Sunday, December 27, 2020

Tea With Grandma (Fiction)

 1.

The only bad part about living in the basement at my mom's house is that I can hear the phone ring upstairs. I don’t bother running to get it since it’s never been for me anyway since I graduated college. You don’t figure into anyone’s plans once you’re on your own, and every phone call for the rest of your life after that is only about work, which I also don’t have to worry about right now.

I hear my mom answer. I can’t hear what she’s saying, but I can hear by her voice that she’s talking to grandma. She always gets happier when it’s grandma. I don’t know why. No offense to grandma, but that old folk’s home she lives in is so depressing for me I can’t stop thinking about it. It’s all that comes to mind whenever I think of grandma.

After a while, mom’s voice drops a bit. This call got important all of a sudden. Maybe grandma’s dying. It doesn’t help that my mom starts calling down the stairs for me to come up and talk to grandma. Oh god, I don’t need this stress.

Mom’s seems weird when she hands the phone over to me. She doesn’t seem sad, which is even more unsettling for some reason. I thought I caught a smirk after she handed me the phone, which is just as nerve wracking.

“Hal!” she squawks excitedly on the other line. “How you doing, snot?!” She hasn’t called me that since before I graduated high school, the last time I visited her. I always wanted to tell her to quit, but I figured I’d let her ride it out. It’s harmless anyway. I don’t care.

“I’m okay, grandma.” I always hate updating people about my life. Living in your mom’s basement doesn’t give much to report. Which isn’t my problem, it just makes conversation stupid.

“I’m sure you are,” she said, with what sounded like a pity laugh. “Listen, I’ve got a favor I need from you. I’ll make it worth your while, and I know you’ll do it, cause us McKenna’s got to stick together.”

I hear the same tone in her voice whenever she says our last names, like she gets some satisfaction out of emphasizing it – McKenna – which she loves using on me.

 “I know it’s been a while since I’ve seen you” she goes on, not waiting for me to answer anything, “I’ll pay you 100 bucks to come visit me. That way you can’t back out. Haha!” She has an old high register cackle. Since my dad left before I was born mom went back to her maiden name, which is why I’m Hal McKenna. “Your mom knows all about, and she’s all on board. I got a real mission for you, Hal. I know you don’t got a job anyway, so you got time to kill!” I hear her still giggling to herself as she hangs up.

I don’t mind being a McKenna and missing my dad. Ogen would have been a weird last name anyway.



2.

Now I’m at the old folks home, the last place on Earth I ever want to be. Every one of them is always exactly the same, too. Taupe top half on top of beige bottom half wallpaper, muted colors with nothing to share, like a permanent dusk sunset on a toxic planet with no life, covered in fart clouds. Old folks homes never feel like they’re attached to planet Earth.

I spend the whole time here not thinking of the obvious, which is how I obviously assume the old people who live here spend their whole time thinking about not thinking about too. I try to distract myself by thinking about how “taupe” and “beige” are gross words for gross colors, and how stupid people just complain about gross words, like which word is more gross than the other one. I'd say taupe and beige are at least accurate gross noises for gross colors, and also that “turgid” is a 1000 times grosser word than “moist,” for my money.

I find my grandma's room, and knock. “Come on in, Hal!” she yells, ending with a laugh. “Have I got a deal for you. Sit down. You're going to hate this one, it'll be a lot of fun.”

I'm on the couch and I can already feel myself getting exhausted and annoyed. She hands me some tea, which I at least know is going to be good, since she loads it up with honey every time. Enough to almost crush the tea flavor. I drink and ask that stupid easy question, “How are you, grandma?”

“I'm great, because I'm going to get right to the point.” She looks me right in the eye, which she always does to everyone, it's so annoying. “Hal, I need your help.”

Automatic pointless answer, “Sure, what can I do?” for some pointless chore, no doubt.

“I need you to get me some mushrooms.”

It feels like the birds stopped chirping. The sun almost slams on its brakes breaking through her living room window. Wut.

“What?”

“You heard what I said, and you know what I said, don't you Hal?”

“I...yeah, I mean, I know what you mean...I think.”

“Certainly not the kind that I can buy at a fucking grocery store, I'll tell you that! Haha!” That laugh, every goddamn time. “You do know what I mean. Good!”

Horrific mental flashes of the hidden microphone bugs in my grandma's apartment, cops trying to catch us. What? Why would this be a set up? Who would hire my grandma? Are you seriously thinking this? No, this is a joke? No, I mean, maybe? She is nuts. But not a cop. So either she's picking on you, or actually wants mushrooms. Being a narc with the cops would be the least likely most impossible scenario somehow.

“If my eyes worked any better I bet I could see the steam shooting out of your ears right now,” with a giggle before taking a sip of her tea. I also have tea?

“Ah!” I yell, from almost spilling my saucer and then almost spilling it again in the over-correction. Jesus.

She smiles, but doesn't laugh, because now she knows that I know she needs something out of me, so she's trying to hold it in. And not doing very well at that. Which is annoying.

“What, why, ffffffaahhh...why do you need me to get you mushrooms?” You can't swear at your grandma, right? I mean, if you could, this would probably be an acceptable time.

Smiling again just cause she almost caught me swearing, but shaking her head. “You wouldn't...you wouldn't know why.”

I crunch my eyebrows together. “Is that why you were going to pay me $100 to come visit you?”

A flourish of fingers and a right hand, ending up with an index pointing at me. “Ha! See? You are smart. I knew you were the man for the job.”

“I can't – I won't! I, ih, it...” close eyes, deep breath, open “I can't get you mushrooms, grandma. I'm not going to.”

“You know you can, you're just not going to, is that what you meant?”

“Fine, yes. I would know how to do it, but that doesn't mean I'm going to do it. I won't.”

A normal smile, which seems genuine for once. “That's good. I was worried I could just roll you over into doing it. I'm glad to see you refusing.”

Genuinely confused. “What?”

“I like seeing you stand up for yourself, it makes me happy.” No shitty laugh, just strong eye contact while sipping her tea.

With a different tone, strange to hear from her, “Now, since I pleasantly can't bully you into doing my bidding, I would like to try to explain to you why I need you to get these mushrooms for me. It's important, and you deserve to know.”



3.

She's been looking down at her tea cup. Neither of us has said anything. This is the longest I've heard her in silence.

She looks up with a little smile, waving her left hand in space over her shoulder, vaguely in the direction of the hallway.

“It's an awful place here, isn't it?” she says.

I look down.

“You can be honest.”

“Yeah,” I said, looking up. “It's awful. I hate the color of your hallway.”

“Ha! Me too! It's the worst. You should see the crap landscape paintings they have strewn all over the place. Like they think we forgot what sunsets are supposed to look like. Like they can fool us.” Looking out into the hallway with a sneer. “It makes it even worse.” Turning back to me, “But we're not that dumb.”

I think I just smiled. Did I just smile? I don't know, I think I'm still too scared to think straight. Why am I scared? She's not going to hurt me. Oh yeah, the controlled substance felony.

“Why do you need...?” I trail off.

“I know, I'm sorry Hal, I'm getting there. Here's the situation.” Putting down her tea cup, elbows out, hands on her legs. Business.

“Every Tuesday, we go on a mall walk. We go to that big strip mall on 42nd, and they just corral us on a big walking circle.” Waving one of her hands. “We hit the food court and the designer store, and that high end stupid fashion shop, and right past the electronics craphole, whatever and everything, we make the whole circuit. And Hal, let me tell you, I hate it. I hate it more than anything I've ever done in my life. They take us right past all these places where we can't buy anything, like we're supposed to look at all the lives other people can have, while at the same time other people are gawking at us about how old we are, and how lucky we are to be walking, and 'isn't that nice? they let them out for the day' bullshit. A zoo on a zoo on a zoo.”

She pauses and looks out the window. It just occurs to me that I've never heard my grandma annoyed at something before. I'm still nervous and scared, but I feel like I shouldn't stop concentrating on her. This feels important.

“We're going again soon, and god be damned I cannot do it this time, Hal. I'm just going to scream if I have to take another step in that place. I didn't like getting dragged out around inside those places when I was a kid, and I sure hate it even more now. I'm old enough to be left alone to enjoy my own company for once.” Grandma smile is back. “I've always been my own biggest fan anyway. I didn't like being babysat even when I was a baby, much less now.”

I offer up some kind of conjunction. “Sooo...”

