a young guy with big prescription glasses and a long beard.  He is cross-legged and his palms are together in front of his chest.  The next morning, I'm back at my old bus stop.  The mental guy who was here the last time I was is back.  Again, he asks me the time.  This time...I don't know what time it is.  The following afternoon, I have a rare Saturday off.  For just over a month I have had one cold after another, and for the first time in at least a couple of weeks I am headed to the gym.  I'm down the street at a stop for a crosstown bus.  Sitting on the ground is a couple next to a shopping cart filled to the top with at least one guitar  case, as well as a sleeping bag and assorted belongings.  The pair bums a couple of transit system "ride coupons" to get on the bus.  When the bus arrives, they haul all of their stuff on board.  The lady strikes up a conversation with a guy reading the newspaper, who kept his eye on them as they took a seat.  She tells him that they were both "assaulted and robbed," and are seeking safer digs.  Is where we are headed more safe than where we all got on, she would like to know.  We all caught the bus on the boulevard where I live.  He mentions my boulevard to them, describing it as "pretty rough."  I wonder if this means I am a rough guy?

     He advised me to...more like the locals and discuss the issues that mattered to them.  "You are the High Representative of the little man."  ...the office receptionist...said, "I am not aware of your appointment."  She wore a dress with a picture of the president printed on her stomach.  Around the image were inscribed the words "My Husband Is Capable."  She looked at me sternly; I stopped reading her belly.  Africa has a history of using geography as symbols: cities are named Freetown, Liberville...countries are named and renamed Democratic and Free with each revolution, coup...and election.  The nostalgia was...the "correct" attitude to have...  The abuses...were only awkwardly acknowledged...  So the two were kept separate...  And this is what crushed society: this constant need to switch between two worlds, the impulse to deny what had happened.  The...capricious, lawless world...had possibility: it had a future.  The Congolese, having learned to distrust the future, retreated to their families and clansThe society that resulted seemed intellectually stagnant, half emerged from its history and only reluctantly moving forward.  ...I recognized...a certain aquiescence, a cloistering within small ambitions...and an utter belief in the power of one man.  - Sundaram

     One of the other night's featured attractions is a deep-trance medium..."Bud"...from Santa Anna...  "I was an auto racing mechanic...  ...during the off-season, I started talking in my sleep in some foreign language I didn't know anything about.  ...a linguistics professor we know.  He said it was a dialect of ancient Arabic."  Bud then goes into a trance...grimacing...  Assisting is someone who helps run there Know Thy Self Fellowship.  After a few minutes Bud announces, "I am Paul, born of Arabic descent in the year of four A.D."  In a halting, mechanical voice he proceeds to answer...about the Other Side, where he is a teacher at one of the twelve universities that instruct...souls...to choose suitable parents for their next reincarnations.  No modern, postindustrial society has ever experienced anything like this occult explosionHarvard University's hip, activist chaplain...says unworriedly about the occult explosion, "Our tight, bureaucratic, and instrumental society is fascinated with the slippery stuff that never found a place in it: astrology, madness, witches, drugs, non-Western religions, palmistry, and mysticism..."  But Yale's equally hip, activist chaplain...fears...occultism is a "beautiful example of the lobotomized passivity that results from the alienating influence of modern technological society."  - The Occult Explosion, by N. Freedland, 1972

     Monday.  After being off the bike for two solid weeks, due to a second cold, I endeavored to ride it today.  Alas, it decided to lose air in its front tire just in time.  I'm back at my old bus stop this morning, across the street from an infamous ex- medical marijuana dispensary.  Raided and shut down for laundering money from a Columbian drug lord.  Recently remodeled to appear, at least, as a bank branch.  A sign observed from across the street appears to announce a tattoo parlor coming soon.  The following day is the end of the month.  How shall I end this month's entry?  Well...I am out at the bus stop across the street around mid-morning.  'Tis a relatively mild winter morning, and a quiet one for this racetrack of a boulevard.  A grey-haired guy shuffles across the street between the stopped traffic.  A new muscle car comes to a stop.  The driver's window is down in order to share the message of love via his sound system.  Could pray tell he be fresh from the Women's March?  "I'm outta here.  Bitch.  'Cause I ain't got time..." his speakers pronounce.  The bus comes and collects me, and as we head up the street, a street racer blows past us.  While we are parked at another stop, another racer loudly races the engine.  I disembark at the station for the train downtown.  I'm headed there to purchase more transit system discount coupons, go to my bank to get change for work, and get the tire on the wheel I am carrying topped off with air.  Outside the bus, I catch a whiff of marijuana.  At the top of the long stairs down to the train is a guy with his face covered in tattoos and an expression of sorrow.  I catch a glimpse of his face and he appears as if perhaps he was beat up.  Coming across the street is another guy.  This one, in an olive hoodie and knit cap, got my attention when I heard him yell, "Fuck!  Fuckin' fascists!"  He continues past the bus shelter and stops briefly to pick up a cigarette off the ground, which he puts in his mouth.
     I get to the platform for the downtown train where I take a seat next to a guy with a small tattoo under his left eye.  He moved to the other side of the tracks to catch the train going the other way.  The train whips me downtown, where I grab a shuttle down the pedestrian mall.  I jump out to grab a copy of the city's homeless newspaper before I jump on the next mall shuttle.  I sit next to yet another guy with a tattoo next to his eye, this one a teardrop.  At the next stop, another guy gets on.  He asks the first one something about another part of town.  The first mentions the name of an enormous neighborhood where he is headed.  Row after row of multi-million dollar mansions and pastoral meadows.  The highest income by far of any neighborhood in the metro area.  He says he is going there "where it's peaceful."  Before he gets out, the second guy asks him if he knew him in prison.











