Tuesday, August 06, 2013

Out In The 1970s Be-Bop Night- The Girl With The Pale Blue Eyes-Take Five


From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

He was getting ready to leave her again, leave her like he had so many times before, and like he would probably do again. Who knows what it was that triggered things this time. Maybe he got mad that she did not take once he got his personal affair sin some order his newly found passion for saving the world now that it was going to hell in a hand-basket seriously and was in desperate need of fixing and so was out on the streets with some fellow veterans who also found “religion” on the war issue. Or maybe it was that he could not for the life of him understand why she wanted to stay cooped up in the little white house with picket fence and dog that they had shared in Old Lyme for the previous several years and let the world drift by while she, they, pursued their respective careers. She, a very, very competent lawyer who had started out in the beginning all starry-eyed enough. And he a better than middling free-lance copy editor for well-known local publishing houses, although he had done everything from washing dishes to teaching school once he decided, or she decided him, to settle down a bit after he got the trauma of Vietnam under some kind of control .

As he packed his few belongings in a small backpack he had a half-ironic vision that in forty or fifty years if he was still alive he would still be leaving her, or still be working his way back to her. That forty or fifty year thought didn’t faze him, didn’t cause him pain, and didn’t make him tremble. Didn’t make him tremble that maybe there would not be a forty or fifty years, that she would cut it off, or he would before then. That was outside the box of their relationship and always had been in the now numberless times they had danced this dance. That was just the way their love worked, or didn’t work. Yes, they both agreed, sometimes with a laugh, sometimes in maniacal rage, that was just the way it was between them and had been from about the first time they met a decade or so back in the mid-1970s.

Finished packing his belongings to head out for wherever he was heading this time he had a moment’s confusion. Like the other times, that numberless times, it was not clear where he would go, west to California, east on some tramp steamer to Morocco and some Kasbah hash den, north on the hitchhike trail before the snows set in and then south to the Baja, he didn’t know until he went out the door and walked some distance, maybe picked up a ride and that would decide it. All he knew was he was, she was, in a place neither of them wanted to be and so he would cast his fates to the wind. And he thought too, as he had thought so many times before when this damn interlude came upon them, about how he had met, or almost didn’t meet, his girl with the pale blue eyes.

Soldier Johnson had to laugh about that last fact, about how they had almost not met, or rather how he had almost not connected with his Jewel, Jewel Samson, the woman he was now about to leave again. Back then, back in the mid-1970s when his future had looked settled Soldier had thought that he had blown the dust of old North Adamsville off his shoes after he finished his military service and so his return, his painful return, back to his growing up hometown after he had busted out for the umpteenth time on the West Coast was quite a letdown. He had drifted back east, had not picked up much of anything coming back, and had thus wound up, hat in hand, at his parent ‘s front door one night, defeated for the moment in life’s battles. The cost of that defeat, the immediate cost was a constant harping by his mother, taking up her vigil established since childhood, about his, uh, short-comings, short-comings against her expectation, and against the myriad neighbor children who had “made good.” After one such painful exchange with his distraught mother, on the fateful day he met Jewel, who continued to make it her personal responsibility to remind him constantly that at thirty- two he needed to get on with his life, needed to get a job, get married, get to whatever he had to do and in response to that also numberless tirade he had fled out the door and headed to Adamsville Beach to cool out a bit.

[Soldier (real name Lawrence) Johnson had gotten that name, that moniker, while in basic training down at Fort Dix in New Jersey from the other raw recruits who kidded him about his non-existent soldierly deportment. He had done more drill sergeant-inspired push-ups for unmade bunks, footloose foot lockers, misshapen uniforms than anyone thought possible. More extra- duty KP (kitchen patrol for the civilians), more confined to quarters, more night guard duty, well, more of everything that most common grunts (enlisted men) would go well out of their way to avoid. And more screw-ups at the firing range or out at maneuvers than anyone thought possible either.

But the name stuck, stuck through hell-hole Vietnam where he was not the worst soldier, not at all, taking a little shrapnel to save a buddy, taking point out in that bloody Mekong Delta, swampy, fly-infested night and, mainly against all odds surviving the experience. Physically surviving it and when he got home his old corner boys from in front of Salducci’s Pizza Parlor kept the name on him and kept it on even more so him after they had heard his exploits for about the ten thousandth time. And it also stuck through his post -soldier internal war that he waged within himself, his personal civil war, which he hid from his parents, his corner boys, and his hastily-married first wife. His post-Vietnam trauma as it was described at the time before the condition got a more scientific name, included a stint at the VA hospital out in Frisco and another vagabond stint with fellow trance-walkers from ‘Nam under the lost soul bridges of Southern California. That is a story for another time though.]


Soldier walked that day the two miles to the beach from the family house so by the time that he got to the his favored boyhood spot near the North Adamsville Yacht Club and sat on the seawall to catch a cool breeze it was getting a little late. That spot always evoke deep feelings, mainly of frustration but also of some inner calm brought on by the splash of waves aimlessly reaching the waiting shoreline. He had no sooner settled in for a serious think about the cast of his fates than Jewel came walking by with her girlfriend, Laura.

