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Public Space, Private Life

Sunday night at 9:00 p.m. I climbed aboard a Canada Coach bus, the VIA rail people having cancelled all the overnight trains for my convenience, after a very tough day working at the Montreal Grand Prix which was washed away by more rain than the cars could navigate.

The minute the lights went off and the bus got underway, out came the cell phones, and everybody under 30 proceeded to enlighten 52 strangers on every intimate detail of their bodily functions, all the stupid things they had done all weekend, and the hysterical soap opera that was their lives.

A young lady confided indignantly to the world, "I had to give up my deodorant on the air flight over here and I haven't put a thing in my pits since Thursday!"  That's news I'm sure her seatmate was happy to receive ...

A vacuous blonde telephoned five friends who were not home and left messages "Call me, buh-bye!" before she found someone who was home.  Then, in that sing-song Valley Girl patois they all seem to speak, she retailed in excruciating detail every detail of her three days in Montreal, from what she had for breakfast the first day, to several excursions indicating that she ought never to be allowed into a city of any sophistication without her nanny and a translator.  (For example, she waited two hours for a free outdoor movie and was shocked to find that the movie was in French!  In Montreal!  Who'd have guessed?)  52 strangers now know she doesn't know the difference between a salad and an appetizer. 

But the best story was the soap opera taking place behind me, with the starring characters a young Chinese brother and sister, and an unseen ex-boyfriend of the sister and friend of the brother, who was trying desperately to break up with the sister who was clinging to him like a suction hose.  The poor fellow received cell phone calls from both parties, who spent the time between phone calls telling the fascinated audience that the poor guy wanted to be a Canadian and didn't want a Chinese girlfriend, and that the brother and the friend both considered her an obsessed, immature, thoroughly annoying person, while the sister cried and sniveled and begged her brother to find out where the poor guy lived so she could go and 'visit' him. 

All this blabberjabber was going on in a wholly public place, where strangers were trapped together, in blissful disregard for the fact that they were revealing information to the world that the world neither needed nor wanted nor deserved to know.

I'm sure you've plenty of stories of a similar nature.  There are the ladies in the grocery store blocking the aisle while they blabberjabber on their cell phones to the babysitter at home.  There are the ladies in the doctor's waiting room describing the intimate details of their reproductive systems to unseen companions on the cell phone and a waiting room full of people who have their own problems.  There's the man in the gate area at the airport dictating letters to his secretary, and some of them contain information we're all sure his clients didn't intend to be shared with an international audience that just might include competitors, opposing parties, other lawyers and the press.

And all of these people have the idea that we can't hear a thing they say if they even know we're there at all.

People, think about what you're doing!

When you're standing there in the elevator spilling your guts to Binkie on the phone about how drunk you got last night and how you got home without your shoes and your bra, how do you know the guy standing behind you isn't the person who's about to interview you for a job?

When you're sitting on the train filling the air and your buddy's ear with obscene references to your boss and what you'd like to do to his wife, are you sure the woman sitting across from you isn't your boss' wife's sister or the Judge you're going to appear before tomorrow?

And you there in the bathroom (yes, the BATHROOM) explaining to your mistress how you're going to see her tomorrow at the Whoop De Doo Hotel once you've kissed the wife and kids goodbye for your (har har) business trip to Charleston, how do you know that a member of the press isn't in the next booth taking it all down in shorthand?

Perhaps it's time for a campaign based on the old "Loose Lips Sink Ships" campaign.  The poster could show Mister or Miss Blabberjabber blissfully filling the air with confidential information, and all around them the open ears of bosses, wives, competitors, Judges, cops and children.  Put the title up that says "They Can Hear Every Word You Say."  And at the bottom of the poster:

"Save it til you get home."

Please, please, please let us bring back the public place as a place we all behave politely and keep our conversations general, civil, and suitable for all ages.

Can't we all just, well, shut up?
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Do It Today

Today is the 25th anniversary of MTV, and I'd like to ring the bell for the attention of all those who stopped reading books more than 25 years ago to go out and get a copy of Brave New World by Aldouis Huxley and read it.  If you can't read the whole thing, turn to the back of the book and read the lecture Mustapha Mond gives to John Savage just before the savage goes off to hang himself in despair.  Mustapha Mond (and Huxley) lays out the game plan in all its beautiful simplicity and when you look up from that chapter you'll see it all before you.