     A person is dead...in a three vehicle crash [on my corner] Sunday afternoon.  - Denver 7, Facebook, 1/29/2017

Sunday, December 11, 2016

OMNI April 1981




Solar Sisters/Earth, by Patricia Seremet
     Two days before the opening of the largest solar conference in the world, a series of panels and workshops was held for women only.  Angered that the solar-energy movement is being dominated by men...  ...a film called X-Rated Solar M.E.O.W....was explained by...a "free-lance philosopher and artist of ideas"...  "Please," she pleaded with the women on the stage, her voice choking with emotion, "tell me about different ways to organize women around truth, respect, security, and the earth."  But rather than plot solar strategy, the opening speakers paid homage to their sister-in-the-sky.  In one address the speaker took hold of the microphone and...emitted loud chawnking noises.  "I'm trying to chew up the bullshit I've been fed all my life about the limitations I have just because I am a woman."  "Uh-oh," cautioned...a member of Mid-American Solar Energy, "we're talking to ourselves again."  "There we were," said...a director of the Western Solar Utilization  Network, in Oregon, "the earth mothers in one group, and the men, the builders, in another."  Women will never make a real impact on the solar energy movement, she said, until they work through their feelings of socialized inferiority "and become solar professionals."  ...a "burned-out" teacher turned puppeteer, told how she delivers the solar message to schoolchildren from a theater she carries on her back.  One panel...was called "lesbians and Grass-roots Solar Organizing."  "Eighty percent of the women in solar building are lesbians.  We must recognize our witching powers."

Manifest Destiny, by J. A. Michner
     And Americans, men and women alike, will once again be voyaging in space after a period of six years during which we surrendered leadership to the Russians.  If it fails, and some ultracautious experts are suggesting that it could, Congress and the public might be tempted to close down major space efforts for several decades.  "With this machine we can accomplish miracles.  When it becomes functional, the world will experience a surge of excitement."  I judge that by the time Flight 17 blasts off on January 31, 1984, it would be practical for the shuttle to carry fare-paying passengers.  "Civilian passengers would wear business suits."

Fiction
The Hitmaker, by Cynthia Morgan
     The town was perfect.  Despite the contract stipulations that no essential changes were to be made  in life-style or environment during the year of the contract, locals were always trying to improve their image.  ...new furniture, home repairs, painting...  Ten years from now, Jordan thought, locals would be running the show.  ...that first year's success had been due to the novelty of continuous viewing.

Interview/Peter Glaser, by Douglas Colligan
     The NASA people are working with a sixty-satellite scenario for the United States.
     ...we would not be allowed to create a monopoly with SPS [Solar Power Satellite].  ...we would be the true global superpower.  That would be a cause for war.  ...we will have to work with other nations.
     More and more satellites are being put up in geosychronous orbit.  Should we be reserving space for the SPS now?
     ...satellite functions will have to be amalgamated in satellite platforms.
     Some of the equatorial countries are suing for space rights over their land.
     ...SPS technology will allow us to extend civilization beyond the earth...  I picture a scene where the...chief engineer...may say..."We think it will be more economical to use lunar materials to construct the SPS."  ...to capture asteroids: we could...use the material there as well.

Transformations, by R. Sheckley
     Transformation - its prediction, its control, its meaning - has always been the province of the priest, the shaman, and the artist.  Magic...is...the control of changes.  Visionary artists increasingly...deal with inner experience...  Fantasy thinking...contact with the oldest layers of the human brain...metamorphic references for...psychological states...


Thursday, December 1, 2016

December 2016, Professor Vape and the Mexican trash man






     And the months are waning of 2016.  Thursday.  4:30 AM.  On the other side of the street from my parking lot is an old building newly renovated into apartments.  Parked in front of them are a car and a pickup truck.  The car has the left front corner missing from the body, the truck the front grill.  Street racing damage, or damage from street racing?  Up the street, at my bus stop of old, I watch a car turn the corner.  The front grill is smashed and mangled.  It's as if I am in a Stephen King story about zombie vehicles.  Twenty-four hours later, I am back at the same corner.  As I step off the bus, I see on the sidewalk the front corner of someone's vehicle.

     ...hasn't opened a taco joint...  Hasn't ventured into an abandoned warehouse in RiNo or joined the crowd on Tennyson Street, and he doesn't grow his own produce on a farm.  I showed up early on a Saturday night, knowing ho quickly waits can develop...at hotspots across suburbia.  Like many of you, I've endured long waits at the likes of P.F. Chang's...  Around us, multi-generational families filed in, some with a birthday to celebrate.  Groups of plaid-shirted guys in trucker hats downed gravy-cheese fries.  Chatty women of a certain age ate dessert and nursed mugs of coffee.  The crowd skewed both older and younger tha in Uptown, with fewer millennials...  - Westword, 12/1-7/2016

     ...any sultan - is a pope, because he is the supreme religious head of the community.  ...he must be anointed...by...a congregation of Moslem holy men...  The Sultan is a puppet...  ...France wanted, (1) an "old" man...not...inclined to absorb nationalist ideas, and (2) one completely docile.  Whether the new Sultan can read or write is doubtful...  The Sultan gets...around $850,000...a year...  I asked...Resident General...where all the money came from.  "From the people.  From the soil.  ...if it rains.  If it doesn't rain enough, there isn't any money."  ...the French...to build up the...Sultan's prestige...even call him a "nationalist" (of the moderate wing) as a sop to nationalist sentiment.  Nobody has any future anywhere in Africa these days unless he is some sort of nationalist, even the Sultan...  The deposed Sultan...  ...the Berber leader...  Late in 1950 he called angrily on the...ex-Sultan...and accused him of being responsible for nationalist unrest in...Berber villages.  ...that he, the Sultan, a descendant of the Prophet Mohammed ought to be ashamed...for dealing with reactionaries and Communists.  This played directly into the French handHis masters were, moreover, uneasy about...his children.  ...the two elder daughters...twenty-two and twenty respectively.  They were allowed to go shopping unescorted....wore western dress without veils...hanging around milk bars and listening to...music.  They had their photographs taken and put on display, and...made talks on the radioThe French "colons" (settlers) were now determined to get rid of him.  ...the conservative pashas and caids...turned against him, because of his association with the nationalists, the "Lumpen-proletariat" of the towns.  The feudal pashas hated the "riffraff" of urban agitators, who, if they ever came to power, would certainly take away their own feudal privileges.  The caids do not like the big cities.  It was a revolt of the country bishops against the pope.  Who and what run French North Africa? (1) The French government. (2) Islam. (3) A Moslem feudal class that lives off the land. (4) French "colons (settlers).  But even if French administration was beneficial plenty...fought against it for years.  "Not one of the native tribes came over to us.  Not one submitted without a fight.  Not one of them accepted us without having been conquered by arms."  ..roads are of three catagories, those without restriction at any time, those open only by day, and those which may not be traversed at all without military authorization.  ...Fez and Marakesh are in restricted areas...  More than half the country...is..."zone d'insecurite'.  ...French Morocco...  American GI's...saunter down streets traversed by Moslem women so heavily veiled that they look like tall white thumbs.  Arabs are forbidden to assemble in the streets, even in groups of two or three, and the police watch everybody.  ...the European community is on edge.  I never succeeded in seeing a single conspicuous nationalist...  ...primitive, vivacious color.  ...indigo...black as blindness.  ...mahogany, bronze, chocolate, beige, russet, tar-paper.  ...a prancing white stallion...heaps of camel meat...  ...lambent pools of ultramarine and scarlet.  This kaleidoscopic , spectrum-colored market reaches climax, comes to a boil...and spews out and over...a half dozen...city blocks...  ...the snake charmers, the fire eaters, the scribes taking down letters, the storytellers...the magicians with their live doves.  ...the chain of blind beggars that cuts its way through the throbbing crowds..  "Islam...is not a religion with profound thoughts on God and the world. . . .  It has preserved all the instincts of the primitive religious mind and is...able to offer itself to the uncivilized and half-civilized peoples...in the form on monotheism most easily accessible to them . . . ."   -  Gunther