“So!” Slapping her leg. “That's where you come in. I'm sick of going, so I decided to come up with something else to do with my time, and this seems like just the thing. Since I'll still be stuck at home, this seems like it'll be the easiest way to travel, haha! I just need to seem sick enough that they'll leave me behind for the day – being how old of a fart I am and how these things will make me feel before they kick in, it won't be that hard to come off as convincing, haha!” All her sounds are back again.

“I'm sick of watching old folks walk around like drunk octopuses,” she chortles, “I'm want to meet some real octopi for once, and have a nice conversation!” Off giggling into the kitchen.



4.

Now I'm walking to Terry's house, thinking about everything my grandma said. I don't know why I have to do this stupid chore. It's freaky. I don't know why my grandma has to do something stupid like this, and guilt me into it. I can't even just stay home and be left alone.

I get to Terry's house, and ring the doorbell. He answers the door.

“Hey Terry.”

Smiles, “Fuck you.” He knows that I know he prefers Terrence, because he says it's an innocent name, so no one would suspect he's a drug dealer. I refuse to play along.

“Can I come in?”

“Say it.”

Heavy sigh. “I would like to buy drugs from you.”

Big smile. “Nothing better than forcing you to be direct, Hal. Get inside, goofball.”

Terry's house is always warm and clean. I don't know how he does it, and I'm certainly not going to ask. I don't care.

“Stop standing in my doorway with your shoes on like you're not a guest in my house. Come relax.”

“I'm just here to...get stuff.”

“As we established, but come sit down like a human being, you goober.”

I take my shoes off and walk in and sit on the couch. I put my hands in my lap in a prayer-style entwined fingers. Why? God I can't relax.

Terry yells from the kitchen, “Want some tea or something?”

“No thanks, I already had some today.”

Perplexed voice, “Where have you already had tea today?”

Why am I suddenly panicking when I answer this? “I saw my grandma today.”

“Oh yeah? That's nice of you, to go visit her like that.”

“What?”

“What 'what'? I'm glad you're visiting your grandma Lucy. Say hi for me, she's great.”

“I didn't think you'd remember her.”

“High school wasn't that long ago, Hal.” Coming in with hot chocolate.

“...Thanks.”

“So...” sitting on the other couch opposite me. “...what can I do for you?”

Deep breath. “I came here for...” Why am I waving my hands instead of finishing the sentence?

Terry now with a stupid smile. “Drugs, yes, we established that, but I'm going to assume not weed like usual, since you've never been this nervous asking for that all these times.”

“No, I mean...yeah, you're right.” Each word with one paused mouth shape. “I...need...mushrooms. Not need! I would...” breath through nose “I would like to buy some mushrooms from you.”

Raised eyebrows, open eyes. “Really?! Well, that's great Hal. I'm very proud of you getting outside your comfort zone like this.”

I blurt. “They're not for me!”

Why does he need to know that?!

Arched eyebrow. “Oh yeah? Buying them for a lady friend?”

“...Yyyes.”

“Hal, you're buying them for your grandmother. I'm not dumb. It's okay.”

I've forgotten how to blink with my face. Does everyone know about this? How many people know about this?

“Wh...how did you know?”

“It's not hard to guess. To be polite about it Hal, you don't have much of a social circle. I know I don't need you to buy me any mushrooms, and wild guess that your mom doesn't either, since you've obviously known her all this time and the request has never come up. So eliminating variables, that just leaves your newly-visited matriarch of the McKenna clan.”

“My...my mom doesn't know about this, does she?”

“Ha! How should I know, man? I assume not, dude. We're just chatting about getting mushrooms to your kick-ass grandmother, as she requested. Did she tell you she told your mom?”

“No.”

“Then don't assume so. No one involved in any part of this is out to get you, man. Try to relax and enjoy the whole experience. Obviously I'd suggest not telling your mom unless you already know she's in on it.”

Looking down at my cup, again. “...Right. Speaking of...” looking up “...this stuff is really illegal, right?”

“Yeah Hal, it is.” Taking a sip of hot chocolate. “Are you planning to run into any cops at the old folks home?”

“No.”

“Then you should be fine, man. You should also know, there was a study at Johns Hopkins about cancer trauma and end of life therapy, and this stuff is great for that.”

“My grandma isn't dying!”

“I didn't say she was, Hal. But if I remember your grandma, she's not one to fuck around, so she probably knows she's closer to the end, and she probably knows that this stuff will help her with whatever she's going through. And I also happen to think that it's a good thing you're doing here, Hal, to help her through that. Pretty heroic of you.”

Eyes rolled. “Thank you, drug dealer.”

He snorts. “Ha! Fine, fuck me. Wait here, I'll get you a bag. Make sure you say hi to your grandma for me when you see her. She's good people.”



5.

The next morning, I'm back at the old folks' home. Terry wanted me to stay longer last night, but I told him I had to get up early to get these to my grandma. Which was true, but he still seemed disappointed for some reason.

I walked down the terribly color-shaded hallway again, and get to my grandma's room, knocking on the door.

“Is that you Hal?”

“Yeah.”

“Well, come on in. I'm happy to see you again. Sit down.”

“Do you want your...stuff bag?”

“Yes, thank you. Let me put the kettle on and get ready.”

“You're going to take them now?!” Far more break in my voice than someone at my age should have.

“Relax Hal, not right now while you're here. But it is Tuesday, so probably after you leave.”

“Okay, sure.” Why am I breathing like this? “Was there anything else? Here's your change.”

“You can keep that, and sit down, you shake machine. You have to stay. You can't leave me alone with an open heater on the stove.” Now affecting a stupid Halloween movie voice at me. “You wouldn't want me to hurt myself, left unattended.”

Trapped again. I sit on the same couch as before.

Coming in from the kitchen. “I just wanted to talk to you. See how things are going. How's Terry?” Sitting on the opposite couch again, like that's somehow an offhand and harmless question.

I splutter, “How-How do you know about him?”

Grandma laugh back again. “I figured that's who you'd go to. I remember him. I never told you, but years ago, after you two had graduated high school, he saw me baking in the kitchen. He was so curious and polite about the whole process, it took me a minute before I realized he was asking me so much about ingredient replacements for making cookies – about cooking temperatures for different oils and all that – that he thought he was being slick and getting advice on making weed brownies. I laughed so hard once I clicked in on what he was digging for. He's a smart friend of yours, Hal. You stick with him.”

“But he's a criminal.”

A grandma eyebrow, which I know by now is just a setup to get me to say something to make her laugh. “Is he a real criminal, Hal? Or is he just a drug dealer?”

Annoyed breath out my nose, not going to take that bait. “Well,” I said, “you'll be happy to know that he says hello. He guessed who...that bag was for. I didn't even tell him.”

“Well, that's nice of him. And I appreciate you not blowing the lid off this whole operation, and being such a reliable bag man. I knew I could count on you.”

“Yeah, sure.” I say, offhandedly.

“No Hal, I mean it.” Looking me in the eyes again. Why can't I stand it when anyone does that to me? Even just my grandma.

“I think about you a lot,” she says. “You know and I know it's just the three of us, you and your mom and I. And your mom does an amazing job of everything. And I know I'd just be in her way if I was at that house. But you're the only grandson I've got, and I know McKenna boys are always late bloomers, but I can't remember the last time I saw or heard about you having any fun. I know you've got a warm house, and – I think you know – a mother that loves you.”

Direct eye contact. “Yeah, I know.”

“That's good. You've got all the important stuff, the stuff you can't lose. But now you just can't ride that stuff out. When we're little babies, we have all the same things you've got now, and those things are beautiful. Having parents who love us and feed us, and a place to shit. It's great. But after that, the first thing babies do is learn how to play. Fun is the first thing we learn how to do, on purpose at least. It's always with us. Usually. But sometimes we need some help to remember how much fun it is, being alive. And me being towards the end of it like this, I need some help remembering, you could say.” A nice loud grandma laugh.

I'm staring out the window again. The sides of my head feel weird.

“Hal, what are you thinking about?”

“...Just that Terry said you might be using this stuff for that reason.”

“Well, Terry's a smart guy, like I said.” Giggling to herself. “I sure do hate that mall walk, that was true. But the other part can be true too. Thank you for bringing me what I need, Hal.”

I turn to look at her, and we almost make eye contact for a second, when the kettle whistles from the boiling water.

She jumps out of her chair. “There's the train! All aboard Hal! We're off to the undiscovered country.” She heads for the kitchen, whistling She'll Be Coming 'Round The Mountain as she walks. Somehow light on her feet at this age.

Feeling useless again, I think. I ask her, “...Do you need me to stick around?”

