NM Me

As the prez describes his enemies I have to remark that his delineation of an implacable enemy of liberty, driven by a narrow and inflexible ideology which celebrates the sacrifice of humanitarian value in the pursuit of an hegemonic dominance under the banner of a fundamentalist creed, I hearken to what appears to me a thoughtful self-portrait of the worldview that hears these words and agrees with the president.

Pinochet

Gen. Augusto Pinochet, dead at 91.

My family and I lived in in Viña del Mar, Chile during the year 1969, and many of my earliest memories are set in our house and nearby. I recall playing outside in the wintry June air and various details of life in Chile in those days, details that reveal much about Chile’s heritage, distinct from the rest of Latin America due to British economic support from the country’s earliest days. France also played an important role in the country’s self-definition, and I well recall French-style blue-and-white enamelware street signs in the neighborhood around my preschool.

My father has related stories of the radicalized environment in which he taught business at a Chilean university that year. He was repeatedly hassled by activist students whose principal strategy was to disrupt his classes but shouting or otherwise making discourse impossible. He relates his attempts to reach out and communicate with these folks, concluding with regret that he was never able to make a personal connection.

A couple of my most important early memories take place in Chile. In one, during the lead-in to the American moon landing, a fancy department store in the center of the large town we lived near to (Valparaiso, I beleive) mounted an elaborate series of window displays depicting fanciful interpretations of the moon landing at 1/3 scale. I was so deeply fascinated by the displays that I insisted on requesting one of the 3-foot-tall cardboard-and-styrofoam silver-spraypainted astronauts. This artifact remained with me until I was about 16 or 17 years of age.

Directly related to this, what I long considered to be my very first memory took place in Chile. In July, 1969, the first moon landing was broadcast worldwide. My parents awakened me in what I recall as the middle of the night, and we watched the events on our portable 12-inch black-and-white Sylvania television, a TV I took with me when I left home and was very sad to lose when it quit working sometime in the mid eighties.

When the coup occurred in 1973, it was in the wake of the extraordinarily divisive 1972 Presidential election which eventually spawned Watergate. I was stunned and disturbed that an election could be undone by military action, and as it became clear that the US had lent direct support to the coup, my first-grade sense of justice was deeply disturbed. In subsequent months, as Watergate unfolded, my trust in the world – not just the world of adults, but the world itself, the whole idea of life – was more-or-less destroyed, and since then, I have lived with a world view that mistrusts expressions of absolute ethicality or actions taken based upon the concept of rights.

As subsequent events in Chile came to light, I became more and more disturbed. The introduction of torture and extra-judicial killings to the apparatus of government were apparent to me by the time I was in third grade, and I quickly learned how inadvisable it is to point out how deeply the US has been involved in the tactical and strategic re-introduction of such practices in the service of the quest for global dominance.

Augusto Pinochet, with the collusion of my native country, chose to strip a certain innocence away from my toddler self, despite my fortunate position nestled deep in the heart if the international middle class.

Initially, I let loose with some profane sentiments regarding the decedent as I wrote this. I chose Pinochet as the symbol of a sense of personal betrayal, and certainly his actions merit censure and punishment. But he’s dead. So instead may I offer my condolences, albeit very angry ones, and my sincere wishes that the general shall rest in peace.

The industrial complex inside an eggplant

“Any bowling ball can figure out a financial spider, but it takes a real razor blade to seek a mating ritual. If a surly pork chop dances with a boiled grizzly bear, then the tape recorder around a stovepipe dies. Now and then, a judge near a tripod borrows money from a minivan defined by the bottle of beer. Another financial photon, the umbrella, and another somewhat polka-dotted CEO are what made America great!

Any vacuum cleaner can organize a rude cloud formation, but it takes a real tornado to bury the pompous polar bear. Now and then, an almost tattered movie theater pours freezing cold water on a satellite beyond some vacuum cleaner. Indeed, a briar patch takes a peek at the hairy squid.

Most people believe that a sheriff near a buzzard makes a truce with the spider about another grain of sand, but they need to remember how knowingly a dust bunny daydreams. The lover defined by another hole puncher secretly finds subtle faults with a psychotic sheriff. The familiar vacuum cleaner negotiates a prenuptial agreement with the green dust bunny. Indeed, the barely highly paid salad dressing non-chalantly borrows money from the impromptu CEO. The industrial complex inside an eggplant trades baseball cards with a secretly annoying paycheck.”

Clearly the greatest spam of all time. I wonder if reposting it will in some way strengthen the filter-poison. Hope not, but how can I resist these aphorisms?

FG retail

Eric Reynolds chez local pornographers Fantagraphics notes the impending arrival of the Fantagraphics Mega Mart, which, sadly for me, is within easy walking distance of my workplace. Happily for al, it’s also within easy walking distance of Jules Maes, Smarty Pants, and 9 Pound Hammer. Ahhhh.

SeWa Cell Phone Tfx Maps

Seattlest hips us to the DOT traffic maps gettin’ jiggy with the cellies.

Which reminds me, the League passed a motion last time to extend the tipsy olive branch to Seattlest honcho Dan last time. It may be too late with respect to this week’s convocation.

680 @ 199! I think perhaps maybe so!

Palm announced the lowball Treo 680 today with a street price of $199, low enough to drive my decision, once I’ve reviewed the specs. The lower-rez 320×320 screen is one issue; the press release elides mention of the OS but the screenshots appear to display Palm OS apps. The device comes with a paltry 64mb on-board memory (twice that of my dearly departed 650) and the release makes no mention of card slots.

So.

Jury’s out, but given a card slot and Palm OS I can’t think of a reason not to fork it out. Updates when I find the true specs.