     Saturday.  8 AM.  I have a rare Saturday shift where I am only closing.  I am at a deathburger down the street from where I live.  I'm here to grab breakfast before a run into the supermarket and then deposit my paycheck at the bank.  It was a week or two ago when I saw a young homeless guy sitting at a closed pinion nut stand, yelling at traffic.  He's here this morning, in his "Just Do It" shirt.  This has been a freezing cold week.  He appears to be eating a slice of pizza from the gas station across the street.  Thirteen and a half hours later, I am out of a long day at work and walking to the platform of the train station nearby.  In front of an elevator to the train platform, in a tunnel underneath the interstate, are a well dressed elderly couple.  The husband is pacing and checking his watch.  In front of the elevator entrance is a big puddle of urine.  I cross into and up the great urine elevator to the platform, where upper class people are waiting for a train downtown.  Half of them are dressed in green, as if we are playing the Packers in some kind of night game.  I pile on the train with the families.  I hear one guy mention going to see The Nutcracker this evening.  I hop off the train and onto a bus.  I listen to a couple of guys in back talking about how high they were.  "I can't believe you were that high."  "I was high, but not that high."  When I get home, I head over to get a pizza for dinner at a place behind where I live.  Along the way, I pass the Vietnamese place where I usually have dinner on Sundays.  Looking inside, I see it's full of Caucasians, the only ones I ever see in my neighborhood.  And the place is full.  Here's a couple who appear as if they are out on a high school date.  Here's some kind of bohemian group.  Between the pizza place and here is a tiny Vietnamese strip mall.  Outside, having a smoke, is a Caucasian woman.  In this mall are two Vietnamese restaurants, full of Caucasian customers.  At the pizza place is the first Caucasian employee I've seen there, a manager of all of three days.  She's the first one there to ever ask me my name.  If she doesn't, she tells me, the computer will make up a name.  So every pizza I've ever carried out from here must have been under some made up name which I never asked about and no one has ever told me.  I get the impression that she is the only one who knows this, who has ever worked here or ever will.  I have someone on the inside now, just like that.  She looks like she's my age, and I don't notice that she's short until I see her jump every time she has to look at a screen with the times that each pizza is done.  She's also the first one to ever tell me when my pizza will be ready, which is why she is jumping.  What is someone like her doing in this tiny place with no new furnishings since the late 1970s?  There's even a disco song coming out of the speakers.

     Moors make faithful servants in European households, but they are hard to train...  ...because they have been brought up in tents...  They find it difficult to move a chair through a door, or put a bottle on a shelf.  ...they do not understand instinctively the dimensions of a fixed, solid universe.  ...a good Moslem is...to answer the call...for a jihad...  But...the call has not sounded for a brace of centuries.  Many Mohammedans ...believe...in assorted spooks, spirits, and superstitions...and avoid the Evil Eye.  ...of Islam...  This superiority, this consciousness of...an elite class, is a powerful cement binding Islamic communities together.  For several generations after Mohammed, the outstanding fact about Islam was its inflammatory militancy.  ...the Moslems had, by and large, comparatively little political sense.  They had small interest in stable administration or the evolution of sound governmental procedures.  Europeans...isolated specialists in Arab Culture.  ...converted to Islam...are often homosexual.  The unifying factor in Arab nationalism is religion.  The French...try not to...give the nationalists opportunity to make political protest on religious grounds...  Even sweepers in mosques are...getting salaries from the French administration.  "If we could only abolish Islam, our task would be infinitely easier."  Communist infiltration into the Moslem world is an increasingly dangerous problem.
     This...chieftain...is a kind of Oriental Charles the Bold, who fought 121 pitched battles in his youth, has been wounded thirty-two times, and is proud of the number of men he has killed by his own hand.  ...and has the sophistication of a really first-rate cardinal.  ...his private "army' of Berber warriors...numbers about 300,000.  Probably...the last feudal lord on earth...  ...he has always played the French side.  ...is...a French associate...  ...is a devout Moslem...  He has never touched alcohol...but has no objection to serving it...to European guests.  He plays good golf, and his private course...is...the best in North Africa.  ...Winston Churchill...has several times visited him...  This is not primitive Africa.  This is feudal Africa.  I do not think that anywhere else in the world could a feudal baron, living in a castle...summon...two hundred women...members of the harem [and] principals in a "corps de ballet."  Until France came most of the noblemen...were...at war with one another.  Family fought against family, tribe fought tribe, as in Europe in the twelfth century.  The serfs are...free to go; but where would they go?  ...this is changing.  People do want money.  They want to buy Coca-Cola and chewing gum...  ...a groping movement...  I left...with two...impressions: (a0 these are the Middle ages; (b) they are over.  - Gunther

