Category Archives: Religion

Ridiculous Times: Stuff That Probably Doesn’t Need To Be Said – Superbowl Edition

Just like in Spaceballs when they skip lightspeed to go to plaid, we’ve surpassed the old Chinese curse, “May you live in interesting times” to live in a ridiculous time. Frankly, it’s kind of embarrassing.

Take the Super Bowl (or Superb Owl, or Superbowel, depending on how you feel about it). I’ll admit that I was happy the Chiefs won: not that I care about the game, but I’ve honestly been enjoying all the Taylor Swift conspiracy theories. To be honest, I know nothing about Taylor Swift, other than that she’s very pretty, very popular, she died horribly in Amsterdam* and apparently, she is the most powerful force in American politics today. At any rate, the Chiefs’ victory ensured a brief continuation of what is, for me, the most ridiculous (and entertaining) of the current crop of conspiracy theories.

Ladies and Gentlemen, Taylor Swift – The most powerful woman in America

Watching the MAGAmaniacs (MAGAniacs?) carry on about how the Swift thing is a psyop**to help Biden win in November is pretty damned funny. I’m not even sure how someone would go about satirizing that. To be perfectly clear, I don’t know anybody who doesn’t think that whole thing is abominably stupid – and the vast majority of my friends are staunch conservatives. It’s not a conservative or Republican theory, it’s a bunch of nonsense promoted by televised right-wing talking heads, politicians, and professional shit-stirrers.

It’s also notable that over here on the left side of the field (well, left/center), that none of the televised left-wing talking heads, politicians, or political shit-stirrers are taking it seriously (which of course doesn’t stop them from going on about it in search of clicks and ratings***). But don’t get too excited – there’s plenty of other nonsense for them to get waaaay too excited about. The problem is, for me at least, that while many of the left-wing screaming points are almost as ridiculous, they’re just not that entertaining – or original (This just in: Great Googly-Moogly! Trump said something racist, sexist, incendiary, or indecipherable! What you NEED to know!). Good grief, it is Tuesday already? I kinda feel like my own side is letting me down.

I’ve also been enjoying all of the whining about how people resent all the screen time wasted showing Swift during the games: “I wanna watch football, not some lefty bimbo!” (I’m paraphrasing). I mean, I totally understand where they’re coming from: having to look at a pretty girl for anywhere from 30-60 seconds of non-playing time during a 4-hour-long broadcast must be horribly frustrating.

The lovely and talented Jess and I got rid of cable/satellite TV years ago, because we hate commercials. I know how frustrated I’d be if my streaming services started interrupting my movies periodically for something I’m in not interested in at all (lookin’ at YOU, Amazon!). However, I am having a little trouble understanding the whole objecting-to-looking-at-a-pretty-girl-because-of-her-politics thing, to be honest (not that I would ever objectify a woman – gotta maintain my liberal-left-wing-commie-pinko-fag card).

In other Super Bowl-related ridiculousness, how about that “Jesus Gets Us” commercial? Apparently, everyone hated it, for reasons with absolutely no overlap: I saw a video from a guy who was horrified by it, because it apparently Wokefies Jesus – obviously a lefty plot. Gasp! The horror! This dude is apparently horrified by the idea that Jesus loves everyone, and that we should too****.

I followed that up by reading an article about how horrible the ad is, because of the apparently shady organizations/motivations behind it (the Hobby Lobby folks among others), are using it as a bait-and-switch to lure LGBTQI+, women who might be thinking about an abortion, addicts, and other folks like that, who are desperate for acceptance in so they can be either “fixed” or crushed and discarded as irredeemable. Obviously a conservative plot!

Then there are the sort of Christians that I know and love – you know, the kind who genuinely try to love and care for everybody. They’re offended by the fact that a gazillion dollars that could have been spent taking care of people/helping people was spent on an ad. Okay, this one, I actually get.

Even when we don’t like something, we’re not happy unless everyone else hates it for the same reason we do. We are ridiculous people living in an increasingly ridiculous country. So we’ve got that going for us!


* For my money, one of the best movies of 2022* (ironically, her character in the film was the victim of a conspiracy – coincidence? Don’t be ridiculous!)