Came walking by like something out of the mist of time, like maybe a 1940s pin-up model all the guys overseas would cherish inside their lockers or on the inner lid of their trunks in some forlorn barracks in some forlorn outpost of civilization, maybe some rock of land surrounded by infinite Pacific seas or under Normandy fogs. Or maybe a 1940s movie star, maybe Lana Turner, all in white when she sizzled up the screen and sizzled up poor clueless John Garfield in The Postman Always Rings Twice. Twisted up dear John so bad he went to the big step off with a smile, or half-smile on his face, just for thought of having been with her, having smelled that gardenia perfume she threw off even long after she left the room. Jewel came that day all dressed in white, white blouse, white shorts, short showing long well-thought out legs and well-turned ankles, white socks hugging white tennis shoes, and even from a distance of ten feet he could see, set off by her well- developed summer tan, those pale blue eyes that would haunt his dreams forever after.

And those eyes would cause him more hell and anguish than he ever imaged, and more happiness. Funny though because it didn’t have to have happened that way, didn’t have to have happened at all. Soldier still caught up in his mother-inflamed big think about the contours of his future had let her pass by, let her go in his thoughts without comment. But as she moved a little distance away he switched from thoughts of getting a job, or whatever else of the twenty-one demands his mother insisted he pursue to thoughts of how this young passing woman, or rather one with her look, her sultry virginal look had always eluded him, had always been outside his grasp. Yeah, he knew that sultry virginal thing was a contradiction but it was all tied up with his Catholic upbringing and those Sunday morning novena–driven girls he watched from behind out from the neighborhood. And by his teenage boy thoughts, corner boy-driven thoughts, of hot women inflamed by magazines, television, the movies and later when he knew the score with such girls, knew they were inflamed too, so make of it what you will.

In high school, maybe starting in freshman year, he and his friends, his corner boys then stationed against the wall in front of Salducci’s Pizza Parlor having moved up a step from Harry’s in the normal progression of corner boy-hood, would hit Adamsville Beach right where he was sitting at that moment and watch, no, more than watch, leer, as the girls went by, the girls who would be dressed very much like Jewel, would sway in the sun very much like Jewel, would fill the very air with their presence, with that subtle fresh from a bath-like fragrance that swirled around them as they passed by. While other guys, particularly guys like Frankie Riley and Timmy Kelly, would have those swaying girls all in white by the dozens he had no such luck as much as they inflamed his schoolboy heart.

At night, summer nights, when the girls turned from white shorts to white dresses he also struck out. He seemed to get either the black-etched arty types who wanted to save the world or save him, or just be friends, or something like that, or the bookworms, especially the bookworms of indeterminate dress, say plaid and stripes or some such combination who endlessly wanted to speak of books, and not much else. He was okay with the books part, although the not much else drove him to distraction. And his dream in white-dressed girls, wearing shorts or dresses, were not bookworms, were not even concerned about books for all he knew.

Later, before ‘Nam, while he was in college he settled for the bookish types and left it at that. After ‘Nam he took whatever came his way, mainly fast and loose women, women like that wife that he married in far too much haste, who would not dream of wearing white, or be accused of dreaming about much of anything. But he never in the back of his mind really ever stopped thinking that someday he might snatch one, snatch that girl in white of his fevered boyhood dreams. And he never missed an opportunity to stare at them, younger or older, when they passed by ignoring him.

That summer day he could see that she, Jewel, was younger, maybe too much younger than he was (they would laugh, laugh about how he was closer to her father’s age than hers, cry, cry when she could not understand having been a mere child at the time what ‘Nam had taken from his soul and what he could not give due to that clot, make fun about that difference, would say that when she was forty he would be an old man of fifty-two and stuff like that, about that twelve year difference as it turned out since she was only twenty, a sophomore in college, at the time), and so he let the thing go by as just another fantasy and that was that. Then, as fate would have it, the pair of young women walked back up past the yacht club again near the place where he was sitting and from out of nowhere, or maybe out of that boyhood angst, he called out to them, called out to the girl with the pale blue eyes that her eyes were pretty. That her eyes reminded him of the sun-drenched seas behind them (or some such thing for he was so nervous to get it out that he was not sure he remembered his exact words correctly but that was close enough).

Jewel looked at him, startled, like nobody had ever made that comment to her before. Being, as he found out later, a gentile young woman, she came over and asked him if he was speaking to her and when he responded that he was she said “thank you” with a slightly blushed face under her tan and in a hushed voice that spoke to him of adventures, and desire. That was all the opening he needed, well, almost the only opening, once he asked her name and what she did. It turned out that she was a student at Boston University a place where he had gone to school a couple of years before he busted out about a decade before and wound up getting drafted into the damn army. She was visiting her friend and fellow classmate Laura who lived in Adamsville, and they were taking a little sea-side break from the summer course they were taking at BU Something in Jewel’s manner gave him the impression she was looking for something, or maybe it was something in his kindly manner that stopped her (that kindly thing, along with what she called his wisdom of the ages prophet long hair and beard, as she mentioned later, was what kept her talking to him as he sat on that seawall).