    Najib's collapse...marked the end of the era of Western imperialism in South Asia dating back to the eighteenth century.  The Soviet Union had vanished.  The ideological contest between communism and Islam was no longer relevant.  Inside Afghanistan, the extremist versions of Islam exported to Afghanistan from Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Iran now competed with each other and with the mild, indigenous Afghan Hanafi order.  The Islamic sects gaining beachheads in war-racked Afghanistan during the 1980s and 1990s were in agreement that the country should be...governed by an ultraconservative version of Sharia, not constitutions and elections.  The volatile mix...threatened...a trembling linchpin of diverse tribes, ethnic and religious groups..  Beginning in May and through the summer and fall of 1992, tough Iranian-trained Wahdat Shia based in Kabul's western suburbs fought...  In May and June the death toll...climbed into hundreds of combatants and civilians.    ...some 800 were being held hostage.  Ethnic and sectarian factions carved Kabul's neighborhoods into heavily guarded enclaves.  Large posters of Ayatollah Khomeini were posted in...West Kabul..  ...Mujahidin wandered the streets conducting home invasions, robberies, murders, and rapes...  ...sporadic shelling of the open city added to the mayhem.  By August, ...bombardments had killed more than 1,800 civilians...destroyed whole residential areas, and sent some 500,000 people fleeing from the capital in all directions.  ...about Soviet POWs.  Over half of the POWs were from the Muslim-populated Central Asian Republics.  The Mujahidin accepted them as fellow Muslims.  Most of the Soviet POWs had married Afghans and melded into the local communities.  All had converted to Islam.  - Tomsen

     The total American forces in Morocco number 7,500.  The [U.S.] Air Force wanted 32,000...so that...anti-aircraft defences would always be completely manned, but the French refused...  ...a Moroccan truck driver gets about half what a French truck driver gets, who in turn gets half what an American gets...  ...GIs will not eat French bread...and so bakeries had to be built...  The Americans broadcast a daily program on Radio-Moor...and for the first time in their lives hear American music, talks, and entertainment.  Perhaps...at some date now remote, we can support the growth of nationalist sentiment...  It may lose us Africa, the greatest of all prizes in the cold war.  ...parts of Africa may be in a position to make their own policy in the future, and they may not choose us.  - Gunther

     ...someone might sit atop our own ruins and wonder whatever happened to the Americans.  Located on the edge of Baghdad, Falcon was...in what used to be called the "Sunni Triangle of Death" (Army and Embassy PR people ordered the term embargoed once they wanted us to seem like we were winning).  FOB Falcon was a cement factory before the Army arrived uninvited in 2003.  ...they had won the war that month.  ...the things they appropriated had belonged to someone else...the Army held elaborate ceremonies to "gift" the places back to ungrateful Iraqis...  FOB Falcon was something from a "Mad Max" movie, run-down, apocalyptic.  ...our American garbage...picked over by the Iraqis, who fought with feral dogs and scavenger birds...  The assembled houses of the Iraqis...with...large discarded placards reading "deadly Force Authorized" as roofs.  On the FOB itself, the Army cleaned things up like teenagers tidied their rooms, pushing refuse aside only enough to make room for new stuff.  - We Meant Well, by P. Van Buren, 2011

     We have looked at the lack of diversity as a problem for years in the outdoor industry, with little forward progress.  Have we also forgotten how to speak to people who don't buy $5,000 mountain bikes or care about new GoPro mounts or the latest waterproof/breathable fabric?  ...backpacking trips with solar panels and wifi.
     After...a week in Alaska...heliskiing and splitboarding...weekend trips to the backcountry were no longer going to cut it.  "When I was a teenager [in] Morth Carolina, I saw...big mountain snowboarder Victoria Jealouse riding a big Alaska spine in the magazine 'Teen.'  I...set my sights on someday following in Jealouse's footsteps.  ...climbing...Mt. Baker and Mt. Shukshan...  My Mind focused on the essentials: warmth, food and sleep.  ...made me appreciate the simplicity of life, especially after our group witnessed a huge D4 avalanche.  ..it's important to recognize how the snowpack is reacting, and then managing and assessing line selection based on hazards.  ...after Liz Daley died in an avalanche in 2014.  Liz...rode for...Karakoram BC...and...was one of my influences...  I inquired with the company...  They offered to bring me on...  - Elevation Outdoors, 12/2016

     Sunday.  1 PM.  I am in between coming from a workout and grocery shopping, and having dinner with the family.  I'm on my way to pick up some medicine at the supermarket pharmacy, pedalling down a residential street.  I pass a parked car missing, once again, the right front corner of the body as well as the front grill.  Demolition derby is the new street racing.  Just wait until there is ice on the roads.  After collecting my medicine, I grab lunch at a deathburger not far from the supermarket.  On the corner is a laundry, and behind it is some kind of small hobo encampment.  The following Monday night, shortly after 8 PM.  I step off the bus back onto my street.  At the stop on the corner is a guy wrapped in a sleeping bag, standing as if he is waiting for someone or something.  When I get home and go to bed, I am so tired that I forget to set my alarm.  The following morning, I awake six minutes before I would otherwise catch my connecting bus, all the way up the street.  I have no choice but to get on the bike.  The good news is, I've had a decent sleep, the first one in days.  So feel like riding the bike, I do.  Close to a half hour after leaving home, I am on an underpass beneath the train.  Headed toward me on the walkway is a guy wrapped in a sleeping bag.  Is he the same one from last night?  The following morning, I am expecting a ride to work, from my boss no less.  Snow and cold.  This evening is forecast to be -7 degrees F overnight.  Due to road conditions, we may not have time to grab breakfast.  I head across the street to the gas station before she arrives, to grab a burrito.  Inside, along with the construction guys filling up on energy drinks, cigarettes, and scratch tickets, is a lone grandmother.  I'm in insulated pants and a winter coat.  I watch her shuffle out of her car and inside wearing an open sweater, pajama bottoms, and crocs.

     He detests...nationalists...  "You have to be for us or against us," he kept saying.  And this, of course, is why he lost his job since...nationalism "has" to be dealt with as a legitimate force, and some distinction made between moderates and terrorists.  The French...are so proud of their "misson civilsatrice" that they...assume that this alone justifies their presence in Morocco.  ...they do not accept "the dogma that the only way to make a country evolve is to grant it sovereignty."  And what would independence...produce?  ...feudal chaos, or exploitation by...Moors, or the Communists?  ...the French say...one must define "people."  Are the Moroccans a "people?"  ...that a handful of conspirators in Cairo should dare to speak for "human rights"...  Half a dozen factors, they say, tend to make Morocco "safe."  ...it is so far west, isolated from the rest of the revolutionary Arab world by the Sahara and Algeria.  ...Moroccans are...so "incompetent."  ...the...majority is still loyal.   - Gunther