** This Jesse Watters video literally made me laugh out loud. As an added bonus, here’s a really funny video I found in the comments: https://twitter.com/i/status/1723037915561746564

*** I hope this isn’t one of those “pot-calling-the-kettle-black” things!

**** This dude isn’t alone, either. Here’s a link to the commercial on the social media platform formerly known (and mostly still known) as Twitter: https://twitter.com/HeGetsUs/status/1756829657859772554https://twitter.com/HeGetsUs/status/1756829657859772554 As much as I normally avoid comment sections, I found the comments on this video kind of horrifyingly funny. Your mileage may vary.

A New Story! Possibly the Most Wholesome Thing I’ve Ever Written!

Missed me? It’s been a long, long semester (I’ll be writing more about it soon). Anyway, here’s one of the good things (I hope) that came out of it. It’s a story I wrote for my 18th Century British Literature course. I think it’s pretty good, as well as funny. It’s an attempt at writing in the style of one of my literary heroes, Henry Fielding, author of Joseph Andrews, Tom Jones, etc.

It’s a first draft, because I ran out of time before I could add in everything I wanted to, like aliens, and the greatest satirist of the 27th Century, Anthrax McGillicuddy, but deadlines are tough. Hopefully someday, I’ll get around to putting in everything I want.

It’s an attempt at combining Fielding’s 18th Century style with modern academic criticism (it was for a course, you know), but the primary point was entertainment. Anyway, enjoy!

The Great Man Himself

The History of Samuel Richardson’s Afterlife Objections to Henry Fielding and the Character and Characters of his Novel Joseph Andrews;

AND

The Defense of Mr. Fielding, His Novel, and Its Characters;

AND

The Final Judgment of St. Francis de Sales in the Matter

BY

Lloyd Mullins

Chapter One

Of possibilities, both general and literary; of readers and the worlds of books; with a note on the difficulty in keeping a narrative on course, and literary judgment.

It may be considered surprising in some circles that the saying of that eminent philosopher Douglas Adams, “In an infinite universe, anything can happen,[1]” is true, and will no doubt be even more surprising within those circles that anything not only can, but more often than not, does indeed happen.  Even more surprising in those same circles (although it must be said that the more literary the circles one runs in the less surprising this will be) is that entire worlds, universes, dimensions, or what-have-you’s, are peopled entirely by and for the originally fictional characters, creatures, and environs of novels, both popular and literary.

While it will not be surprising to that group of people known to be of a literary bent, or more commonly known as readers, that those fictional characters that they love so well, be they human, animal, alien, historical, contemporary, futuristic, heroic, cowardly, or ordinary, occupy worlds complete and often overlapping, it may be surprising, and possibly even disappointing, to learn that those worlds are not entirely encompassed within those selfsame readers’ heads; that those characters, creatures, and creations also exist in worlds entirely independent of readers and the expectations, requirements, and emotional needs of those readers. However, if we posit that every book, or series of books, is a world complete unto itself, then it quickly becomes clear that they do exist independent of readers. Each book is simply an “undiscovered country[2]” to those who have not yet read it and, lest the reader think your humble narrator bends his literary allusion too far, what true reader ever does truly return from a much-loved book? Do they not always leave a piece of themselves in the world of that book, whether they be crossing swords with the minions of Richelieu, matching wits with Moriarty, Blofeld, or Elizabeth Bennett, trekking with Odysseus, or playing tricks and learning lessons with Sun Wukong, the Monkey King, and does not the leaving behind a part of ourselves in these literary worlds, far from diminishing the reader, rather increase them, at least in spirit? This is the magic of books. The magic of books however, is not the point, nor purpose, of this narrative. It also seems I have let the course of my discourse drift on a tangential current, and must, with sincerest apologies, return to the correct heading.