Laura had to go, or had made some other excuse to leave them, but Jewel decided to sit on the seawall with him. They sat for hours talking, talking about this and that, about the travails of school life, about how he wanted to go back to school since he could do it on the G.I Bill and maybe teach, something like that, about busted dreams, hers too, since she had wanted, desperately wanted to be a scientist, wanted to be like Madame Curie who she had read about as a child, but was then knee- deep in a pre-law school program that he parents had pushed on her, pushed on her kicking and screaming. About her troubles adjusting to the hectic city life and obliquely about her failed love-life. She would tell him later that she felt comfortable talking about such things, sensing that he was not judgmental and that he was not above listening to her like most guys.

Soldier (she asked him then how he got that name and later she too called him that moniker except she called him, in good moments, her soldier boy) spoke about Vietnam and his lost decade, about a time that she back in Greenwich, Connecticut where she grew up, had no real recollection of except of protests that would drive her conservative parents crazy, and fearful childhood television snippets of war scenes. (He avoided speaking of his internal wars, his sometimes tough nights just then although that subject would emerge with a vengeance over time.) They kid boy and girl-like spoke about musical likes (many shared, like The Door, the Stones, Bob Dylan), movies (they both loved film noir, especially Bogie and Bacall), lots of things almost making stuff up in order not to leave that wall. He spoke vaguely of his busted married and she of a couple of guys who it didn’t work out with, not for her not trying she said.

As Jewel and Soldier talked into the dusk they both got just slightly flirty along the way, feeling things out, feeling whether this moment had any future (as they both were quick to point out later in recapping that first meeting they were both hoping that it did). All they knew was that they almost simultaneously asked for each other’s telephone numbers, and laughed. There was a lot more of that, that flirty then hesitation feeling, before they became a couple. And while whether they might be star-crossed lovers or have an eternal love still was being played out even as Soldier closed that white picket- fenced house door behind him that sweet summer day strangely enough started it, started their rocky road. Started with those pale blue eyes.

The Stuff Of Dreams#27- Ida Lupino’s “Lust For Gold”- A Film Review


From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

DVD Review

Lust For Gold, starring Ida Lupino, Glenn Ford, MGM, 1956

Philosophers and social thinkers from Plato to Marx have commented in their various treatises on the hold that gold has held for a significant portion of humankind. Whether to wear it, carry it, or to miserly hoard it that quest for the yellow fever stuff had animated more than one human saga. And it does so here in a saga of the Old West, the old American West, Lust for Gold, a title that says it all, and that saw more than one feverish dream go up in smoke or vanish under an off-hand bullet. The road west was paved with the litter of the whitened bones of many such dreams.

This little black and white 1950s B-film is done in a flash- back as a grandson of the man on whom the story is centered, Jacob Walz, is knee-deep in his own exploration of the quest for the yellow stuff, stuff that his grandfather allegedly found in the hills of the West, the Arizona west. The idea behind the film is to show that, once again, men, and women, can get their thinking skewed by the desire get rich quick with a little strike, a little yellow stuff.

Now this Jacob Walz (played by Glenn Ford) is not your typical Western cowboy of film lore, some waspy John Wayne, but a tinhorn, although a tinhorn quick on the trigger and quick with the back of his hand, a German, from back East who came west, like a million others, to find his place in the sun. His place in the sun was to strike it rich in the gold fields not by digging and sweating himself but by finding a version of El Dorado, finding the lost mine gold fields which some earlier Spanish adventurers had mined, and lost, after being massacred by the Comanches who took exception the desecration of their burial ground where the gold was found . And he does find the end of the rainbow after getting rid of (killing off) his partner and a couple of wreck-less ghost sons of the Spanish conquistidores who got the madness which had started way back when looking for the oro that drove their forebears across that dangerous Atlantic in search of treasure.

Of course those finds were only the start of Jacob Walz’s problems, his everyday problems, as everybody in the greater Arizona area began to take dead aim at him to find out where his stake was and take their own shots at it. And of course this being a film, a romance of the Old West film, a dame (played by Ida Lupino), a married dame, enters into the plot to bring Brother Walz down. Ida was tired, tired unto death of her nickel and dime existence out in the arid West and tired unto death of her ne’er-do-well husband so she used her vast feminine wiles to snag Glenn in order to get that gold dream of hers into shape . In the end though Ida’s perfidy, extreme perfidy, Glenn’s mania, and the natural elements combined to close out our saga on a down note. The found lost goldmine was lost once again for that itchy grandson (and others) to pick up the trail. Yeah, the stuff of dreams, yet again.



BOYCOTT WAL-MART

COMMENTARY

THE RACE TO THE BOTTOM MUST STOP HERE!

SUPPORT THE BOYCOTT- UNIONIZE WAL-MART

FORGET DONKEYS, ELEPHANTS AND GREENS- BUILD A WORKERS PARTY!

From The Archives-2006

This writer has just received news that the Massachusetts Federation of Teachers (MFT) has voted to support the Wal-Mart boycott. Thus, the MFT joins a growing number of other unions and union federations nationally and internationally in support of this first step in the struggle to organize Wal-Mart. Every militant is obliged to and must support this boycott as a first step in the struggle against this greedy mega-corporation. To list the egregious labor practices of this corporation is like reading pages from the history relating the sweatshop conditions of the American labor movement at the turn of the 20th century. Whatever piddling savings one might receive by shopping at Wal-Mart is negated by the degradation of its labor force. It is high time for the labor movement to move on this outfit and move hard. The race to the bottom stops here.

