It’s late morning. It has been raining since yesterday morning. The
Ranger said that if the river comes up much
more we might get stuck in here. There is a low water dam that has to be
crossed to get out and the creek that it spans might back-up from the river a
hundred yards downstream. The leaves are
falling. Last year by this time a hundred miles to the west I had already
experience my first frost. God I don’t want to have it be winter again. But
what say do I have about it. They forecast colder weather than normal this winter. For now I’m just trying to avoid the puddles
of water. They collect inside my tent. I must get better at picking where I
pitch it. I could give it up and spend the winter indoors. But no, I gotta see
it through. I gotta know if I can survive out here. Scott and Shakleton (and
Cherry-Gerard and Griffith Taylor and Birdie and the Farmer and Uncle Bill
all did it – well some of them did) and the weahter was much worse and their
equipment much more primitive, or at least it was by modern standards. But of
course they were all young (except and Scott) and they were English after all,
and I’m not.
What is almost certain is that
capitalism could not have survived and flourished in the way it has, had it not
been for the perpetual expansion of the populations available as both producers
and consumers….But the converse proposition also applies: without the growth
supplied through capital accumulation, populations could well have starved -
Dimitris Papadopoulos - Escape Routes: Control and Subversion in the 21st
Century , 2008 p161
It was almost noon before the fog lifted. “Permit required”
the sign reads. I drove to the Project office at the dam to get one. Camping is
free in the primitive campsite but its very primitive indeed. Hunters I
discover drive in here and dump off the carcasses of their kills – deer and
squirrels for right now. The flies are horrible and the vultures are having a
feast. They noisely come to roost in the trees behind me at night. The only animal more noisy than the vulture in
finding its nightly haven is the turkey. And if it hadn’t been vultures up in
the trees it would have been turkeys. I picked the best spot – back in the
trees with plenty of nearby firewood. None of the drive-thurs have yet to bother me.
Many estranged spouses go out to campgrounds for their noon-time nookie. Of
course there is also the hunter looking for an out-of-the way place to dump his
cleaned carcasses and the locals with nothing better to do – lookie-loos, I
call them – and I bet they know who’s cheating on who. All I ask it that they all
leave me be. And so far they do.
From the perspective of the social
conflicts pertaining to labour, any ‘non-contractual’ freedom – that is any
form of mobility which is not regulated by the salary system – can only be
understood as the refusal of the worker to work and, even worse, to valorise
capital. The worker is free to sell his/her labour power, but he or she is no free to leave the position of dependent
labour - David Harvey – The Enigma of Capital and the Crisis, 2010
It’s the first day of rifle season – they were out at the
firing range until after dark last night zeroing in their sights. They were up
and headed out before it got light this morning – half and hour before dawn and
half an hour after dusk. I make sure I wear my day-glo orange, even in the
park. Although hunting is prohibited here, even the Ranger tells his day
workers to all wear their vests. And I notice that they do as they scoot by in
their cart preparing the trail for its winter burn. Burning the duff. It’s a
good thing. But this is not the time to go into the pre-modern ecological
management of the landscape. Long before there was agriculture there was land management.
Hunters and gathers didn’t just wander about the landscape. Nor do gorillas and
chimpanzees (but of course they don’t do proscribed burns either).
In January the flies are just happy to be alive
Noting so happy as a January fly
You can hear them singing
Up in the treed
Up in the treed
The sciences do not try to explain,
they hardly even try to interpret, they mainly make models – John Von Neumann
And I was thinking why not?
A big fat
cigar – only the goods ones
Of
course
Not those cheap nasty ones
But I knew I was too cheap
One or two
goods ones
To begin
the habit again
Then it would be back to the nasty ones again
As I tried
to curb expenses
And it had been such a struggle
To kick
nicotine
When was it now? Twenty or
Thirty
years ago now
And I had counted the hours, then
The days
and the months
And then
the years until
I finally lost track
And now that I’m getting old
What the
hell!
I’ve learned how to fart and
To belch to
relieve my gas
I didn’t
know that heartburn
Could
be so debilitating
I dribble when I pee and smell
Of stale
urine liver spots
Cover my skin which is getting thin
And everyday there’s a new pain
That I’m
sure is the onset
Of
the one final disease
So why not light up a good cigar.
But I know I’m too cheap
Already the farting is bothering
The dog and
I’m sure
He’d run off if I begin smoking
Cabbage
leaves
And remember the shirts
in the
Closet that
you hadn’t
Worn since
you stopped
And how they smelt. You gathered
Them all up
and threw them out
Cheap cigars and stale urine and a
Goof gurgling fart
The dog is having second thoughts
He looks
peeved
But then he likes to sniff at
Strange
shit and I
Tolerate that. And the other day
He pissed
on a kid who
Was trying to pet him. I appologized
For the dog
and said he’d
Never done that before. Not pissing
He does
that a lot but pissing
On someone, that is. Am I any
Different
and who’s
There to appologize for me?
Even the dog may
Get fed up
with it
And leave
And leave
Second Crucifier: Right, you two, move aside, so that we can
put wings [nail Jesus’s hand to the cross] on this Angel, so that he an fly up
to the sky, like Icarus – Dario Fo – Mistero Buffo p104
Questions disperse power; answers concentrate power
Beggars are the only ones who never
pretend to be happy; on the contrary they pretend to be sad – Coelho
Some had opportunity built in
Born
beauthiful
Others had exhausted what
They had
before
They ever started
They felt privileged just
To have
been close enough
To hear what is said
A few race, many watch
Most stand
outside the fence
Some sell
tacos if they can
Being fortunate and had gotten
Microloans
Which were now in arrears
And the rest?
Trash, just
trash
Whether black
or white
Tyranny is a regime with many laws
and few institutions; democracy is a regime with many institutions and very few
laws – Gilles Deleuze
'll walk with gentle
peace,
And choose the
smoothest place
And carefully dip
the oar,
And shun the winding
shore,
And gently steer
this boat
Where water-lilies
float,
And carmine
flowers
Stand in their
sylvan bowers.
I have passed down
the river
Before sunrise on a
summer morning
Between fields of
lilies while still not awake
And then at last, flakes
Of sunlight came
spilling over the bank
Onto this mirrored
plane
And as I floated along
without a banner,
So insensible was I
To any sense of time
That I forget to
reget
The passing space
A knife and fork are not merely
utensils for eating. They are utensils for eating in a society in which eating
is done with a knife and fork. And that is a special kind of society – Jacob
Bronowski
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