What will undoubtedly be surprising to even the most avid and philosophical of readers is that the actual world, or worlds, of books is not limited to either the readers’ heads, or the physical confines of the books themselves, but that they also exist on a temporal plane of their own as well, albeit a temporality encompassed in a strictly spiritual environment; to whit, the Afterlife, provided they are adjudged to be worthy of such existence. In these worlds, the characters are freed from the strictures of the limited imaginations of both readers and authors, and granted free will to live their lives according to their own lights, although influenced by their origins as lain down by their creators and, to a lesser extent, the readers who have loved them, much as children leaving their parental abodes, but subject to the genetic traits and philosophical and practical teachings of their parents. It is a situation highly desired by the inhabitants of all books, but granted to a very few for, just as species become extinct, so too do most books. Just as not all people are adjudged worthy of Heaven, not all books are found worthy of their own worlds; just as all people must face judgment day, all books must face judgment as well. This is the story of one such Judgment day.

Chapter Two

In which a crowd gathers and sides are taken; the proceedings begin; a note on verb tense; an unsolicited and surprising testimony; the prosecution begins

On this day (and since in the Afterlife, which is eternal and exists outside time and space there is neither method nor reason for numbering or tracking days, “this day” is used to delineate any given day), shortly after Tea (and it should also be mentioned here that judgment of books is reserved within cultures; while the proceedings are open to all, they are ordered according to the precepts of the author’s home culture), the literary Afterlife is abuzz with anticipation. Henry Fielding’s novel, The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews and of his Friend Mr. Abraham Adamsis to face judgment. Under ordinary circumstances these sorts of proceedings are met with very little fanfare, being largely considered a formality; if  a book is important enough to be remembered, much less continually read and/or loved two to three hundred years after publication, its passing judgment is virtually a given, and is generally treated like an inter-office birthday party; there are usually several sincere well-wishers and, inevitably, many who are only there for the cake.

Today however, there is an air of suspense; for there is an actual opposing counsel in the person of Samuel Johnson, long an avowed enemy of Fielding, and who has owned, perhaps not undeservedly, Fielding as his own Nemesis. Johnson stands at his appointed table arranging his papers, and practically salivating at the opportunity to visit doom upon Fielding’s beloved creations (for what pain is greater to a parent than the loss of his children). He is said to hold a number of other anti-Fielding literati in the wings as witnesses to the iniquitous nature of not only the book, but of the author, and even Andrews, Adams, and the other characters themselves. He nods, smiles, and gladhands his supporters, and sneers superciliously at his detractors, especially the tittering, catcalling, and hooting rowdier element slinging 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st century insults his way from the gallery, which is filled with the expected well-wishers, a small number of pro-Johnsonites and, as is inevitable at any gathering of this type, a large and boisterous mob of lookers-on who are only really there for the fun of it and hoping for at least a bit of good-natured violence in lieu of cake.

Fielding enters the courtroom with his wives Charlotte and Mary on his arms (and it must be said, neither of those ladies seemed particularly happy with him) as nonchalantly and confidently as if he too were really only there for the cake. Joseph and Fanny Andrews, and Parson Adams en famille, follow close on behind him looking somewhat less confident, with Lady Booby, Mrs. Slipslop, Mr. Booby and Pamela in train, alternating between indignance and nervousness in the fashion of those who consider themselves above judgment but are all too aware of what they’ve been up to and why, and finally Mr. Beau Didapper, Mr. and Mrs. Tow-wouse, Parson Trulliber, and the remainder of the company, many of whom are too deeply in their cups to fully recognize their peril.

Mr. Shakespeare, in his role of bailiff, strikes the floor thrice with his staff of office, calling for quiet. “My Lords and Ladies, Gentlefolk, and all others! Be silent and upstanding for His Honour, St. Francis de Sales!” The crowd lumbers to its feet, and the noise dulls somewhat as St. Francis enters and takes his seat, acknowledging Fielding and Richardson, both of whom bow, although it must be said that the latter bows much more deeply and elaborately, and holds it much longer than the former’s cursory obeisance. St. Francis nods to them both and rolls his eyes at the still-presented top of Richardson’s head; finally, he clears his throat pointedly, and Richardson straightens, somewhat puzzled by the titters and laughter from the gallery. St. Francis nods to Mr. Shakespeare and that luminary, unable to resist, strikes the floor again with his staff, strikes a dramatic pose, and exclaims, “Cry havoc, and let slip the literary dogs of war!” while the gallery erupts in cheers and laughter, for it is beyond the ability of any of that great literary mob to hear those words from the immortal Bard of Avon and remain quiet.