     Of the various armed groups that had pitched up...many were little more than neighborhood self-defense committees...only a bunch of opportunists and cowards.  "Most of them were just guys from the neighborhood who'd managed to get their hands on some guns.  ...I'd grown up with them...  But more and more were coming in from the outside...  ...a lot of the fighters were on drugs...  "...most of the"...Free Syrian Army..."in Weir...  If another group came into the area, they would turn around and join that group."  ...in...Libya...  Within weeks, the number of "revolutionaries"...20,000...had mushroomed to some 250,000.  ...the structure of the compensation...the Transitional National Council, announced...stipends to all...who had fought...the Qaddafi regime...created an incentive for new armed groups...to form but to remain independent of any central command...  ...by the close of 2012, Libyan militias - some...no more than tribal or criminal gangs - had begun carving the country into rival feifs...bankrolled by the very central government that they were undermining. ...in Syria...so many new militias competing with the plethora of already existing ones, it was quite impossible to keep track of them all.  For sheer daring and cruelty, however, one group stood out: the Islamic State...  ISIS had used rape and sexual slavery as a weapon of war to destroy the fabric of Yazidi society...  I met two teenaged girls who had escaped from ISIS after one month, along with a relative I took to be her mother - she looked perhaps 45 years old...sunken cheeks, missing teeth, greying hair - who had been held for eight months.  Except this woman wasn't their mother, she was their older sister, and she was only 24.  ...she had feigned deafness, which is seen by ISIS as a sign of mental illness...  "You see?  ...Daesh controlled this village, and the people living here had no problem with them, they stayed throughout.  ...I would erase this place.  This was their message to Daesh.  'Spare us, we are with you, we aren't Kurds.'  And...the Arabs stayed throughout."  As we continued across Sinjar mountain, he drummed his fingers on the steering wheel.  "This is our time now.  Iraq is gone.  Syria is gone.  Now it is our time."  - The New York Times Magazine, 8/14/2016

     "The police department depends on you to be its eyes and ears," Denver Police District Six Commander...has been telling citizens worried about increased numbers of homeless people in their neighborhoods.  Many residents voiced concerns on Nextdoor.com, the neighborhood social media site.  "I have a homeless man, sometimes multiple, who has made his home in a shaded corner of my property...  ...creating a total mess around my garage, doing drugs on my driveway...with his friends and snarling at my roommates...  ...becoming increasingly more aggressive...  Frustration was the common theme...with the failure of the city, personified by Denver's police (DPD), to stop homeless people from using both public and private property to sleep, urinate, defecate and often abuse drugs and alcohol.  ...there's been an overall increase in the homeless...  ...police from all over the western region...said the top problems...were mental illness and homelessness.  "The only one who didn't have the problem was...Cherry Hills."  Denver has spent millions of dollars, but homelessness [keeps] growing faster than resources.   - the profile, 12/2016

     This was literally a desert.  There's no water here.  Things seemed insurmountable.  Inverness was using aquiferrs for  long time.  They were among the first to recycle their water for their golf course.   There were a lot of creative deals made with Denver Water, so they got what they needed by going outside of the way things are usually done.  The state-of-these-art electronics that the Tech Center had were probably the first fiber-optic cables ever laid in the country. - Denver-Herald Dispatch, 12/8/2016

     I yell at the cops.  I scream at them because I am passionate.  I am fighting.  There is no one out there fighting for us.  You see a crane over there building a building.  You see new businesses opening.  You see the city growing.  The mayor, he is trying to build something to bring up more businesses.  But they're not building affordable housing for people like us. We aren't part of the city's plan.  We try to work.  We go to work for Ready Man or for a tip agency or day labor and we make nickels and dimes, pieces of crumbs.  We can't get out of here  We can't get our own place.
     We sleep out here and live out here.  This is the end of the road.  We aren't here because we want to be...  It feels like (the police) come here to make war.  All you're doing when you move us from downtown is we move to the suburbs.  We move to the parks.  We move to the alleys.  Then when it's all clear we move back.
     I stayed in a shelter the first two weeks, but I was eaten up by bed bugs.  You can wait for an hour or longer for a bus to come by with an opening for a handicapped person.  ...there is no place to go.  We work hard to make these sidewalks work.  We wake up every morning and sweep the sidewalks clear.  ...enough of us do it to make it work.  We care about it being clean.  We care about Mother Earth.
Let tonight by my last night in the shelter
Tomorrow when I wake
Let me cook in my kitchen
Use my bathroom
No bugs in my bed
Let tonight
Be the last night in the shelter
This is my prayer    - Denver Voice, 12/2016

     Thursday.  In the late afternoon, I am up the street at the drug store to get some Christmas cards made.  Outside of the store are a couple of homeless guys.  One is wrapped in a blanket, and the temperature is not far above 0 degrees F.  I'm inside, scrolling through photo Christmas card designs on a monitor, and these guys are outside in the below freezing cold.  One claims he hasn't any socks on.  I wonder if they are going to stay awake all night just to stay alive.  If memory serves, this is the first week during my working life, excluding previous vacations, when I've had more than a single day off.  Thursday and Saturday.  On Friday evening, the ride home is one of the first this season over icy streets.  In the ambient street light I take it slow, slow.  On Sunday, I'm at a copy place on the other side of the interstate, where after an hour and a half I drop $83.  I run across the street to a deathburger.  Next to the rack where I lock up my bike is a homeless guy.  He's sitting in the sun reading or looking at something with his walker parked next to him.  As I go inside, he gets up to leave.  From my seat, I watch a skinny, middle-aged guy, dressed as a woman, come across the parking lot and inside.






     Tuesday.  Strange work schedule during this season, full of long days followed by more days off than I've ever had in a row.  I am out at the bus stop shortly before 4:30 AM., across the street from where I live.  The trash can has tipped over, and a clear plastic wrapper walks its way toward me in a cold breeze.  The bus pulls up and I step on with someone who I listen to for the short ride up the street.  She mentions that her daughter bonded out of jail for $15,000.  I don't know what her daughter does, but I often see this woman patiently wait for buses long before the sun comes up.  Sixteen hours later.  I had four hours of sleep last night.  After a 12-hour day, I am dead tired.  I pass the very same bus stop on the way back across the street.  A guy who appears to be twenty years my junior is asleep on the concrete, with his head under the bench.  Eight hours later the following morning, he is no longer there.  Thursday.  I have three days off in a row, if the plan at work does not fall apart.  Today I have off for sure. I am headed downtown to have lunch with the sister.  I hop on a bus up the street.  A guy gets on with a collapsible shopping cart.  He pulls out a 40 oz. bottle of Magnum beer.  As he chases it with an airline bottle of whisky, I watch him gag.  The driver told me that the fare box does not work.  I forget that I don't have a transfer when we get to the station, and I get onto a train.  With no transfer, I otherwise need a ticket or a validated coupon or a pass.  None of which I have.  Who is in front of me but a transit system security officer, checking fares.  I take a chance on the door button and it opens.  I head back to the bus with a couple of guys, each with a banner on a pole.  Both banners say "fuck bad cops." We all get on the bus when it shows up.  One of the pair has a small dog with him as well.  Power to the people.  I meet the sister for lunch at a place across the street from someplace with a name I can't quite remember.  It's something like 'adverse reaction prevention center'.  Down the sidewalks from this place come a steady stream of homeless.  While a steady stream of young and urban Caucasians come into where we are eating.  After lunch, I am headed down the pedestrian mall, back to the train.  There on a corner is a third person with a "fuck bad cops" banner.  Happy holidays, and fuck adverse reactions.