In order for Communism to succeed, the general population must be kept in perpetual adolescence.

Look around you and you'll see that in places where the culture is focused on those things attractive to teenagers: sex, drugs, liquor, television and movies, and the endless loop of feedback provided by the cell phone (more on that in the next installment), there is no interest in marriage and reproduction and the concommitent ambitions that must be exercised to support the world as it needs to be for adulthood to rule.  Europe has become a giant college campus where Mom and Dad pay the bills and all Jasmine and AntJuan have to do is party. 

And it's all right there in Brave New World.

MTV teaches them how to live the way their masters need them to live in order to keep them under control.  Do you notice that most of the pre-programmed chants have fewer than seven words and most of the longer ones rhyme?  That's because things you can yell in unison are attractive to teenagers.  And of course the other thing is that they're easy to teach.

What's the one thing teenagers found their lives on?   "YOU'RE NOT THE BOSS OF ME!"  That is, in order for teenagers to rule, they msut be encouraged to do the precise opposite of what would be in their best interest, and to believe that this is not a destructive path to the grave but is a triumph of independence.

And that is what MTV does.  MTV makes inanity, inactivity and death a song of triumph against those who want to be The Boss Of You, and by doing that they become in fact The Boss Of You.

Every step on the spiraling path to extinction is made to the cry of YOU'RE NOT THE BOSS OF ME and every time you buy into that you hasten your own doom.

Mom and Dad, listen up.  Go to the mirror and look at yourself.  Do you see a Mom or a Dad in that mirror?  Or do you see a caricature of a character from television?  Are you trying to pretend you are one of those people you despair of your children becoming?  Is your fond wish to be attractive to your son's or daughter's friends?  Are you frightened of Being The Boss Of Them?

Mom and Dad, it's time to clean up your act.  They Can't Win If You Grow Up. 

So wash your face, comb your hair (and remember that green, orange and blue are not the hair colours of Mom and Dad), cover up your breasts, your belly button and your butt, and take charge of your life and of your home.

MTV can't win if the adults realize they are in fact The Boss of their kids and if they respond to the perpetual crying with the firm reply, "Yes, I am in fact the boss of you and you will do as I say or you will get out of my house.  Period.  No buts."

My Ukranian Communist ex-brother-in-law used to complain that America couldn't be brought to a communist revolt because "America has no proletariat."  MTV and socialism teach that the only important things in life are those things important to teenagers, and that taking up the responsibilities of adulthood is Letting Them Be The Boss Of You.

Yes, they are after you.  Yes you can stop them.  And it's easy and you can do it starting now.

Grow Up.

Do it today.

And start by getting a copy of Brave New World.  It's all right there for you and it's not hard to fight back.  Just do it.  And start today.
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Gathering Round

I have just returned from a family gathering that took place because Daddy needed a replacement pacemaker following a huge lightning strike on their house that knocked Mama and Daddy off the couch and blew up several appliances but otherwise left the household intact.  Daddy is 86 years old and not in good health and it was debated as to whether or not this surgery should be performed, but he said he was not going to live out his life in "low gear" and wanted to roll them dice.  So them dice were rolled and fortunately Daddy came out in good shape.

The odd thing to me was the surprise among the relatives that the first thing we girls did was Gather Round.  We live all over the Eastern Seaboard and are in every stage of life from grandmotherhood to career change, from booting out the university age slackers who won't go to work, to overseeing the marriage of the last likely marriageable kids and the birth of grandchildren ... to travel for business and hosting of overseas guests ... to dealing with upcoming retirement and major home repairs ... yet when Mama made the call, our first instinct was to gather by e-mail and sort out who was coming down and when, what would be needed, how long we'd stay, and what our positions would be should the worst happen.  One sister is a nurse; she went down first to be interpreter and to stay with Daddy in the hospital overnight.  Another sister came down with her to go home with Mama and see that she got rest and food and to intercept the barrage of telephone calls sure to arrive from anxious relations (Mama has 8 brothers and sisters; Daddy has 11) and family of the sisters back home.  Wednesday one sister went home and I arrived to take over the 'gofer' role and keep Daddy company while Mama went to run errands and had the luxury of a leisurely bath and the chance to wash her hair and roll it up.  We also ran interference among the elderly relatives in town who normally look to Mama for help with various everyday errands.