“No Hal, you go ahead. I called for some help when I put the kettle on, so I won't be left alone with a dangerous stove top. They should just about be here.” Giggling again to herself as she turns away from me and gets the tea bags.

I walk to the door and she comes and meets me, and gives me a hug. I hug her back. “Thank you for coming to visit me, Hal. I'll see you later.” Putting a heavy double entendre on a drug pun, I suppose. She softly shoves me out the door that she had apparently opened before hugging me, and I almost run straight into one of the building's nurses.

“Oh, hi there!” she says. “You must be Hal. I'm Jen.”

My soul has left my body.

“That's my grandson, Hal.” says grandma. “He was just on his way out.”

“It's so nice to meet you, Hal. Your grandma Lucy has told me so much about you.”

Her voice sounds like it's from a hospital, but in a nice way. She puts her hand out. I shake it?

“Yeah, nice to meet you too.” somehow comes out of my mouth, served up from the empty hole where my brain used to live.

“I think it's so sweet that you come to visit your grandma every week.”

What does she know? Is she in on it? Oh god every week? She probably thinks I'm ugly too.

“Yup, yeah, every week.”

“Aww, that's so nice of you.”

“It was nice to see you, Hal. Come on in, Jen. I've just about got my tea ready, then you can get back to work. See you next week, Hal!”

I leave her, with her laugh bouncing and curling off the wallpaper.

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Whack Job Conspiracy Nut Claims “Spring Is Coming” (Satire)

RED WING, MN – Disgraced geology teacher, Donald Spetzavitz continues to propagate the insane babbling that lead to his termination in the first place; the obscene notion that “winter is almost over” and “spring is almost here.”

“I know it’s been a rough winter for everyone”, says the unhinged maniac who used to be in charge of children’s education, “but we’re in the home stretch now, and then we can enjoy the beautiful outdoors again that this state has to offer.” Implying that there had been, or ever shall be a time, that this cold white despair of Minnesota winter ever did not exist, instead of what it truly is, which is a creature with no beginning or end that has forever been.

“I know it’s not a lot of people’s favorite season, but it’s got its own charm,” says the unattended nut job, who surely should be under some sort of social supervision at this point. “I’ve been skiing, and sledding with the kids. We made a snowman. Even staying inside and drinking hot chocolate with people you love, while watching the snowfall outside, can be a humbling experience to remind you of what’s really important” said the basket case, surely a danger to himself and others at this point.

This most ludicrous notion that Spetzavitz offers is that not only will this winter eventually end, but that it will somehow return again in several months, in some sort of a cyclical repetition: an unending cavalcade of misery, struggle, pain, the mocking torment of false promises of deliverance, and extinguished hope.

“It’s part of being Minnesotan,” claims the sociopath.

Toxicology Report Shows Cops Drunk With Power Led to George Floyd’s Death (Satire)

Preliminary toxicology work done on four Minneapolis police officers who were involved in George Floyd’s death has shown elevated levels of megalomania in their bloodstream.

“It’s actually quite common in police,” says Dr. Herbert Venmast, a hematologist with the University of Minnesota. “Many officers nationwide have gotten worrisome results in several tests. Extreme numbers of Unnecessary Jerk cells, Porcine mitochondria, and morbid obesity are rampant in precincts nationwide. Seeing what we call ‘Excessive Vigilante Anemia’ in these four police officers isn’t surprising.”

The questions arise as to where exactly these disturbing bacterial anomalies were first contracted, and why they’ve been allowed to fester unchecked for so long.

“That’s one thing we don’t know,” says Venmast. “Does the job naturally attract diseased subjects, or are they being infected in close quarters after they’ve been hired? Is it in the ventilation? In the water? In the donuts? I’m afraid we just don’t know.”

When asked what treatment options there were for such horribly stupid afflictions, Dr. Venmast was pessimistic.

“Cases like these are certainly not easy to cure. You’d have to start small. I’d suggest starting out with children’s books, ones with lessons about being nice to other people who look different from you. But that would first involve teaching officers like these four how to read, which is already a considerable challenge.”

No officers were quoted in this story. Why would they be? We tried, but they tear gassed our homes.

Vape Pacifiers Outlawed (Satire)

In a totally lame turn of events, little sprouts aren’t allowed to toot their sweet little cloud puffers any more, dude.

A sleaze chunk of bad types called “politicians,” I guess, decided that little squawks up to the age of 5 years are prohibited from getting their voop on with pacifiers, leading to a vapepocalypse of epic proportions.

“It’s not fair,” says local cloud chaser Zardoz Kumquat, legal name. “I was all set for my baby Popcorn Lung. We named him that because we thought it sounded so cute, just like him. I had gotten Baby’s First Fingerless Gloves and everything.”

There are plans for vapelyfe gods to get together and ride the mist into some legislative changes to fight for their rights to give their babies their own personal tiny tootle puffers, but that trip has its own challenges, as none of the vooper are registered to vote, and most don’t know how to read. Vooperbaiting.

“It’s like the tankinistas I met at the Gathering of the Juggalos always say: ‘It’s better to vape on your feet than breathe on your knees.’ I don’t know what else I can to do, I just know I have to do something. Otherwise we’re never going to be able to make the baby’s room smell like burnt pancakes.”

Heroic: Pandemic Delivery Driver Does It For Love Of The Game (Satire)

 One delivery driver finds the recent national COVID-19 pandemic to be right up his adrenaline alley.

“I got a tattoo of the germ design on my wrist. Just thought it looked cool,” says Joseph Swellen, 23. “This job is even more exciting than usual now, now that my chance to die has gone through the roof.”

Swellen says that the excitement of delivering food to people is initially what attracted him to the job.

“Once I read that the Department of Labor proved that being a delivery driver is over twice as dangerous as being a pussy-ass cop, I knew this was the gig for me.”

Since the advent of the worldwide COVID-19 Coronavirus, Swellen says the job is even more invigorating. 

“I’ve always loved the challenges of delivering food. Paying for parking out of my own pocket or take a risk getting towed, worrying about getting hit by traffic running across streets, paying my own gas and car repairs, and getting $4 a delivery with no healthcare is such a fucking thrill, living on the edge like that. Now I find out that I can die just from leaving my house and breathing deeply? What a trip, man. That’s so dope.” 

“Life is such a rush,” he coughed.

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

BEDSORES FOR JUSTICE - Getting Cops To Do More To Protect Us, By Doing Less (Essay)


Laziness is a perpetually and unfairly maligned characteristic in our modern society. A fake quote attributed to Bill Gates says, I always choose a lazy person to do a hard job, because a lazy person will find an easy way to do it." I've always drawn a lot of inspiration from that quote, because even though Bill Gates 100% definitely didn't say it, someone did (1). It's one of the very few times I've heard laziness presented in the shining terms that I feel it deserves (2). Put simply, I think any amount of time that people are spending being lazy means less time they're out in the world causing trouble. Not until recently, with the 2020 worldwide pandemic of COVID-19 and its respective Stay At Home Orders, has lethargy been thought of so highly. A personal favorite being the German video that describes the "couch warfare" of the winter of 2020, complete with an aged male actor looking back fondly on his heroic "time served on the front line." (3)

Right now I want to suggest that looking at another current social issue – a rather serious one – can be greatly served if we tried giving it a much more Laziness Positive approach. I genuinely believe that America's current issue of police violence would be greatly served if sloth was encouraged and pursued, on an unprecedented national scale. In every town, hamlet, valley, city, and metropolis, I believe things would be immeasurably improved if we could only convince our police officers to hand off their problems to someone else.

First, I believe an aside is worth mentioning. I'm looking to tell cops how to do their jobs, something that's become a very touchy national topic, at least politically speaking. Obviously, criticism of your job is not something that anyone's a fan of. Cops least of all, apparently. (4) Their main justification being that as it's such a dangerous vocation, no one has a right to direct them in how they do it. (5)

Not to say that it isn't dangerous, but statistically speaking, it's not even in the top 10, ending up in 14, out of the top 25 (6). Compared to Delivery Drivers (7th) or Roofers (4th), it's quite a gap. A second justification to allow the public to have a voice in how police officers do their job is the fact that – unlike a delivery driver or a roofer – there's no capitalist market competition in our police force. Mind you, this is as it should be; introducing profit-seeking motive into our government public assistance industries is just about the worst idea a person could have. But this also means that we can't shop around for better cops, like we could with an inferior delivery driver or roofing company. We have only the one outlet, or source, for this service. As such, we have to make our community wishes known through other methods – essays like this one, voting on local election referendums, speaking to our legislators, things of that nature. We can't speak with our dollars (which, as I said, is as it should be), so we fall back on speaking with our words and our votes.