     We are the first generation that didn't inherit religious identity like we do a hometown.  The globe right now is like a map of the teenage brain, prone to recklessness and destruction in places...  So many are relentless in telling the story of destruction that it seriously colors how we tell the story of our time.  The pain and fear alive in the world surface as anger and violence, and some of us are called to be calmers of fear.  - Natural Awakenings, 12/2016

     ...many of the jobs created since the economy started recovering from the recession were in service industries, located primarily in large metropolitan areas - not in small towns and rural areas...  ...median household income outside of metropolitan areas fell 2 percent.  Metropolitan areas...where most Hispanics, blacks, and Asians live.   The low-end service jobs there...offer a more hopeful future than a shrinking employment base.  "It has been a good decade for metropolitan America.  ...you can't underestimate the economic and social pain across the rural tier."  ...such clear divisions - less educated whites living in depressed rural areas...  - The New York Times, 12/14/2016

     ....hundreds of thousands of Moroccans have no land at all, must work on white farms and are...underpaid.  ..."colons" talk on occasion about making a revolt against Paris, and founding their own republic in Morocco.  They despise men like Mendes-France...and want Moroccan nationalism wiped out forcibly once and for all.  Few Frenchmen would refuse an invitation to dinner with the Pasha of Marakesh, or...a prominent caid...if a Moor is rich enough, prominent enough, ad culturally acceptable he may be admitted to the periphery of French society.  Their hope is to make "Frenchmen" out of educated Moors...deflected out of the nationalist movement...  The fact the India, Ceylon, Pakistan, Burma and so on have become free serves...to make France doubly tenacious about holding what parts of Africa it has.  What the political scientists call "responsible" government does not exist, that is government by a cabinet and legislature responsible in some measure to the people.  Civil liberties do not exist.  There is no freedom of the press, or of speech, or of assembly.  The country has been in a state of siege...martial law - for more than thirty years.  There is no penal code or code of civil law.  Freedom of movement is severely restricted...  Even the Moroccan Boy Scout organization has been disbanded.  Political expression and organization are forbidden.  The number of Moroccan nationalists in concentration camps...probably runs into the thousands.  ...in Marakesh a schoolteacher asked members of her class what they would like for Christmas.  One little girl piped up, "A machine gun!"  Probably she meant this as a joke, but her father was arrested the next day.  - Gunther

     In Peshawar, Abdul Haq's angry comments reflected the general sentiments of moderate Afghans I met.  I included their views in my reporting to Washington...  "...you gave military resources only to kill communists.  Your withdrawal is...not proving that you care about democracy here.  ...people here in Afghanistan...want peace and security and democracy.  ...they are the ones you are abandoning.  Your withdrawal is strengthening the radicals.  ...Pakistani and Arab...monsters are turning on the Afghan people, but they will turn on you, too.  If they come to power..."  - Tomsen

     ...looking for the head of democracy and human rights...and found some 21-year-old
 political appointee who had no idea what was going on.  It was insane.  I was looking for guidance on Iraqi law and was met by a 22-year-old American in charge of the Ministry of Justice who said, "Don't worry about that, I'm pretty sure we're going to rewrite that constitution anyway."  A cleric...called..."a woman on the town council...the driving force for the women's group...a Baathist and a Zionist, etc.  ...  My brain is on overdrive...  It's like you're on the verge of something explosive and just trying to contain it."  The elite secular Iraqi women who had recently returned from exile were unnerved...  Conservative women...resented [a local conference on women's empowerment] and its dubious teachings.  "Basra, my home...  You find Hezbullah offices...  Hamas offices in Nasiriya.  The political parties are controlling their minds..."  Although...the kidnappings and beheadings would not begin for another month, the us-versus-them atmosphere had already begun to take over the Shiite world.  ...so many Iraqis these days wouldn't dare speak English in [one's] cell phone...on the street.  - The New York Times Magazine, 9/19/2004

     ...the scattershot nature of the Arab spring...one pattern does emerge, and it is striking.  The six most profoundly affected - Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Tunisia and Yemen - are all republics, rather than monarchies.  And of these six, the three that have disintegrated so completely as to raise doubt that they will ever again exist as functioning states - Iraq, Syria and Libya - are all...created by Western imperial powers in the early 20th century.  In each, little thought was given to national coherence, and even less to tribal or sectarian divisions.  In October 2002...I asked...Qaddafi...who would benefit [from the] Iraq invasion...  "Bin Laden," he said.  "...if the Saddam government collapses...actions against Americans will be considered jihad."  ...Qaddifi's rule...bore...resemblance...more to...the Baathist regimes of. Saddam Hussein in Iraq and Hafez al-Assad in Syria.  ...the dictators developed elaborate personality cults...and aligned themselves with the "anti-imperialist" bloc of Arab nations...deepening ties with the Soviet Union.  True to the Baathist credo of "Arab socialism" and Qaddifi's third universal theory, all three countries embarked on ambitious public works projects...  At the same time, the states established extravagantly bloated governmental structures...that...quickly became the main pillars of the economy...  "Everybody was connected to the state somehow.  For their housing, for their job.  It was impossible to exist outside of it."   For all their revolutionary rhetoric, the dictators of Libya, Iraq, and Syria remained ever mindful that their...subjects' primary loyalty lay...to their ethnic group or religious sect.  ...all three...entered into elaborate and labyrinthine alliances with various tribes and clans.  ..Saddam Hussein...endeavored to sprinkle just enough Sunnis and Kurds through his administration to lend it an ecumenical sheen.  ...Hafez al-Assad's...de facto alliance with the nation's Christian community...  ...in Libya...what developed there over the millenniums was essentially a series of semiautonomous city-states that resisted central rule.  And...Libya, Iraq and Syria erected some of the most brutal security apparatuses to be found in the world"In the last few days of Mubarak, when we could see what was coming, I and some of the other independents, we tried to talk to all the different political factions.  'Seize power.  Don't wait for permission.  Just seize power now before the military steps in.'"  - The New York Times Magazine, 8/14/2016