Whatever the practical effect of the boycott it can only be a first step in the ultimate union organization of Wal-Mart. A boycott is not enough! A consumer boycott, as has been shown by past practices, is only as effective as the diffuse shopping public is aware of it. In general, a consumer boycott has little or no effect at all. In any case it is not decisive. There is no short-cut to effective organization at the point of production and, particularly in the case of Wal-Mart, distribution. The leadership of the organized American labor movement (now centered in the AFL-CIO and Change to Win Coalition) has chiefly used to the tactic of boycott to avoid the hard struggle to unionize the workforce. In the final analysis only organization in the field will bring unionization.

To organize Wal-Mart means there must be the will to organize Wal-Mart. It is necessary to go all out to win once the decision has been made to organize this monster along industrial lines, like the automobile industry in the 1930’s. Previous local efforts (such as in Quebec and Texas) to organize particular stores have shown that this strategy (or lack of strategy) has been a failure. Wal-Mart is just too big and powerful to be taken on piecemeal. This writer has seen estimates that the number of field organizers necessary to effectively organize Wal-Mart is at least 3000. Militants must call on the organized labor movement to fund and sent out that number en masse. The time is now.

Those even slightly familiar with the Wal-Mart operation know that the corporation has a fleet of at least 7000 trucks to transport and deliver goods to its various locations. This should make every militant salivate at the prospect of organizing that fleet. Militants must demand that the Teamsters International Union organize the fleet. Know this, if the trucks, the key to the distribution process are unionized that is a very powerful argument in the workers favor if a showdown with other parts of the Wal-Mart workforce is necessary. This writer suggests that militants read Teamster Rebellion and Teamster Power by Farrell Dobbs; a central organizer of the successful Teamster union drives in Minneapolis and later over the road drivers in the 1930’s. (These books have been reviewed elsewhere in this space, see April 2006 archives.) One thing is sure, if it took practically a civil war to bring the relatively loosely organized trucking company bosses to their knees in the 1930’s it will be 1000 times harder to do so against this monolithic giant. But the victory will be sweeter.

I mentioned above the need to fund field organizers, and plenty of them, and other support staff. Unlike the 1930’s the organized labor movement has no lack of funds for such an operation today. However, what is necessary is the political will to organize and fight rather rely someone else’s good will. The great lesson from the 1930’s is that you win on the streets, not in the White House or courthouse. Organized labor’s support for the failed Kerry Democratic presidential campaign wasted millions of dollars. Instead of using funds to support bourgeois candidates, mainly so-called Democratic Party ‘friends of labor’, through COPE and other PAC’s for minimal or no returns use the funds to organize Wal-Mart (and the South, while we are at it). That is the real way to use union money.

SUPPORT THE CALL TO ORGANIZE WAL-MART NOW!

NO MONEY FOR POLITICANS-USE THE FUNDS FOR THE ORGANIZING DRIVE AT WAL-MART!

BRING MOTIONS TO YOUR UNION CALLING FOR SUPPORT OF THE WAL-MART BOYCOTT!

BRING MOTIONS TO CALLING ON YOUR UNION TO SUPPORT AN ORGANIZING DRIVE OF WAL-MART!

 
Democracy Now!@democracynow2 Aug
“We Are Slowly Dying”: Fast Food Workers Launch Strike For Living Wage and Right to Unionize

Conflict in Syria: US Intervention and the Prospects for Peace


A forum on Syrian perspectives, the US role and activist response


When: Thursday, August 15, 2013, 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Where: First Parish Cambridge (Unitarian Universalist) • 3 Church Street • Harvard Square • Cambridge

Donation – $5 (No one turned away)


Presenters:



Marwa Alnaal
Syrian American Forum

A graduate of the international relations program at Clark University, Ms. Alnaal is a Syrian American who has travelled to Syria multiple times to study the crisis.



Assaf Kfoury
Boston University computer science department

Prof. Kfoury grew up in Beirut and Cairo and has published numerous articles on the Middle East in the Nation, Z-net, Counter Punch, etc, and has recently returned from Lebanon.



Nidal Bitari
Arab NGO Network for Development, ANND, Program Coordinator

Mr. Bitari has written in Arabic journals and will talk about his expierences during the uprising in Syria as a Palestinian living in a Syrian refugee camp.

With Commentary By:


Elaine Hagopian
Professor of sociology at Simmons College (emeritus)

Prof. Hagopian is Syrian by birth and has spent much of her life studying the Middle East, Palestine and Syria.

The drawn out conflict in Syria is of great concern; 100,000 people have been killed and there are more than a million refugees, but intervention by the US and other countries creates the potential for a major regional war.

The US decision to supply arms to the opposition escalates the violence when a ceasefire and political talks are needed.

Most activists in the peace/antiwar movement and public opinion oppose US intervention, but there are many questions because of the complexity and lack of reliable information.


US Forces Deployed in Jordan
democracynow.org

The Following Questions will be Addressed:

-- What is the historical background of the current situation?

-- What is the actual situation in Syria, who are the players and what are
their agendas? How are things changing?

-- How are the US and other countries involved, including sanctions, "nonlethal" aid and covert actions? What can we do to oppose US
intervention?