This is the way we were brought up and this is the way we responded.

Now, we are not some Norman Rockwell family from the 1950s.  We range from an old spinster lady in a Jordan Grand Prix cap and a t-shirt with sarcastic comments in French (that would be me), to a raving socialist who believes all the money in the family belongs to her, hitting every stop in between including a Jewish daughter who married an Arab who gives some of us the creeps, a ditzy housewife with a great sense of humour, and a half-retired couple (she's retired, he's about to retire) who sound more and more like television characters the older they get ... and embracing both the religious and the political spectrum from evangelical right wing to You Don't Exist And I Hate You, and from Libertarian conservative to socialist.  We don't get along any better than we'd get along with people from the random community who hold these points of view, and we never visit each other.  But we have kept in touch through letters, e-mails, and phone calls, and when the occasion demands it we Gather Round.  That is the way we were brought up and that is the way we respond.

Mama and Daddy are grateful but the family are surprised.  Their kids frequently don't even know what's up with their parents, and the parents don't seem to expect that they will.  Auntie next door has four children and she is more dependent on Mama than she ought to be because her children don't Gather Round.  Their Mama waited on them when they were young and they never got over it to understand that this is Mama's duty when you are under her roof, but once you have left that sanctuary it is your duty when she needs you to Gather Round.

The Book of Isaiah contains a passage that says if you don't take care of your family, it doesn't really matter what else you may do; you are no better than any infidel.  And the very best thing you can do in bringing up your children is to teach them the time and place to Gather Round.

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Marching Mommies

The latest parade of Grabby Hands here in Kanukistan is the Marching Mommies of damaged children.  Generally these are nice boys and girls with extremely expensive and lifelong disabilities which their parents do not wish to pay for, and since the Wish is Mother to the Receipt Thereof, Grabby Hands are 'reaching out' to pick their neighbours' pockets in support of these children.

The two most recent awards have been for "up to $1 million" per year for the lifetime of a single child, and $300,000 per year for another child.  A horde of Mommies are Marching for $60,000 per year for their autistic children (who now receive $60,000 per year only til age 6).  Next of course will be the Marching Muslim Mommies who demand that their neighbours purchase and maintain satellite dishes for them so their children can receive training in Arabic that will enable them to properly hate the country where they are currently residing.  Following that, who knows?

This idea of the Common Pot is not completely the fault of the Mommies.  Brainwashed by socialism to believe that there is no such thing as an individual, they cannot therefore conceive of such a thing as individual responsibility.  And having been told all their lives that the way to live is to be standing in the right place when the Cosmic Lotto Tickets are wafted down from on high by mysterious forces -- thus the term "less fortunate" for those whose day consists of sitting on their heinies waiting for the mailman to deliver the cheque, followed by a trip to Lotto Canada and the liquor store -- we can't expect them to understand that the way to support your children is to get up, get dressed, wash and brush, pack your lunch and trundle off to work, stay there all day giving good value for pay, and go home at night (probably with a big stack of work that needs finishing up.)  Having seen those advertisements in which people who pay $3 for a Lotto ticket are magically gifted with the ability to do as they please in the office, regardless of the desires of the boss; are handed a cottage, a vacation, a wide screen TV, or a new wardrobe ... and are allowed to use the big boat they bought to destroy the small boat of someone who earned the money for it ... it's no surprise that the Mommies believe somebody promised that they could have everything they wanted the instant they wanted it, and somebody else would pay.

As an observer from the bleachers who can go back to the States when the crash comes, I am sitting here wondering what the train wreck will be like when everybody is on the gravy train and nobody's in the locomotive.  Somehow I don't think it'll be long til we find out.
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