Furthermore (related to my main point), if a police officer performs their job (let's say) sub-optimally, there are far worse consequences than crossing paths with a nominally inferior delivery driver or roofer. A delivery driver might get your product or food wrong, a roofer might give you a cruddy roof, but a police officer could either destroy your life with unjust prosecution, or in fact even end your life with unjustified violence. The worse case scenario of running into a bad cop can reach to far greater depths than any interaction with the other two vocations which we're presently comparing them to. This paper will be going in to several of those negative consequences, and I believe it's a fair point to confront.

How can laziness help solve some of these issues? Put simply, by encouraging cops to be lazy, they're far less prone to do all the things that lead to so many of the unnecessary consequences of having cops. There's considerable human cost that can be linked to over-excited cops, all of which are solved if we can convince them to try being lazy for once.

For instance, fatalities from car chases outnumbers deaths from floods, lightning, tornadoes and hurricanes, combined, and 91% aren't even in pursuit of a violent criminal. (7) That means that a very high number of these fatalities are not somehow in exchange for preventing violence – these aren't violent criminals who are being stopped, so the equivalent exchange, as in "we had to stop him or he would have hurt someone," does not exist. It is only the police officer's presence and pursuit which brings, or at least greatly increases, the chance of harm befalling someone.

I want to also bring attention to the fact that this holds true in personal interactions as well, both with civilians and criminals. If no one in a given scenario has a gun – or in fact any weaponry whatsoever – the appearance of a cop with a gun in their possession is, I believe, escalation by definition. A time and place which was once devoid of a gun, now has a gun in play. I don't believe (or intend) this to be a pejorative dismissal or insult of the officer's training, but I think it does bear irrefutable logic. Whatever the best case scenario might be (peace between two parties, or one taken into custody, or the other) those are not, I believe, greatly changed when a gun arrives. But it can get worse. Once an armed police officer has made their presence known, the worse case scenario has changed. I think one would have to agree at least on this (let's call it) Scenario Possibility Theory. There is some statistical challenges in keeping track of police violence, but the Washington Post shows it averaging about 1,000 people a year, since 2015. (8)

There are currently several ideas being raised to cut down on deaths due to police car chases, from (as previously suggested) legislation (9), non-profit organizations (10), and technological advances in equipment (11). All based on the premise that police officers should personally be doing less when it comes to chasing down criminals. As for the issue of face-to-face interaction, this is where the current national dialogue about defunding police departments comes into play. Very recently, as of this year, a handful of major metropolises have begun forming 24/7 mobile crisis response teams, specially trained to respond to unarmed scenarios, specifically with homeless or mentally ill citizens. Denver (12), San Francisco (13), Los Angeles (14), and Minneapolis (15) have either begun programs, or are currently voting on them. The city of Eugene, OR has had a program of mobile unit unarmed two-person teams for over 30 years. Last year, in 24,000 calls for assistance, they had to call armed police officers for backup only 150 times. That's only 0.6% of their calls. (16) It's left to see what the results will be in these cities with larger population, but I believe we can assume to be looking at some kind of drop in mortality due to police interaction, just by fact of making more scenarios with less weapons in them.

Police will always be available for these calls, as they always have been. And, I believe, they'll also be used far more efficiently, since once they get there, they can have the scenario fully explained to them by a trained medical peer who's already been able to ascertain the situation, instead of showing up and being immediately challenged with two or more conflicting stories, about what's going on, that they'll hear from whatever primary (and emotionally charged) characters that the scene might have. I'd also like to point out, that I believe the victim's wishes should be brought into consideration here as well. If people who call for assistance know that they have a multitude of options, that would also engender a higher likelihood that they'll actually call for assistance. I believe anyone going through something as traumatic as a crime would also – as the primary victim – most likely know the best solution for their current predicament. Or, if not exactly in the mental place for expertise, should at least have a say in what kind of help would come to their rescue. Demanding that both the civil servants and the victims bring their respective troubles and challenges into a One Size Fits All paradigm can only lead to unfortunate and sometimes (recalling the worse consequences mentioned earlier) horribly traumatic and damaging or life-ending results.

None of these alternative solutions, I believe, impinge on the cops' very worthwhile necessity in modern society. I can imagine several scenarios where an armed officer is not only suggested, but certainly preferred. We're merely asking them to do less than the extra they consistently volunteer for. This is about two very specific scenarios where it would yield amazing results – economically, socially, in respect to overall safety and citizen mortality, not to mention engendering a far more positive attitude towards cops as a whole if it leads to less violence at their hands – if we could just convince the police to rest on their haunches and let someone else do it. It wouldn't make them any less heroic. If anything, it would be appreciated. Looked on positively, all for doing nothing.



SOURCES


1) Choose a Lazy Person To Do a Hard Job Because That Person Will Find an Easy Way To Do It

    https://quoteinvestigator.com/2014/02/26/lazy-job/


2) Science: Lazy people are likely to be smarter, more successful, and better employees. Who knew?

https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/15/the-science-backed-reason-lazy-people-are-smarter-more-successful-and-better-employees.html


3) "Germany hails couch potatoes as heroes of coronavirus pandemic"

    https://www.dw.com/en/germany-hails-couch-potatoes-as-heroes-of-coronavirus-pandemic/a-55604506


4) "More than 200 police officers have resigned or retired since Colorado’s police reform bill became law"

    https://www.canoncitydailyrecord.com/2020/08/18/colorado-police-resign-retire-reform-law/


5) "The State Where Protests Have Already Forced Major Police Reform"

    https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2020/07/police-reform-law-colorado/614269/


6) "25 Most Dangerous Jobs In America"

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/careers/2018/01/09/workplace-fatalities-25-most-dangerous-jobs-america/1002500001/


7)"Police chases kill more people each year than floods, tornadoes, hurricanes and lightning — combined"

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/07/25/why-police-shouldnt-chase-criminals/


8) Police Shooting Database https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/police-shootings-database/


9) "Deaths lead police to question high-speed chase policies"

    https://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/nation/2010-04-22-police-chase-deaths_N.htm


10) Kristie's Law https://kristieslaw.org/


11) Starchase Products https://starchase.com/product/


12) "'My belief is that this is the future of policing': STAR van responds to hundreds of 911 calls where police officers aren't needed"

https://www.9news.com/article/news/community/voices-of-change/star-van-responds-to-hundreds-of-911-calls-police-officers-arent-needed-at/73-b8a7ac06-f01a-4d37-87b9-5435883efe30


13) "Removing Cops From Behavioral Crisis Calls: 'We Need To Change The Model'"

https://www.npr.org/2020/10/19/924146486/removing-cops-from-behavioral-crisis-calls-we-need-to-change-the-model


14) "LA City Council approves plan to revamp LAPD with unarmed crisis response team"

https://abc7.com/lapd-la-city-council-defund-the-police-nonviolent-911-calls/7027406/


15) "Minneapolis Council proposal shifts $8M from police to mental health response, violence prevention"

https://minnesotareformer.com/2020/11/27/minneapolis-council-proposal-increases-social-services-without-defunding-police/


16) What is CAHOOTS? https://whitebirdclinic.org/what-is-cahoots/





Audience Analysis

Really Just Looking To Justify Takin' It Easy



Similar to the first paper, I wasn't exactly sure how this paper would come out in the end. I knew I wanted it to involve the police force, since that was the issue most at the forefront in my mind this time, since I'd confronted homelessness in my first paper.

I have to admit to personally having a great affinity for the Utilitarian method, and I think any instance where you're using straight factual numbers, statistics, and mortality rates, you're automatically working on a Utilitarian method. Clearly my style is "consequences of different policies," backed up with odds and numbers. This much of a chance of this much pain on this many people. Combine that with (what feels to me) like an overall argument against what you could call an Authority Paternalism; police officers believing that they know how best to solve your/society's problems, and having an assumption that they & only they would have the wherewithal, courage, training, whatever, to solve every scenario. I think this also calls specifically to another solution Mill suggested: You always have the opportunity to do nothing. What's strange here (that I think Mill never predicted) is that you may have to legally force some people to do nothing. Which, admittedly, strikes me as so strange, personally. The idea that some people want to do a job like this one so badly makes no sense to me.