-- Can the peace movement support a dialogue and "political solution by Syrians and for Syrians, based on the Geneva Declaration of June 2012"?
(Syrian American Forum)? How can this be achieved?

-- Is there a way to provide humanitarian assistance to refugees and other victims, through UN or genuinely neutral agencies?

For more information: info@justicewithpeace.org; 617-383-4857

Six Ways To Support Heroic Wikileaks Whistle-Blower Private Bradley Manning




*Sign the online petition at the Bradley Manning Support Network (for link go to http://www.bradleymanning.org/ ) addressed to the Secretary of the Army to drop all the charges and free Bradley Manning-1100 plus days are enough! Join the over 30,000 supporters in the United States and throughout the world clamoring for Bradley’s well-deserved freedom.

*Call (202) 685-2900- Major General Jeffery S. Buchanan is the Convening Authority for Bradley’s court martial, which means that he has the authority to decrease Bradley’s sentence, no matter what the judge decides. Ask General Buchanan to use his authority to reduce Bradley’s sentence when it is handed down by Judge Lind.

Please help us reach all these important contacts: Adrienne Combs, Deputy Officer Public Affairs (202) 685-2900 adrienne.m.combs.civ@mail.mil- Col. Michelle Martin-Hing, Public Affairs Officer (202) 685-4899 michelle.l.martinhing.mil@mail.mil The Public Affairs Office fax #: 202-685-0706-Try e-mailing Maj. Gen. Buchanan at jeffrey.s.buchanan@us.army.mil

The Public Affairs Office is required to report up the chain of command the number of calls they receive on a particular issue, so please help us flood the office with support for whistleblower Bradley Manning today!

*Come to our stand-out in support of Private Bradley Manning in Central Square, Cambridge, Ma. (Corner of Massachusetts Avenue and Prospect Street near MBTA Redline station) every Wednesday between 5:00-6:00 PM.

*Contribute to the Bradley Manning Defense Fund- now that the trial has started funds are urgently needed! The hard fact of the American legal system is the more funds available the better the defense, especially in political prisoner cases like Bradley’s.  The government has unlimited financial and personnel resources to prosecute Bradley. And has used them. So help out with whatever you can spare. For link go to http://www.bradleymanning.org/

*Call (Comments”202-456-1111), write The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20500, e-mail-(http://www.whitehouse.gov’contact/submitquestions-and comments) to demand that President Obama use his constitutional power under Article II, Section II to pardon Bradley Manning now.

*Write letters of solidarity to Bradley Manning while he is being tried. Bradley’s mailing address: Commander, HHC, USAG, Attn: PFC Bradley Manning, 239 Sheridan Avenue, Bldg. 417, JBM-HH, VA 22211. Bradley Manning cannot receive stamps or money in any form. Photos must be on copy paper. Along with “contraband,” “inflammatory material” is not allowed. Six page maximum. Mail sent to the above address is forwarded to Bradley.    
***Out In The Be-Bop 1960s Night- When The Music’s Over-On The 41st Anniversary Of Janis Joplin’s Death-An Encore Sketch-Take Two

 

A YouTube film clip of Janis Joplin and Big Brother and the Holding Company performing the bluesy classic, Piece Of My Heart.
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman   
Classic Rock : 1968: Shakin’ All Over, various artists, Time-Life Music, 1989

Scene: Brought to mind by the cover art on this CD of a Janis Joplin-like female performer dressed in de riguer peasant blouse showing some cleavage, tight blue jeans, many times washed and thus showing the proper fade and, reflecting her, well, Janis’ roots, kick-ass Texas cowboy boots belting out some serious blues rock in the heat of the “Generation of ‘68” night.
******
Just for the record and to avoid any legal or physical fisticuffs with one Joshua Lawrence Breslin, then late of Olde Saco, Maine, a friend of my friend Peter Paul Markin who related this story to me first- hand a few years back (or maybe it was second-hand) about their adventures “on the bus” when Frisco town was the heaven, haven, refuge for all the wounded souls scattered in the mid-1960s night I take absolutely no responsibility for the truth told below. I am merely the scribe here, except to note what Wordsworth said about great happenings in France in the late 18th century-“to be young was very heaven.”

 

Josh Breslin (a. k. a. the Prince of Love, although some yellow bus wit made a joke of that moniker calling him the Prince of Lvov, some Podunk town in bleak old bend-over Poland, or someplace like that) was weary, weary as hell, road- weary, drug-weary, Captain Crunch’s now Big Sur–based magical mystery tour, merry prankster, yellow brick road bus-weary. He was even hanging around with his “papa,” “Far-Out” Phil Larkin who had gotten him through some pretty rough spots weary. And that would make him very weary indeed. 

Hell, showing how serious his malady was, Josh was girl-weary too, girl weary ever since his latest girlfriend, Gypsy Lady (nee Phyllis McBride, I’ll tell you about this moniker name thing sometime, a thing about losing some “slave” bourgeois identity in the monster American night sometime but this is about weariness not about a general critique of 1960s society and I did not learn from Peter Paul about that subject until well after this story was related by him so onward), decided that she just had to go back to her junior year of college over at Berkeley in order to finish some academic paper on the zodiac signs and their meaning for the new age rising. Yeah, okay Gypsy, do what you have to do was the Prince’s languid response.