This time, the good saint’s eye-roll is for his bailiff, and he bangs his gavel. “Good people! Good people, please! A little less havoc if you please!” He bangs his gavel again, bailiff Shakespeare, grinning all the while, strikes his staff against the floor, and the crowd slowly relents. “Good people, let us remember ourselves, our stations, and our duty,” says the saint, “Pray conduct yourselves with at least a modicum of decorum.” “A maximum modicum or a middlin’ modicum, yer honor?” comes a voice from the gallery, accompanied by a minor modicum of laughter. “Gentlemen,” calls bailiff Shakespeare, “if you must interrupt, please have the courtesy to do so with at least a middling modicum of wit!” which generates considerably more merriment because when the bard makes a joke, however weak or uninspired, you laugh, don’t you?

St. Francis, clearly already bored, pounds his gavel once more and addresses the prosecution; “Mr. Richardson, is all this strictly necessary? Your antipathy for Mr. Fielding is well known, but the Afterlife is hardly the place . . . er, time? Plane, perhaps? . . . for carrying out personal vendettas – particularly in this essentially unprecedented fashion.”

Being completely outside – or perhaps entirely within? – time and space is a constant source of discomfort for writers in the afterlife, due to the human predilection for arranging things in chronological order, worrying about verb tense, and so on. Most writers have settled on simply using all three verb tenses, especially regarding things that happened on the temporal plane, since it is never really certain whether the events written from the Afterlife about actual life have occurred, are occurring, or will occur. Events occurring in the Afterlife are always referred to in the present tense.

“Hardly ‘unprecedented’, m’lord,” protests Richardson. “’Tis admittedly rare, but did not Mr. Fielding himself mount a simultaneous prosecution against Mr. Colley Cibber in both the Courts of Theatrics and Non-Fiction, based solely on personal distaste? I argue that I am instead mounting my prosecution based solely on literary, moral, and spiritual transgressions, completely unrelated to any personal feelings I may have regarding Mr. Fielding.” A chorus of disapprobation erupts from the gallery – primarily the traditional boos, and raspberries, along with a truly astonishing array of international and even intergalactic obscene gestures. “M’Lord, m’lord!” cries a plump, good-natured looking gentleman, beaming broadly, “May I be heard?” The crowd, delighted with how the proceedings have already left the rails, applauds in support.

St. Francis buries his face in his hands for a moment. “Very well, the court recognizes Mr. Cibber. Provided he provides succinct and relevant testimony. Very succinct!” The Poet Laureate and playwright bows. “Thank you M’Lord. Mr. Richardson speaks the truth, but truth only in the letter, and not the spirit. As we all know, there was very little love lost betwixt myself and my esteemed colleague Mr. Fielding during our brief tenure on the terrestrial plane . . .” “Succinctly, Mr. Cibber, succinctly, if you please!” calls the saint. “. . . Of course, M’Lord – my apologies. I merely wish to point out that while Mr. Richardson is indubitably correct that Mr. Fielding did indeed mount an opposition to both my play, The Careless Husband, and my celebrated memoir, An Apology for the Life of Mr. Colley Cibber, Comedian and Late Patenter of the Theatre-Royal, with an Historical View of the Stage during His Own Time, Written by . . .” “Succinct!” repeats the saint. “. . . Himself, apologies, m’lord, his opposition, rather than a mean-spirited attempt to further slander my good name (at this point, St. Francis leans back in his chair and covers his eyes with a hand) and cause irreparable damage to my creations, was actually all for show – a carefully organized, and even theatrical entertainment; possibly an homage of sorts – in the 20th century fashion of the Mr. Dean Martin Roasts, an hilarious celebration, however backhanded, in which so many of my contemporaries took part, including such luminaries as Messrs. Fielding, Swift,  Pope,  Shakespeare, Marlowe, Wilde, Shaw, as well as Mses. Austen, Bronte, Bronte, Bronte, Burney, Behn, Haywood, and many others, including Mr. Richardson himself, in an exhibition of good-natured bonhomie, followed by cake and champagne provided by Mr. Fielding. There was no actual objection to my works posited, merely a great deal of fun poked, which not only delighted the gallery, but indeed, caused a resurgence in interest in my work here in the Afterlife. It was entirely different from the current proceedings, and I must say I am personally saddened by Mr. Richardson’s meanness of spirit.” Mr. Cibber sits, and all is quiet. St. Francis remains unmoving until bailiff Shakespeare gently prodds the good saint with his staff of office. “Mmh? Oh . . .” he rights himself, “Ahem . . . very well, thank you Mr. Cibber, your point is well taken.” Turning to Richardson, he continues, “If you are still determined on your course, you may now present your charges sir.”