Of course, it's also a version of his "don't restrict other's liberty (like a cop's liberty to give chase) unless it leads to direct damage to another person" rule. I think that the ultimate decision to make is do we want to let cops do their jobs how they want, or do we want a safe society? At least in these two types of cases, those are our choices.

Monday, November 16, 2020

THE HEROISM OF THE MODERN AMERICAN BILLIONAIRE - Saving The Homeless, Profits & You! (Essay/Satire)


So you're a billionaire! Congratulations!

Having definitely raised yourself up single-handedly by your own bootstraps, in the vacuum sealed existence that is certainly your life, you're now free to indulge in all your favorite personal habits. You've gotten this rich, all by yourself. You obviously deserve it.

But right now I want to offer you an exciting business opportunity. One that only someone with your amazing amount of income could possibly manage. One with a considerate initial investment, but which would quite literally self-automate into a money making venture. All you would have to do is get the gears turning, and the income would literally gain its own momentum. All you'd have to do is sit back and watch your numbers grow. Work smarter not harder, as the Bible says.

There are currently over 500,000 homeless individuals in the United States (1). I'm here to try to convince you that – as far as you should be concerned – this state of affairs is like leaving money on the table. All it needs is someone with enough chutzpah to make the initial investment, and that's you. Nothing ventured means nothing gained, and the greatest gains require the greatest ventures.

First, some clarity.

Even throwing out the "it could happen to you" self-interest conjecture (preposterous on its face, obviously; you've been anointed by the universe into being this rich) you're still leaving the opportunity of more money – for yourself – in the gutter by not helping them. No one's making any money off the homeless. If they were, they wouldn't be homeless. That's just common sense.

A worker trades his labor for a paycheck. The employer who employs that worker is making more money from that worker's labor than the wages that they pay back to that worker. That's simple economics. We'd also have a tenant who pays a landlord, or a homeowner who pays a bank or yearly taxes. Providing human creatures with basic living necessities can be quite lucrative, which we can see is really just a missed opportunity for high end profits.

None of this would be possible without first securing a place for these employees to live. They need somewhere to provide them the comfort, privacy, and rest in order to become useful and functional employees. Without living quarters, they cannot become employees (2). Without employees, business will cease to exist. Of course, I don't need to tell you that. You're a billionaire! You've only gotten where you are by your shrewd and impossibly brilliant business mind and hard work. Clearly.

It's my belief that there's an unimaginable bounty of untouched wealth resting in the laurels of these unhoused peoples. I currently intend to prove it.

For example: In 2015 the city of Denver made an enormous test investment in housing a section of its homeless citizens. At the cost of $13,400 per person per year, the city was then able to save $15,733 per person per year. That's a profit of $2,373 (3). Per person! Saving money from all the hospital visits, emergency services, jails incarcerations, assistance programs, and all the other things homeless people do to pass the time, whatever that might be (4)(5)(6). For every $1 put into the program, it gave a return of $1.17. Just by unhomelessing these people, they're already making money for you. The Los Angeles County alone reported returns as high as $1.20 for their similar program (7). Are you going to let local government take the profits of the American Dream from heroic small business owners like you? Of course not! That's why this investment in housing the nation's vagrants is the right way to go for any smooth company shark like yourself.

"Alright," you say, "How much is this magic ticket money-printing machine going to cost me for an initial investment?" I hear you! I'll bet you imagine it's some enormous number, unimaginable to the human mind. First of all, not the case. Obviously you wouldn't have even been invited to this presentation on this secret island in the uncharted Pacific if you weren't already a big hitter. It'll cost next to nothing for you. Too good to be true, I know! Listen to this.

I've drawn up a hypothetical situation to explain it. Let's imagine another billionaire, looking to take a chance of this great opportunity I dropped in his lap. Using a highly randomized A.I. name generator I invented, we'll call him Beff Jezos. Using another totally randomized number algorithm, let's pretend Beff has, oh I don't know, 189 billion dollars. Just to pick a huge and random number totally out of thin air.

Now, obviously the Actual Cost of this solution I'm talking about wouldn't change depending on who I'm talking to. That could be one number or another number, but once we figure out what that number might be, it certainly wouldn't change from investor to investor. I am nothing if not an honest businessman, as of course we all are.

The real question is how much would Beff actually feel the cost of the investment he made. That is a subjective measurement. That would differ from investor to investor. To put it simply, what percentage of your fortune could you look to risk in this guaranteed safe bet venture? That would depend on the size of your fortune. Let's look into it.

For one possible number, the National Alliance to End Homelessness (for the year 2021) has requested $3 billion in funding from the federal government for its baseline functional requirements (8). This would constitute 1/63rd of Beff Jezos' entire fortune. Only 1.59%. For a comparison as a random example, if someone else was, let's say, a delivery driver in their mid-30s with $2,500 in their bank account, they could fund the entire year's budget for the National Alliance to End Homelessness (at an equivalent proportion to their "fortune") for $39.68. Roughly three hours of work. Hypothetically speaking, of course.

Coincidentally, $3 billion would be nearly exactly what Jezos would pay if we assumed that his company voluntarily yielded to their 21% corporate tax rate on their profits without contesting and avoiding it with credits and deductions like they do every year, but what sucker would let that happen to their business without a fight? That'd be ridiculous. From our cold dead hands, I always say (9).

Let's even choose a larger number. Using Denver's number of $13,400 per person, let's multiply that by all the homeless people in America, to the best of our knowledge; 553,742 (1). If we multiply those numbers together, we get $7,420,148,000. Even that amount of money would only account for 3.9% of Jezos' money. $97.50 when put in the terms of our totally imaginary delivery driver. And remember, at even just the minimal rate of guaranteed return (from the Denver experiment) of $1.17 for each $1, Mr. Jezos would be looking at a return of $8,681,573,160. A profit of $1,261,430,360 at the lowest estimation. Effortlessly.

If these people are provided a warm, safe, and permanent place to live, they'll be far less likely to bring any trouble back out onto the streets that they've recently been rescued from. As far as other simple amenities; a single-profile Netflix account is $9 a month. If you multiply that by 553,742 people it's $4,983,678. Multiplied by 12 months is $59,804,136. Remember, that's the price for a full year for over half a million people. 0.0316% for Mr. Jezos. $0.79 for our delivery driver. A fee that a galactic level billionaire like yourself would only have to support until each person gets their own $9 of disposable income, and with a safe home from which to coordinate the sale of their labor, that won't take long. I would venture that every one of them would be able to stream their media by their own bootstraps within the year. A considerably small price to pay for clean streets. Making parks safe to play in, coffee shops calm to relax in, the space under bridges becomes safe to tell riddles from again, all while you rest easy knowing that you're filling your bank accounts, all from doing almost totally nothing. Never lifting a finger beyond the initial investment. Housing the homeless is like printing money. You'd be a fool to skip out on this chance, you super smart and beautiful billionaire, you. Good job just being you everyday. You hero you.




SOURCES

1) "The State of Homelessness in America"

https://endhomelessness.org/homelessness-in-america/homelessness-statistics/state-of-homelessness-report-legacy/


2) National Alliance to End Homelessness – Housing First

https://endhomelessness.org/resource/housing-first/

3) "Study Data Show That Housing Chronically Homeless People Saves Money, Lives"

https://endhomelessness.org/study-data-show-that-housing-chronically-homeless-people-saves-money-lives/


4) Housing First Helps Homelessness and Saves Money

https://upstream.mj.unc.edu/2019/02/housing-first-helps-homelessness-and-saves-money/


5) "Free Housing Helps Homeless Patients Achieve Better Healt

https://essentialhospitals.org/quality/qualityfree-housing-helps-homeless-patients-achieve-better-health/


6) Ending Chronic Homelessness Saves Taxpayers Money

http://endhomelessness.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Cost-Savings-from-PSH.pdf


7) "L.A. Homeless Housing Program Saves More Money Than It Costs"

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2017-12-la-homeless-housing-money.html


8) Federal Funding for Homelessness Program

https://endhomelessness.org/ending-homelessness/policy/federal-funding-homelessness-programs/


9) "Amazon had to pay federal income taxes for the first time since 2016 — here’s how much"

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/02/04/amazon-had-to-pay-federal-income-taxes-for-the-first-time-since-2016.html


10) www.netflix.com, also I'm a millenial







Wherein I Explain The Punchline

Which You Must Never Do, But I Want A Good Grade



Trying to imagine the audience for this piece was actually one of the more challenging aspects of writing this essay. It was difficult to even start until I had some kind of answer. To be honest, the final working answer I landed on was myself. I think philosophy can have a lot more art to it, when compared to the usual other methods for ascertaining knowledge. I had an idea, and I wanted to see if I could write four pages about it. Once it was finished, then I could think about what kind of audience would eventually enjoy what I had made. When I was trying to think of that imaginary group of people before writing, I was far more paralyzed from even initiating the project.