That summer of 1968, June to be exact, after a year of bouncing between summers of love, autumns of drugs, winters of discontent, and springs of political madness what with Johnson’s resignation, Robert Kennedy’s assassination piled on to that of Martin Luther King’s had taken a lot out of him, including his weight, weight loss that his already slim high school runner’s frame could not afford. (Hint: that weight lost was not due to some faddish diet but rather from too many drug-filled nights and absent-minded half-finished camp-fire make-do stews.)

Moreover, now the chickens were coming home to roost. Before he had joined Captain Crunch’s merry prankster crew in San Francisco, got “on the bus,” in the youth nation tribal parlance, that previous summer he had assumed that he would enter State U in the fall (University of Maine, for those who did not know). After a summer of love that year with Butterfly Swirl, which would require a whole separate story to tell and since she had long gone at that point, gone back to her perfect wave surfer boy down in LaJolla that can wait also (although Josh’s temperature, and that of a couple of other guys too, rose every time he thought about her and her cute little tricks to get him going sexually even then) and subsequently a keen interest in a couple of other young women before Gypsy Lady landed on him, some heavy drug experiences that he was still trying to figure out, his start–up friendship with Phil, and the hard fact that he just did not want to go home once he had found “family” he decided that he needed to “see the world” for a while instead. And he had, at least enough to weary him.

What he did not figure on, or what got blasted into the deep recesses of his brain just a couple of days before his bout of weariness set in, was a letter from his parents with a draft notice from his local board enclosed. Hell’s bells he thought that he had better get back, weary or not, and get some school stuff going real fast, very fast. There was one thing for sure, one nineteen-year old Joshua Peter Breslin, Olde Saco, Maine High School Class of 1967, was not going with some other class of young men to ‘Nam to be shot at, or to shoot.

Funny, Josh thought, as he mentally prepared himself for the road back to Olde Saco, how the past couple of months had just kind of drifted by and that he really was ready to get serious. The only thing that had kind of perked him up of late was Ruby Red Lips (nee Sandra Kelly), who had just got “on the bus” from someplace down South like Georgia, or Alabama and who had a great collection of blues records that he was seriously getting into (as well as seriously into Ruby although she seemed slow, very slow, to get his message). Josh, throughout high school and even on the bus, was driven by rock ‘n’ roll. Period. He got surprised one day when he heard Ruby playing Shake, Rattle, and Roll. He asked, “Is that Carl Perkins or Elvis?” Ruby laughed, laughed a laugh that he found appealing and said, “No silly, that's the king of be-bop blues, Big Joe Turner. Want to hear more stuff?” And that was that. Names like Skip James, Howlin’ Wolf, Robert Johnson, Son House, Muddy Waters and Little Walter started to fill his musical universe.

What got him really going though were the women singers, Sippie Wallace, mad Bessie Smith, a whole bunch of other barrelhouse blues-singers named Smith, Memphis Minnie and the one that really, really got to him, “Big Mama” Thornton. The latter belting out a bluesy rendition of Hound Dog that made Elvis' seem kind of punk, and best of all her Piece Of My Heart that he would discover Janis was covering.

Then one night a few weeks after they met Ruby took him to club over in Monterrey, the Blue Note, a club for young blues talent, mainly, that was a stepping-stone to getting work at the Monterrey Pop Festival each year. There he heard, heard if you can believe this, some freckled, red-headed whiskey-drinking off the hip girl, yeah just a wisp of a girl, from Podunk, Texas, or maybe Oklahoma who was singing Big Mama’s Piece of My Heart. And then Ball and Chain, Little School Girl, and Little Red Rooster. Hell, she had the joint jumping until the early hours for just as long as guys kept putting drinks in front of her. What a night, what a blues singer.

Just at that moment though Ruby Red Lips came over to him, kind of perky and kind of with that look on her that he was getting to catch on to when a girl was interested in him and said, “Hey, Janis, that singer from the Blue Note, is going to be at Monterrey Pops next month with a band to back her up, want to go? And, do you want to go to the Blue Note with me tonight?” After answering, yes, yes, to both those questions the Prince of Love (and not some dinky Lvov guy either) figured he could go back to old life Olde Saco by late August and still be okay with school and the draft but he had better grab, weary or not,  Ruby now while he could.

Monday, August 05, 2013

*Films to While Away The Class Struggle By-Bertolt Brecht'sThree-Penny Opera




 
Recently I have begun to post entries under the headline- “Songs To While Away The Class Struggle By”-that will include progressive and labor-oriented songs that might be of general interest to the radical public. I have decided to do the same for some films that may perk that same interest under the title in this entry’s headline. In the future I expect to do the same for books under a similar heading.-Markin

02 July 2013

HISTORY / Bob Feldman : A People's History of Egypt, Part I, 525 BC-641 AD

Cleopatra VII and her son Caesarion at the Temple of Dendera. Image from Wikimedia Commons.
A people's history:
The movement to democratize Egypt
Part 1: 525 BC to 641 AD period -- From the Persian invasion to the Byzantium Empire
By Bob Feldman / The Rag Blog / July 3, 2013

[As literally millions demonstrate in Egypt in an attempt to bring down the Mohammed Morsi government, and as the Egyptian military appears poised to take action against the Morsi regime, we begin Bob Feldman's Rag Blog "people's history" series, "The Movement to Democratize Egypt." Also see Feldman's "hidden history" of Texas series on The Rag Blog.]