“Thank you m’lord. M’lord, I shall show that the novel Joseph Andrews, along with its attendant characters, occasions, and environs, represent a travesty and an offense upon British letters as cannot possibly in good conscience be rewarded by being allowed to inhabit a terrestrial plane alongside those of Burney, Defoe, Austen, Dickens, and even my own humble creations. While it is tragic that a book must be judged on the merits, or lack thereof, of its creator, they are nevertheless the only grounds on which it can be judged. The faults are the author’s. The evidence is the book. Joseph Andrews, both as a book and a character, stand as witnesses and accusers of Mr. Fielding’s immorality . . .” “I do not!” Andrews cries. “. . . his loathing of women and authority, both terrestrial and spiritual, and his crimes against literature itself.”

“Mr. Fielding, have you any response or rebuttal to offer?” asks the saint. Fielding gently smiles and quietly says, “At this time, m’lord, I would like only to categorically deny all charges. I request to hold my own case until last, when I can respond to all of Mr. Richardson’s ridiculous charges summarily and categorically. I have, however, no objection to any of my friends or creations addressing any of the charges, singly or otherwise, on their own behalf, if it please m’lord.” “Very well,” says St Francis, clearly relieved that someone at least was capable of getting to the point. “Mr. Richardson, you may begin.”

Chapter Three

A bad beginning; the importance of knowing your sources; the problem of cherry-picking literary criticism – particularly in the presence of the critic; a comeuppance; a further note on verb tense; a disturbance and the hazard of writing poorly behaved characters

“M’lord, I call the reverend Isaac Watts!” This causes quite a stir amongst the assembly, for numerous reasons, not least among them that Reverend Watts is not known to have any opinion on non-religious literature, was a Non-Conformist, and had died only a few years after Joseph Andrews’ publication. Indeed, the good reverend himself seemed very confused about being called. “Reverend Watts,” begins the almost visibly gloating Richardson, “did you, do you, or will you not write, ‘Fielding cannot be considered as having made quite so direct a contribution as Richardson to the rise of the novel?[3]” The cleric blinks. “I don’t think so. At least I have no certain recollection of ever having written, writing, or planning to write such, or indeed of ever writing, having written, or planning to write a word about Mr. Fielding.” Richardson continues, somewhat nonplussed, “But don’t, won’t, or didn’t you, in your classic work on the genre, The Rise of the Novel, mention Mr. Defoe five-hundred-and-seven times, and myself a whopping five-hundred-and-sixty-two times, while only commenting on Fielding a mere three-hundred-and-fifty-three times, clearly illustrating the inferiority of his effect on what would be, is, or will be, the English Novel?” The tiny man of the cloth, clearly uncomfortable and blinking in a staccato fashion replies, “No, I feel quite strongly that I have never, don’t, and will never have anything to say about Mr. Fielding, Mr. Defoe, or yourself, and if I ever do, did, or will, I certainly won’t count them.” “M’lord,” cries Richardson, “permission to treat the witness as hostile!” “That seems excessive,” says the saint. “He seems perfectly cordial. I suggest that Mr. Richardson get on with it and rely less on legal training apparently gained by watching too much Law and Order on Aftervision.”