     Saturday.  So much for having three days off.  At 5:30 AM, it's 3 degrees F with the forecast high of 8.  A dusting of snow is coming down on a covered city.  I "run"' over to the gas station across the street before marching down a sidewalk underneath drifts.  As I pass the stop nest to the gas station, a guy stands in the shelter.  Like so many I will see this early morning, he is wearing only a hoodie.  I'm in my warmest coat and longjohns under lined pants.  He isn't shivering.  In fact, he stares motionless out into the snowy dark like some kind of hypnotized zombie.  When I get up to my Saturday bus stop, the bus scoops me up and takes me to the train.  Many here are in nothing more than hoodies.  One kid stands with his hands inside his sleeves.  A middle-aged guy comes along in his hoodie, coffee in hand.  He doesn't even appear chilly.  After some minutes, he says to me, "I think the snow will really take some people by surprise."  (Really?  It's only been on the news all week, complete with a play-by-play of its approach.)  "I had my weather radio set last night, and it woke me up at 1:30 this morning.  So I knew something was up."  No, I don't wtf a "weather radio" is.

     ...before more people die on my block.  [At a middle school on my street, the] campus is the hub for transporting kids, yet...there is a lot of speeding and drunk cars.  There were 12 hit and run accidents on this block alone (my car has been hit three times).  Last spring, we met with the traffic manager and DPS security...  There were promises...  No actions were taken.  And now the situation is far worse,as we have construction...  (...neither the school nor residents were notified...)  ...12/16/2016, [a few streets away from my home] another adult was harmed.  Earlier this year, a student was hit.  On November 26, someone was shot due to... {...the driver behind...the victim...did not see the stop sign and shot the victim).  - Nextdoor Westwood, 12/18/2016

     Sunday.  It's minus one degree F.  At 8 AM I'm out at the stop for the bus I take to go grocery shopping.  I am joined by an elderly guy on his phone.  He's complaining that the bus should have been here fifteen minutes ago.  That sounds wrong, this bus only comes every half an hour this early on a Sunday.  In a few minutes, the bus comes over the hill, and he begins waving his arms.  Perhaps a couple of hours later, I am outside of the supermarket.  The temperature has warmed up considerably and a couple is sitting at an outdoor table, having a smoke.  Along come a young, tall guy of Asian descent.  He's in a T-shirt and basketball shorts.  He wants to know if they can spare a cigarette.  I see him in his car, driving away with his window cracked, cigarette hanging out the window.
     Monday evening.  8:30 PM.  I arrive from work at a station where I step out just in time to watch my bus home pulling away.  I turn around and get back on the train to the next stop.  There is another bus I can take home.  At the start of last week I came down with a cold, and I haven't been out on the bike.  This evening, I begin to feel shaky and very tired.  I step out at this station and just miss another bus, but I know from experience that it won't hook me up with a final connecting bus any faster than the next one.  So I use plan C.  I head to the gate and sit on the bench for a brief wait.  I feel as though I have a slight fever.  Though there is still snow on the ground from a few days ago, for the first time in days, it's not freezing cold in the evening. Yet I am shivering inside my coat.  A guy comes along who appears to be smoking a Vape pen.  In the dark, it looks like a pipe.  With his goatee, he almost looks like a university professor.  He asks me if I am waiting for the number three.  He tells me, "seven minutes."  He compliments my snow boots.  I tell him that I've had them for a couple of decades and he says he can't believe how new they look.  On one side of the bench is a bus shelter, where two or three men are speaking Spanish.  One of them comes around to a trash can on the other side of the bench, and begins looking through it.  Professor Vape asks him in English what he's looking for.  He's searching for a discarded bus transfer.  The trash guy asks the professor where the best trash cabs are for locating used transfers.  He thinks and points to another, and then recommends a better train station.
     Tuesday.  At 10:30 AM, I am out the door and headed to met the sister for lunch.  ON a bus up the street, there is a young Caucasian woman witting toward the back.  She's in sunglasses and headphones, and she is pontificating on the conflict between the Lord and civilization.  "Is it God's art, or is it Satan's art?" she orates, emphasizing the t in the last "art."  Her diction is precise and clear, and she sounds like anyone but a mental case.  I pull out my digital video camera, which I've had for six months but for which I just recently got a memory card.  When I point it at her, she stops, changes seats, and continues.  After lunch, I do a bit of shopping before returning to spend the late afternoon with her.  For an hour or two, I have a chance to see part of her day as she went from one of her jobs doing legal work for the state, to a couple of libraries for her job teaching a community college mythology class, to finally picking up the Christmas turkey.  It was a combination of state statutes, Agamemnon, and A Christmas Carroll.  Look well upon these children.  For their names; one will be Quiet, I'll be Peace.  The next day, I am just out of work, and waiting for the 7:48 PM bus to the train.  This particular stop, in front of the place where I have worked more often than any other location over the past two years, is extremely dark after sundown.  I must carry a battery operated lantern with a flashing mode.  I put it on when the bus comes over the hill, and I turn it off when I see the bus signal go on.  When it pulls up this evening, I step on and the driver suggests that I keep it on until he comes to a stop.  I notice that this driver is wearing big glasses with yellow-tinted lenses as large as ski goggles.  He lets me know that the fare box is not working.  This being the case, I don't need a transfer, but he gives me one anyway.  Thursday morning.  I am across the street at the bus stop shortly before 4:30 AM.  Along with a guy with the cane who is usually here, there are a couple of twenty-something Caucasians in the bus shelter.  One of them has an enormous backpack.  Standing away from all of us is a young woman who is dressed as if she belongs at a holiday party at a dance club or a bar.  The bus comes along and scoops us up.  The young guys head to the back of the bus.  The one with the pack has put on a ski mask and sunglasses.  At 4:24 in the morning.