Most people in the United States now realize that most Egyptians want to see their society politically and economically democratized. But most people in the U.S. may not know much about the history of the over 83 million people who currently live in Egypt, beginning in 525 BC when the country was invaded by the army of the Persian Empire, led by Cambyses II, the son of Cyrus II (“Cyrus the Great”).

As The Rough Guide To Egypt observed, “the Persian invasion of 525 BC began…rule by foreigners” in Egypt that essentially lasted until 1952.

Despite a number of unsuccessful revolts by people in Egypt against their Persian rulers during the next two centuries, “Egypt remained under Persian control until 332 BC, when their entire empire succumbed to Alexander [the Great]" of Greece, according to The Rough Guide To Egypt.

And according to Jason Thompson’s A History of Egypt, “so detested was the Persian yoke that when Alexander the Great arrived in Egypt, he was welcomed as a savior.” Initially, there was no resistance by people in Egypt to the rule of Alexander and -- following Alexander’s death in 323 BC -- to the rule of the Greek Ptolemaic Dynasty of General Ptolemy Soter I and his descendants between 322 and 30 BC.

But according to A History of Egypt, “the population of Ptolemaic Egypt consisted of a comparatively small number of relatively privileged Greeks superimposed onto the great masses of native Egyptians, most of whom lived around subsistence level but whose back-breaking labor supported Ptolemaic society and government;” and, not surprisingly, “Ptolemaic rule…became highly resented over time.”

As the same book recalled:
There were numerous rebellions, especially during the second and third centuries BC. Most may have resulted from economic desperation or lax central control because of dynastic infighting, but some…expressed a longing for the glorious past when Egyptians ruled Egyptians. A distinctly "nationalistic" literature appeared… Government officials extorted everything they could from the peasantry, frequently leaving them insufficient means to sustain themselves. Famine, inflation, banditry, and flight are all too abundantly attested during the later Ptolemaic Period…
The last representative of the Ptolemaic Dynasty to rule Egypt, Cleopatra VII, was made queen by the Roman General Julius Caesar after his troops killed her brother and rival for the Egyptian throne, Ptolemy XIII, in 47 BC.

But, according to A History of Egypt, Cleopatra was “so unpopular that Caesar permanently stationed three legions in Egypt ” and “when he departed in spring 47 BC to new conquests...Cleopatra was pregnant.” Then, after Julius Caesar was assassinated in 44 BC, Cleopatra formed a similar political/sexual alliance with Mark Antony.

But, after Octavius Caesar’s Roman forces defeated Antony and Cleopatra’s forces in 31 BC at the Battle of Actium (and both Antony and Cleopatra committed suicide), Egypt became a province of the Roman Empire in 30 BC.

As part of the pre-partitioned Roman Empire until 395 AD, Egypt was exploited as the grain-producing “breadbasket” of Rome; and during the 30 BC to 395 AD period of rule by Romans and their Roman legions, “vast amounts of Egyptian land” that had been owned by the state under the Greek Ptolemaic dynastic rule “were now mostly sold to private individuals, some of whom acquired extensive estates,” according to A History of Egypt.

As a result, “small landholders, though comprising a large proportion of the population, were increasingly hard-pressed;” and “many became little better than serfs and slaves on the estates of the privileged, who assumed powers that previously had belonged to the state, giving them even greater control over the peasantry,” according to the same book.

In 330 AD, Roman Emperor Constantine founded Constantinople; and when the Roman Empire was partitioned for the last time into East and West in 395 AD, Egypt became a province of the Constantinople-based eastern Byzantium Empire until 641 AD; and during this period “Egypt’s grain and revenue remained extremely important to Constantinople,” according to A History of Egypt.

But the same book also notes that, “the Byzantine yoke became so odious to Egyptians, both politically and religiously…that they were not averse to the change of rule that came in the seventh century.”

[Bob Feldman is an East Coast-based writer-activist and a former member of the Columbia SDS Steering Committee of the late 1960s. Read more articles by Bob Feldman on The Rag Blog.]


From The American Left History Blog Archives (2006) - On American Political Discourse

 

Markin comment:

In the period 2006-2008 I, in vain, attempted to put some energy into analyzing the blossoming American presidential campaign since it was to be, as advertised at least, a watershed election, for women, blacks, old white anglos, latinos, youth, etc. In the event I had to abandon the efforts in about May of 2008 when it became obvious, in my face obvious, that the election would be a watershed only for those who really believed that it would be a watershed election. The four years of the Obama presidency, the 2012 American presidential election campaign, and world politics have only confirmed in my eyes that that abandonment was essentially the right decision at the right time. In short, let the well- paid bourgeois commentators go on and on with their twitter. I, we, had (have) better things to do like fighting against the permanent wars, the permanent war economies, the struggle for more and better jobs, and for a workers party that fights for a workers government . More than enough to do, right? Still a look back at some of the stuff I wrote then does not a bad feel to it. Read on.
************