Having written it, I can look much more objectively at Who This Essay Is For. Now that it's finished, I can list its qualities far more easily. I would say that this article would definitely be a great read for anyone who already believes that how this nation deals with its homeless people – and in a related respect, how it deals with the obscenely lucrative upper class – is a moral failure of quite literally staggering proportions, the likes of which border on genocide of an entire economic class, which is unique only because it's different from the usual racially or culturally specific attempts at eliminating human beings on a mass scale. By not taking (proven here almost literally effortless effort) any action to alleviate the suffering of a particular group of people, every action performed by these billionaire – both now that they're billionaires, and retroactively whatever actions they performed in order to get to where they are now – is devoid of use for society, if not definitely harmful, and should be looked down on.

The mechanic of comedy that I used while making this point is two fold. First of all, it's more fun, not just for me to write, and also more importantly for the audience to take it in. We're talking about several morally disgusting things occurring here. This amount of medicine is going to take a equivalent amount of sugar for any reader to choke down. Secondly, it speaks directly to the specific audience I mentioned; An enormous requirement of A Joke is that you Get It. This work speaks to people who, as I said, already believe that how we treat (or more specifically, ignore) homeless people in this society is unforgivable and uncomplicated. It's wrong, unequivocally. I'm not looking to spend time convincing anyone of that. If you don't already believe that human beings deserve to be treated better than this – from previously reading not only the writers in our class but in fact any of the thousands of moral writers in our nation's history – I'm probably not going to be the one to convince you. This article, as well as the Housing First resources I use, and (I believe one could argue) the Supreme Court decisions we've read have somewhat of a shared justification that a human being cannot reach any potential (much less their best potential) without first securing a place to live safely. Deciding what to do to solve that issue is going to have to also include figuring out what to do with the people who could solve this problem effortlessly but decide not to. This essay suggests that they should be virulently ridiculed, at the very least. Tricked out of their fortune, ideally, but I admit the likelihood is slim. But one can dream.

This article is made for people who already know and personally deeply feel that what's happening is wrong, who already Get It, but who perhaps lack the language to express their deeply held beliefs. This article can provide that for them. I have statistics and facts, math and subjective budget comparisons, and strongly supported opinions, all dressed up as a time-share style "sucker born every minute" seminar, on a private hidden island in the center of the Pacific Ocean, written with several gallons of dripping sarcasm disguised as fawning billionaire flattery, all a secret code for loathing directed at the type of people who could easily do something about it all but are deciding not to. The audience that would appreciate this essay already knows the current scenario is wrong. Now I've given them facts, charts, experiments, numbers, and a (very memorable, if I may say so myself) context to couch it all in and to recall it all with. This is how I enjoy writing to the public when I write my philosophy.

Friday, June 5, 2020

The Boy Everyone Pees On (Short Fiction)

Don’t get fed until after patrol.

That’s the first thing to remember. Every day, you’ve got a job to do. Just one, but it’s a big one. Then you get to eat and sleep all day. Not a bad deal.

I miss dad even when I’m sleeping, so it’s always good to see him when I wake up, even if I am still tired. He always lets me get a drink before we go, which I always need. It’s tough getting old, but it beats the alternative.

I’m not really sure why I can’t eat before we go, but I’ve never really wondered about it. Maybe to keep my killer instinct sharp. I’m sure there’s a good reason, probably a ration or something like that. I couldn’t imagine he just wouldn’t feed me if we could afford it. He’s not like that. This is our life, no reason to complain.

Dad’s the general, and we have a mission. One he can’t do without me.

We go into the Smell room – I call it that because two or three times a day mom & dad make themselves something to eat, and it’s all so different and amazing from my food that I can barely stand it – and we get ready for the patrol. I’ll admit, leaving the house is the worst part of my day, but feeling like a useful soldier for the general fills me with so much pride that I still get excited when we suit up.

Dad has only the finest equipment for his best and only soldier. It lets me know he cares. He spares no expense. I have to get into my Haptic Act Responsive Neuro Energy Survival Suit. It’s always a two man job. Dad has to help, I can’t get into it myself. Then dad attaches the Longated Extension Algorithmic Survival Hook to the two of us, which also has the Portable Offsite Omega Passage Boulders And Gas Satchels at his end. Now we’re a unit. It’s time for the perimeter check. This is when it gets real.


************


Sometimes I have nightmares. I know they must be bad enough for the general to take notice, since sometimes I wake up to him rubbing me and looking in my eyes until I can sniff him that it’s all okay. He looks so scared. I don’t want him to worry. I guess I must be barking in my sleep, that’s how he’d know. But I’m not sure. Since I’m deaf, I can’t really wake myself up, so it just kind of happens while I’m sleeping until they go away on their own. They always do eventually, but it’s faster if dad saves me.

I guess something happened to me, before. I can’t remember what it is, but it must have been bad. Sometimes I yell, even when I don’t want to. It’s like a nightmare, except it’s when I’m in the light, which makes me feel even worse while it’s happening, since I know it means I’m yelling and biting at mom and dad. But I can’t stop that when it’s happening either. I’m just so scared. Luckily I don’t have teeth. I lost those sometime. I don’t know where, but it was before I met mom and dad. Sometimes I miss my teeth when I’m eating, but sometimes I’m glad they’re gone, because that means I can’t accidentally hurt someone I love when I’m scared. It’s such a strange feeling, to be relieved when you remember you have no teeth. It doesn’t make sense sometimes. Lots of things don’t make sense.


************


Dad carries me down the stairs. This is actually my favorite part, being carried. If I could, I’d ride around on dad all day. I try to remember that he’s got general stuff to do, so he can’t hold me all day, but sometimes it’s the only place I can relax. I try to remember I’ll get picked up again at the end for the trip back up the stairs, so I try to keep that in mind, to get me through the patrol. We have to make the perimeter check, at least during the summer. When it’s winter, it’s too cold, and we only go to the mounds, the edge of our fort, then we come right back home. Winter is too cold for a full perimeter check. We just have to hope everything will be okay out there on the far territory until we can go back when it’s warm.

He puts me down on the sidewalk, and we go walking. Sometimes I have to stop and drop my logs right away, so dad will wait. Then he gets them and puts them in the mounds at the edge of the fort. The mounds have a mouth on top, and dad pulls them open and drops my logs into them. I guess dad feeds them too. It’s weird that the mounds eat logs.

I love peeing on the mounds, it’s my favorite. I use most of my pee, because it’s our border, so it’s important to let everyone know that they’re not allowed any closer unless the general says it’s okay. I only save a little bit of pee for the last thing that will need to be marked later.

We cross a little bit on the sidewalk, and now we’re going with gusto. I smell the others, Stella and Beau, who are very nice but big but I don’t get to talk to them, I think because their dad isn’t as good a dad as the general. I know they watch me, even though I can’t see or hear very well. I have a good nose. I know they walk even with me a little bit to the side, until their dad makes them stop. I think we all wish we could be friends, but that’s not how things are right now. All we can do for each other right now is use the BEPO.

After Beau and Stella’s house, we turn left. We’re going on the sidewalk, still. We’re on the farthest rectangle side end, the farthest from home we go every day. At the very most far away, halfway to the other corner end of the sidewalk where we turn left again to head back home, in the middle before that at the point of most far away walk, it’s the BEPO. Sometimes dad has to stand him back up, but most of the time I can see him before we get to him, which is so exciting. I can’t see real good, so when he’s bright and yellow and I can see him getting closer it feels like my eyes work again. He has an arm and a hand and a head and legs, but he never moves. He lets us all pee on him. He’s such a hero.

I can smell Beau and Stella on him, and all a bunch of others out there too that I’ve never met – I don’t know what they look like – but I can smell their kind, and how big they are, and how hungry they are, or if they’re a boy or a girl, or how old they are. If they’re happy or healthy. Everything important about them. It’s my favorite thing. It’s proof of life. Solidarity. I know you’re here. I am also here. I may never meet you. I don’t know what you’re going through, but you are not alone. It’s important to say hello everyday if you can. It’s how we talk without seeing.