     ...the left hand is not supposed to touch food...  ...there are no knives, forks, spoons, plates, or other implements.  Fingers are not supposed to touch the mouth.  Women of the household are never present...  Each dish, if anything is left, is passed on down to the women...of the castle or dwelling.  When the wives and concubines have finished, it goes...to male servants...female servants...retainers, hangers-on, or slaves.  ...the high sibilant whistle...made by the long files of women from the town, who line the castle walls, and...begin to oscillate in a slow rhythmic dance...  We entered a small room with maroon-striped settees, green curtains, and a flaming yellow carpet - Moslems love clashing colors...  - Gunther

     A couple in a black Subaru Forrester with no plate just stole an Amazon package from our front door and replaced it with an empty one.
     ...recycle bins...ours was stolen...  - Nextdoor Westwood, 12/22/2016

     Sunday is Christmas this year.  I have yesterday, today, and tomorrow off.  It's been quite a month.  I re-enrolled  in my same health insurance policy almost two months ago.  This week, a letter came in the mail telling me that my insurance has been cancelled 'per my request.'  I haven't been on my bike in two weeks, and missed my workout for the first time in over a year, thanks to a cold.  At work, I found out that only one of our three drycleaning machines is currently working, that one has been broken down for three months, and the working one is overheating.  I finally got my presents wrapped yesterday.  I'm not marching toward Christmas, I'm tumbling toward it.  All I can say is, 2017 is going to be quite a year.  Ho ho ho.  This morning, I am out on my bike after recovering from a fortnight of mucus in my nose and chest.  I'm headed to my old deathburger on the chance that it is open for breakfast.  Turns out that it ain't.  It's a quiet morning.  But it is Christmas morning.  And though the single-digit air has moved out, and the promised forecast of three inches of snow is nowhere to be seen save for some menacing grey clouds, there are a couple of dishevelled guys at the corner of the drug store across from the deathurger.  As there is no one else here but myself and they, they look singularly alone.  The drug store turns out to be open.  But this corner of the lot is empty.  These guys don't appear dirty, or drunk.  They appear thoroughly alone and abandoned. They have nothing but the rumpled clothes on their backs.  One has a hat which makes him appear as a immigrant fresh from Ellis Island, our just off the train from Dickens' London.  They appear as if their home is anyplace but this grey windswept neighborhood.
     Tuesday is my first day back to work.  Yesterday was the first day I was on my bike after a two-week cold.  It's good to be back out on the trail.  I am headed along the river trail around 11 AM as I approach a middle-aged guy in a Nepalese knit hat.  He's parked on a BMX bike.  As I go past him, he wants to know if I passed a "guy on a skateboard goin' that way?"  He points behind me.  Sure.  A perfectly usual question.  A middle-aged guy is on a BMX bike looking for another guy on a skateboard at 11 AM on a weekday.  Between Christmas and New Year's.  When I answer no, he replies, "Oh."  There was a kid on a skateboard, but that was in the bike lane of an avenue I took to the trail.  I don't know if he's an avenue guy as well as a trail guy.  Or maybe he's just a guy.  A half hour later, I am onto a connecting trail and headed through a park.  At a big tower holding power lines is a young guy with a small dog.  He has a big backpack standing up, and to the top of it, he is tying a folded sun shade for a car windshield.  I wonder if he knows the bike guy, and/or his skateboard guy, and/or the skateboard guy I saw who may or may not be the one who the bike guy is looking for.  I venture to guess that none of them know the lady around the bend of the trail, who is walking three little dogs.  Together, their leashes stretch across the entire trail.  She is yet another pedestrian who does not notice me come up from behind, until I tell her for the second time, "I guess I'm on your left."  And I am positive that the BMX bike guy and his as yet undetermined friend couldn't possibly know the kid riding up and down his street, in the neighborhood of opulence between the trailhead and work.  He's in a yellow T-shirt and surf shorts.  He rides up to and over a boulder in a corner of someone's front yard.
     The following morning, I am headed down the street around 10:30 AM.  Within yards of each other along one residential block are three vehicles with damage (due to street racing?)  One small car parked on the street has its front bumper and grill completely smashed off.  In the driveway is another small car with big dents in the doors on one side, typical of other cars I've seen along this stretch of neighborhood.  The third one is a minivan missing the front bumper.  I've seen almost every kind of vehicle street racing, except a minivan.  Perhaps this one is passive victim.  There is a "for sale" sign in one window.  Further along, I am on the first short trail through my side of town.  Again, on the path is someone with a couple of dogs, the leashes of which are straddling the entire trail.  The owner is bending over one of the dogs, and does not even notice me as I pass by.  A good hour later, I am almost off the last trail to work.  Yet again, another woman has a pair of dogs whose leashes stretch across the trail.  She does not notice me until she appears to hear the sound of my wheels on the grass next to the trail.  The following two days I am scheduled to work at a store far to the south, which I can reach by bus or bike.  I forget to set the correct time on my clock radio, and I awake without enough time to catch the bus.  But rested enough to get out on the bike.  I make it to the train station, only to get on the wrong train.  Back to the same station, I catch the correct one and in fourteen minutes am out on the street.  Onto the trail, I take a wrong turn in the dark, double back, back out onto the street and up many a hill before I get inside the store, only to find I must restart the hard drive before I can clock in.  Which I manage to do right on time.
     The next morning is New Year's Eve.  I have to say that my year began with a degree of uncertainty, including what little I could decipher from the owners about the future of their company for which I work.  I met my new doctor under my new insurance, had my first prostate exam, my first colonoscopy, got my first nutritionist, had a wonderful summer swimming almost every day, and the year is ending on a comparatively more secure note on all fronts.  Not everyone feels the same way.  I am someone who ponders the existence of incompetence, familiar though I am with it, as well as counts his blessings.  This morning, I am on my way to work a short Saturday shift at a store far to the south.  To make the connections, I must catch a weekend bus earlier than usual.  So I am headed up an alley closing in on 5 AM.  I'm coming out of the alley to cross the street when a little car is accelerating toward me.  On the other side, from behind comes a pickup, accelerating where it can through the alley...instead of the street.  (?)  Across the street from my Saturday bus stop is a Vietnamese insurance office.  In an unlit corner of the back is a homeless Vietnamese guy.  I can hear him talking to himself under his blanket.  Perhaps he is an appropriate note upon which to end this year.  May Orion look down upon him through this morning's broken clouds.