VOTE NO ON THE ABORTION REFERENDUM- HR
1215 -IN SOUTH DAKOTA ON NOV. 7TH

COMMENTARY

VOTE NO ON THIS DIRECT CHALLENGE TO ROE vs. WADE

FORGET DONKEYS, ELEPHANTS AND GREENS- BUILD A WORKERS PARTY

This writer has spilled no little ink castigating the judicial decisions of the Neanderthals who pose as justices on the United States Supreme Court. And rightly so. And I am sure that I will have plenty of occasions to do so again. But some times these guys (and I do mean guys because at the time, in 1973, the court consisted of all men) get it at least partially right.  That decision was Roe v. Wade which for all intents and purposes declared that a woman’s right to choose to have an abortion (or not) fell within her right to privacy and thus was constitutional protected against the snooping of the state. As far as that decision went in the direction of increased, if partial and reversible, democratic rights militant leftists supported the decision. And defend it today. Moreover, today we face yet another, apparently frontal, challenge to the decision this time in South Dakota. We are duty-bound to try to beat this one back as well.
Since 1973 later Supreme Court memberships have attempted to nullify abortion rights by making the scope of Roe v. Wade much more restrictive than the original court decision, generally under some compelling state interest rationale in creating more restrictive procedures. State legislatures have also contributed their ‘wisdom’ by narrowing its scope and making the procedures, especially for the most vulnerable- teenage girls and poor women, as hard and impractical as possible. To add fuel to the fire various so-called “right-to-life” groups have, at times, spent much time and effort in intimidating women at abortion clinics.  Now the South Dakota legislature has passed a law which has all the hallmarks of an openly declared war cry to get this issue before the Supremes again. The legislation, HR 1215, is intentionally so restrictive of the conditions under which an abortion would be legally permitted as to totally negate the right. The only stated condition that would make an abortion legal in South Dakota is if the mother’s life was in danger. Not even rape or incest cases would qualify.  Thanks a lot. Christ, where the hell do these people who make such proposals come from. However, the legislation is up for a vote by the citizens of South Dakota on November 7th. This bill must be voted down.

Militant leftists must remember, or be made aware, that the political environment in 1973 when Roe. v. Wade was officially decided was a time of social protest and the awakening of the women’s liberation movement. Such protest has quite a lot to do with how the decision came down and that it was decided at all. There is a lesson for us here. The long and short of it is that every democratic gain must be defended strongly against the inevitable war to chip away those rights. A women’s right to choose falls in that category. But it is not enough to merely defend that right. To make the right real we need to insure those poor women, teenagers and others who do not have easy access to abortion clinics have that access as part of free, yes free, universal quality health care. This fact starkly comes home in the case of South Dakota where, according to news reports, there is only one abortion clinic in the whole state. Thus, the beginning of wisdom on this issue is that we need to fight to implement the socialist program. But until that time- DEFEND ABORTION RIGHTS. NO ON HR 1215. FREE ABORTION ON DEMAND. FREE QUALITY UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE FOR ALL. 


ROTC OFF CAMPUSES! JROTC OUT OF THE HIGH SCHOOLS!

COMMENTARY

WHILE WE ARE AT IT-KEEP THE MILITARY RECRUITERS OUT TOO!

HATS OFF TO THE SAN FRANCISCO SCHOOL BOARD

In the Op/Ed page of the Ideas section of the Boston Sunday Globe of November 19, 2006 conservative pundit, one Jeff Jacoby, in a commentary entitled “Anti-Military Bigotry” is up in arms (figuratively, of course, since like most neo-cons of late he did not avail himself of the opportunity to partake of military service) about the decision of the San Francisco School Board to eliminate the JROTC program from the city’s schools. The gist of Mr. Jacoby’s argument is that the decision of that Left Coast town is another unmistakable example of its anti-military and therefore unpatriotic bias, especially in a time of the great struggle his beloved President Bush is leading in the “war on terror”. Militant leftists take a rather different view of the matter. Yes, indeed we do. Hell, we commend that school board decision as an exemplary anti-war action and seek to drive ROTC and JROTC out off all campuses and out of all schools.

As part of his argument Mr. Jacoby has dressed up the role of JROTC by giving a litany of its positive effects on San Francisco students as a great bonding and “community” creating activity. In short, it is on the same level as the Boy or Girl Scouts, 4-H Clubs and the like. Wrong. However one wants to dress it up ROTC and JROTC are military organizations which act as a transmission belt to recruit students for military service. Whether those organizations do that successfully or not or provide some non-military activities are separate questions- and subordinate to their real aim. The military is not using them as a vehicle to further the brotherhood and sisterhood of humankind. Ask the Iraqis, for one, for the truth of the matter.

It is no accident that in the 1930’s prior to World War II and again during the Vietnam War of the 1960’s that a major campus activity for leftists, and not only leftists, was to drive ROTC off college campuses. Why? In the final analysis, as Karl Marx and V.I. Lenin pointed out long ago, the state is “armed bodies of men (and these days, women) - the military, the police, etc.” There are many ways to create that armed body-ROTC and JROTC help that effort. If you want to stop a war there is no way around that hard political problem. As an elementary and concrete act of opposition to the Iraq War and ultimately of American imperialism militants have to demand-ROTC OFF CAMPUSES! JROTC OUT OF THE SCHOOLS! MILITARY RECRUITERS OUT EVERYWHERE!