At the top of the sidewalk we turn left again, and we walk a bit halfway, but then dad picks me up, at the same spot every time. I’m not sure why, but I’m sure it’s for a good reason. And I like looking down at the sidewalk when dad carries me, because then I can see the sparkles on the ground. I think that’s why dad picks me up, so I can see the bright sparkles on the sidewalk, because once they’re gone he puts me back down.

Now we’re in the home stretch. I can tell because it’s the brightest in the sky out of the whole walk, and because of the killer river with the angry water monsters going so fast and big on the right side always make me flinch, but it’s important. This is our fort. We have to make sure the edge places are safe. I can feel dad tighten straight behind me, so he knows where I am. I can tell he’s nervous, which makes me nervous, but I also know I’m safe with him. He’ll never let me go. He takes it as serious as I do. He’s not messing around, and neither am I.

But I know we’re almost home! Sometimes I make logs again, so we go past the doors and give my logs to the mound again. I love showing off our mounds. I’m so proud of them. Then dad carries me up the stairs, my favorite part. And I get to eat. Sometimes I make a mess, since I don’t have teeth and I’m slurping a lot of tongue to get food in. But then I sleep on dad, for six hours. Then a short patrol to the mound. Then I sleep on dad again. Then I patrol the mound again, then I eat again. Then I sleep through dark until it’s bright. I couldn’t think of a better life. And then it’s tomorrow again for the big perimeter check. It’s important business. I don’t know what he’d do without me.

Thursday, June 4, 2020

'Everything Fine' Say Cops In Riot Gear (Satire)

Claiming it's PPE to prevent the spread of COVID-19, thousands of fully equipped police officers in riot gear have been seen marching in low income neighborhoods around Minneapolis, for no particular reason whatsoever.

"My wife made it," said Sergeant Eric Splatz, pointing to the kevlar wrapped breastplate he was wearing while harmlessly patrolling his beat. "She sewed it, along with the flower printed jackboots, and a little satchel for me to carry my ammunition magazines for this M-16. It's really cute."

Doing their job on this normal day like every other day since nothing terrible whatsoever recently happened, the cops were seen holding hands and skipping through the sidewalks of minority neighborhoods where they are most definitely welcome all the time and certainly get along with everyone perfectly fine thank you for asking. Why wouldn't they?

"Everything's great!" screamed officer Mike Krepwitz. "It's fine! It's super great! My kids won't talk to me! I have to sleep in my body armor to fall asleep every night. That's why I'm a hero. It's the appreciation from the citizens that really makes it worthwhile. The way they call us war criminals for stomping on human rights lets me know they care."

It sure is great being a police officer, with no shenanigans to worry about whatsoever from any co-workers, since all cops are inherently good and beautiful and nice and also brave everyday forever.

"The shield and billy club is for the virus," says Splatz. "You can't be too careful with this stuff. The tear gas is also there to disinfect the air, for your safety, since the virus does spread through the atmosphere. Sometimes the coronavirus thinks you went too far, and then it comes back to march in the street just because one of your other officers might have gone a little off the handle the other day, things might have gotten a little crazy." Immediately after this interview, Sergeant Splatz was hit by a bus.

Luckily that's nothing to worry about, since full riot gear just happens to be in vogue this summer, that's all. Minneapolis' finest is just chasing the haute couture for the coming season, which surely looks forward to friendship and camaraderie nationwide.


(published at www.theterminaltimes.com)

Monday, May 18, 2020

Mayo Shrimp At The Walmart Shooting (Essay)

When I first started to write this, it was called “Mayo Shrimp at the School Shooting,” since I knew there had been a shooting – that’s what the topic is, obviously – but my memory had failed me and I’d naturally assumed and falsely remembered it was a school shooting. An understandable enough guess.

Seven of my friends and I – all of us comedians – had just finished up a weekend Saturday game of basketball. I’ll leave it up to your imagination to guess how well that went, but a fun time was had by all, if a comic’s idea of fun is to make fun of their friends. Which it is, so it was.

Being the mind shattering examples of perfect physical specimens we naturally were, we decided to convene for an after game lunch at that pinnacle of health conscious cuisine known to athletes everywhere as the Chinese Buffet.

The Chinese Buffet is a particularly American Masterpiece of theater. It’s three to four long heat lamped tables, with one long sunken rectangle shaped hole filled with water, going down the middle almost the whole length of each, west to east. Placed in 2 by 3 or 4 batches of smaller steel rectangle bins suspended on top of that water within these tables is whatever steam heated semi-sustenance can survive for the longest amount of time – chicken fingers and wings and wontons of some sort with vaguely Chinese names written in English hanging over all of it, low rent old fish, basic Midwestern supplies of roughage vegetables like corn and potatoes, and any other small, easily, and cheaply mass produced starch, cheese, vegetable, protein, or combination thereof. If you find one that offers pizza slices and French fries, that’s how you know you’re at a good one. In front of these long beds of decadence that would make a feasting hall ancient Viking weep with joy, you see every beautiful version of the American humanity that you think is just made up for cartoons.

Hipster 20 to 35 year olds, eating there because they don’t know how to cook, or don't want to cook, or don't have the effort to cook after mutually embarrassing themselves in synchronized basketball goofery, making the most of the Actual Human Interaction they’ve happily fallen into (since being a comedian and spending every night at a different bar doesn’t really count as hanging out with your friends like a real human being). There are day laborers getting as much unstoppable all-you-can-eat last-all-day sustenance as they can on $18.95 and try to make it until they fall asleep that night and make it to tomorrow. A mother and father on their third marriages – their second try with each other – and their 3 to 5 children, from one or some of the other previous couplings, either sprung from a by-the-book matrimony or not, but most likely not. All of them being lit softly by the reflecting light coming from inside the table above the food, bouncing off the surface, coming filtered up through the glass of the sneeze guard, making each customer look like an undershone god who’s either about to tell the food a campfire ghost story, interrogate it, or both at the same time. All of it basked in the wet steam heat.

Asian-American citizens that run the restaurant who, statistically speaking, are quite possibly not Chinese at all, but know that American’s wouldn’t have any appreciation about the subtle differences between the separate cultures and would probably be scared away anyway so they just picked the easiest foreign adjective to paste on this empty building where they’ll be serving cottage cheese right next to the soft serve ice cream. The employees come and go as great muscled but invisible specters, lifting an enormous and full metal bin of wings or fish for the 8 millionth time of their lives into the formerly empty spot, paying no mind to the slippery burning heat on their fingers since the callouses have all grown into some kind of new Uber-skin. You fool yourself into thinking that this “new” bin of food must be “fresher,” so you rush to get the first portions, since that’s how you believe the rules of time work. Not knowing that since things run differently in a Chinese Buffett all the food is always and forever at the exact same temperature – just short of peak “comfort food” warmth yet somehow always still warm enough as to be bland on the tongue – whether it’s just come straight out of the kitchen or has been sitting on the buffet table for several minutes, hours, or perhaps days, who can tell.

There is usually no table service, and since you’ve already paid the full buffet price before you sat down, you can go your entire meal without having to interact with another employee for as long as you live, for all they care. It’s what I think Libertarians imagine the country would be like if their philosophy actually worked: “Here’s your money up front, don’t talk to me ever again about anything." There are no birthday songs brought to customers at the tables, no small talk, nothing besides the sacred quest of paying, taking, and leaving. It’s what Ford could’ve only imagined, only instead of building cars it’s an efficiency of human intake, and only intake, as much as they could want, so that the subjects can return to work, and only work, as much as they can manage, before being rudely forced to eat or sleep again, at the behest of their weak human bodies. Compared to a Chinese buffet, a McDonald’s has atmosphere. I heard if you look for Chinese Buffets, Golden Corrals, or Shoney’s in groups of five on a map they always form a pentagram.

I was so excited. My group of wannabe professional clowns paid for our meals-to-be, all jacked up pretty well on endorphins from more exercise than we were likely to get for the next 6 days and 22 hours. We were all in a good mood. The ironic thing is that we stayed in a good mood even after we had sat down and saw on TV that there had been a gun nut maniac in El Paso, Texas who had shot up a Walmart earlier in the day while we were holding our own dramatic reenactment in Minneapolis earlier that morning of “White Men Can’t Jump.”

It didn’t affect our meal in the least. And that’s not even to say we were the callous ones at the restaurant; we were the only one’s watching the TV. Not that we didn’t care – we felt like the only ones who cared – we were just bored with it, more than anything. Other than the obvious joke that the shooter probably bought that gun at the same Walmart he used it, there was nothing inspiring about it. Shootings had entered into that fetid and dismal hall in the mansion of standup comedy known as the Basement Wing of Hack Premises. Right alongside airline food & the deal thereof, shootings are something so pervasive in America that the vein of creativity has dried up. There’s nothing special about them anymore. You’d sooner find a comic with a hot take on the sun rising before you found someone who thought mass shootings had any surprise left in them. And without a surprise in a joke, it’s not a joke anymore. Now all you’re left with is just someone’s opinion about something. Gross.

Luckily, soon after we sat down, someone came back with their second plate of food and had stumbled upon a magical wet white glob of buffet tadpoles that the sign above the bin claimed was called “Mayo Shrimp,” and it immediately had our full attention. This looked like a horror movie monster had budded asexually with placenta like white paint. I felt I was looking at the pinnacle of culinary “fuck you who cares you’ll eat it” in the history of Chinese Buffets, and that’s saying something. It was a work of multicultural, amoral, post-modern art, like something Andy Warhol dreamt up during a heroin nap. No pretense to Chinese or even Asian cuisine was made or expected. It was the funniest thing we had ever seen.

Immediately, of course, there were challenges thrown around the table about who would eat it. I leapt at the chance – which I assume you had already guessed, since you’re reading this; eating it was my payment that meant I earned the right to make some kind of work of art out of the experience, all my friends having respectfully creatively restrained themselves since that day – and I took a forkful simultaneously with my girlfriend.

It tasted, felt, crunched, squished, and smelled like a fat, half pre-chewed stick of gum covered in sweat, like the boneless finger of a 400 pound dude who’d just been on the treadmill for an hour and a half on January 2nd. It was soggy. It was the pure crunch of wet soggy. It was a sick lump of skin with a tail aglet at the end, like a shoelace has, but crustaceanal, all of it covered in mayonnaise. Mayonnaise that had been sitting out, under heat lamps. I saw god. A vengeful god. It was the most fun I’d ever had in a restaurant that makes you serve yourself.

Lots of other cultures – all of them, I’d venture to guess – have some kind of pride for their food. Local customs and cuisines, ancient recipes handed down from 300 year old matriarchs who know the trick for “good cow tongue.” America does not have these recipes. I would even venture that it doesn't want them. Recipes and traditions are something that can only be Done Correctly. They involve rules. That’s not really our style. We don’t want to get Something Right According to How People Did It Before Us, we are only searching for the other direction. We want to swing for something so unabashedly weird that our ancestors can’t even stay mad at us when they see us eating it, simply because of the fact that what we’re making doesn’t even fit in their culinary morality. It’s literally incomprehensible. Like trying to get a round octopus through a square hole, but with your mouth.

Try a quick thought experiment with me: Where is the best place in the world to get Vietnamese food? The obvious answer being, Vietnam. That’s how accuracy works. The best Russian food will be in Russia, the best Polish food will be in Poland. Columbian, French, Somali, Indian, for the best kind of food from each country, you’d have to go to that country. That’s simple logic. Every country has the first place winner of that country’s food. America does not have its own food. America does not have the first place winner of anything. But what it does have – that no other country has – is the second best of everything. You can’t get better Vietnamese food in America than you would in Vietnam, but you can get better Vietnamese food in America than you would in Italy. You can get better Ukrainian food here than you would in India. You want a quesadilla in Poland? Go fuck yourself. It won’t happen. Or it’ll be such an abomination of mistranslation that it’ll give you nightmares for a decade, like the hotdog I had in Athens, Greece. Don’t ask. Suffice to say it was even worse than Mayo Shrimp. Believe me.

That is our American exceptionalism: everyone from every country that each homeland was stupid enough to let escape into our warm, weird bosom. Their loss. Tough nuts great leader, we got the guy over here who invented Mayo Shrimp. You decided to chase him out and try to kill his whole family because his shirt was the wrong color. Now you get boring food. You can keep it.

There is no crime more cardinal in America than being boring. Nothing worse than expecting things to stay the same. It’s the one thing that is anathema to everything that America stands for. It is the absolute zero on the bill of rights, the unwritten rule. The number before the numbers. It’s not even against the rules to be stupid, as long as you’re not predictable. Then you deserve whatever happens to you. You will be judged and found guilty by your peers, left to rot in a sad gray room with no windows and only your mind – who also happens to be your worst enemy – forever, you sad, mentally dented goofball, for doing the same thing that every other boring dude with a boring gun wants to do – keep things boring. I might be willing to admit that maybe guns don’t kill people, but I know boring people with guns sure do. Those are the two key ingredients.

I am a big fan of this country. Most of it. Almost all of it. All the weird parts, and even most of the stupid ones. That category includes me, since being a comic is definitely a pretty weird, dumb way to try and make a living. No one is safe. Anyone dumb enough to stay, or at least stay living in a major metropolis, farm land, village, township, cult, planned utopia, or live in a treehouse in these 50 states has definitely got something going on upstairs. There are plenty of countries elsewhere, why not try one of those? I’ve even been to a few. I’ve got family there, why don’t I try somewhere else? Somewhere that saying the word “free” in front of normal human economic rights doesn’t start a fight in a bar. Never mind the guns, anywhere that just doesn’t have Walmarts would definitely be a step in the right direction.

I stare at that paragraph, and I know I could never do it. I couldn’t leave. Not now, not for at least another 30 or 40 years. Once I’m old and boring and useless, I’ll kick off to some other country who wants to take care of me. Someplace else where everything makes sense, the day has a natural flow to it, cause and effect have a natural progression to themselves, and if you want to know what happened you can just read the newspaper, because it’ll all come to your door. How nice and quiet, just like our grandparents used to do.

I couldn’t do that right now. Not God’s waiting room, every other developed country in the world. I like it too weird. It’s a brain drug now. Anywhere else would feel like being stuck at a bad county fair for the rest of your life. The only place I happen to arbitrarily draw the line is that no one deserves to die. I don’t think that’s too much to expect. Mass shootings of innocent people are not an American requirement for America to stay America. Mayo Shrimp might be, guns might be, even violence might be. But every other spot with expected demolition – NASCAR pileups, football concussions, airshow combustions, even Walmart Day After Thanksgiving tramplings – can’t be called a random act of god. You knew what you might be in for. You bought your tickets for a front row. Unless you can’t read, or you were kidnapped and brought there, you knew your Vegas odds. But some unkissable sad boy using a gun just to shoot anybody who walked in front of him is an insult to America, gun owners, the founding fathers, and Evil Knievel. Boo. I’d rather drink Nighttime Robitussin and watch a magician perform at an old folk’s home. Back in high school, my friend Clint left a dozen eggs hidden in the shelves of the giant Shopko store near my house. No one found them until they’d gone bad and started to smell, AND he had written a dozen random numbers between 1 and 18 on them, so that even after they found all twelve, they’d always wonder if there were some left behind. Those are mind games I can get behind. That’s my kind of terrorism. Something with a little flourish, some panache. I’m still talking about him now. Does anyone remember even one of these shooter’s names at this point? I don’t. Certainly not this El Paso dink. I remember Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, but that was over 20 years ago at this point. And you always remember your first, unfortunately.

Everything these kinds of people have done since then is a hack premise now. And obviously, everyone hates them when they’re doing it. Out of all the insane ways people hurt themselves for fun, you’d think a would-be killer would have no problem finding victims to play along with his thrill crazy rampage. Just put up a flier a week beforehand and say, “Hey, I’m thinking of turning the VFW into Swiss cheese next Tuesday. Any takers to be my huddled praying masses hiding in the coat closet?” It’s the first sign of failure: no one wants what you’re selling. They’re always running away from you. Mass shootings are like when you go see a play, and at the end the actors come down into the audience to try and get you to sing with them; no one signs up for that bullshit voluntarily. And believe me, people will subject themselves to some weird stuff just to have a story to tell.

That’s what America is; everyone’s one weird story they get to have that they bring home and annoy everyone in their family with, telling them about how it happened, at every social gathering for the rest of their lives. We give that gift. Except someone’s one story is happening somewhere in America every day. Everyone in the world comes to America to get their story, and that can be tough for us to provide. It’s a lot of responsibility, being circus for the world. Being that weird, day in and day out, just so the rest of the world has something interesting to tell strangers back home. Luckily, America is a strong, weird country. It takes in everyone that all the other countries couldn’t handle, that’s our secret. We are stronger for being so weird. It can support all those dreams and weird fetishes and strange odds and close calls. We just have to stop killing all the customers. Otherwise, there’ll be no one left to brag about us.