A thin, dapper gentleman rises from the gallery. “Excuse me? I might be able to help.” “How so?” asks the saint. “Well you see sir, I believe Mr. Richardson is referring to my book, The Rise of the Novel. My name is Ian Watt, which I believe may be the source of confusion.” A chorus of laughter, derisive noises, gestures, and remarks along the lines of “Well that explains a lot,” are aimed at Richardson from the gallery. The good saint fixes a gimlet eye on the prosecution. “Yes. That would explain much. I presume you have no further questions for the good Reverend?” Richardson, white as a sheet and clearly not used to thinking on his feet in front of such an august company, mops his brow. “Ah . . . erm . . . well, um . . . no, no, I don’t. I would however like to call Mr. Watt.” While it is undoubtedly true that no battle plan survives first contact with the enemy, Richardson’s blunder was such an excruciating example of a legal “own goal” as to shake the confidence of even a seasoned barrister and indeed the portly author-cum-neophyte-prosecutor is clearly taken aback by his own now-obvious error but, game to the end, attempts to square his rounded shoulders and soldiers on, addressing the correct witness. “Mr. Watt, did you, do you, or will you not write, ‘Fielding cannot be considered as having made quite so direct a contribution as Richardson to the rise of the novel?’” “I did, but . . .” “and was your mentioning of the authors’ names in the aforementioned proportion?” “I have no idea . . .”

Richardson is getting his second wind now. Beaming smugly, he presses his attack, “Would you believe that according to a digital analysis of your text in the 21st Century, using Voyant tools, established, establishes, or will establish those exact numbers? Those numbers and that statement are later borne out in your own words, and I quote, ‘since it was Pamela that supplied the initial impetus for the writing of Joseph Andrews, Fielding cannot be considered as having made quite so direct a contribution as Richardson to the rise of the novel, and he is therefore given somewhat less extensive treatment here,[4]’ a statement that clearly places Mr. Fielding and his book on a much less important footing? ” “I suppose so,” answers the Stanford Professor Emeritus of English, “but I don’t . . .” “Thank you,” interrupts Richardson, “and did you not also write, in comparison of the works of Mr. Fielding and myself that, ‘the disparity between the two novelists and their works may therefore stand as a representative example of a fundamental parting of the ways in the history of English civilisation, a parting in which it is the urban Richardson who reflects the way that was to triumph[5],’ an obvious statement of the superiority of my work?” “Well, I don’t . . .” “Did you write those words or not, Mr. Watt?” “Well, yes, but . . .” “And did you not further write that, ‘Fielding’s argument here for ‘referring’ his novel to the epic genre is unimpressive: Joseph Andrews, no doubt, has five out of the six parts under which Aristotle considered epic; but then it is surely impossible to conceive of any narrative whatever which does not in some way contain ‘fable, action, characters, sentiments, and diction,[6]clearly pointing out Fielding’s totally unwarranted self-aggrandizement?” “Well, yes, I did write that, but what I was trying to say . . .” “And did you or did you not also write that Mr. Fielding also departs from any claim to ‘realism’ by the totally unrealistic characterizations of his characters[7]?” “Oh tosh!” exclaims Thomas Gray, the acclaimed poet, from the gallery, “I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again, Fielding’s representations of people, however exalted or lowly they may be are very good and perfectly natural – especially those of Parson Adams and Mrs. Slipslop![8]” “Truer words were never spoke, my friend,” agrees Rev. George Gregory, “I don’t know that any writer, not even the mighty Bard of Avon, has ever equaled Fielding in specific characterizations![9]

“Again, yes,” says the obviously frustrated, and now slightly embarrassed academic, “but I was speaking there of two specific characters in Tom Jones . . .” The gallery erupts with “What’s new, Pussycat, whoa-oa-oa-oaoa!” to the surprise of Mr. Watt, the chagrin of Mr. Richardson, and the slightly embarrassed amusement of Mr. Fielding. Mr. Watt takes a moment to recover his train of thought, “. . . er, um, heh,heh, where was I . . . oh yes, not in Joseph Andrews, and to make a further point . . .” “Thank you sir, that will be all,” Says Richardson, suddenly anxious to get rid of this accidental surprise witness.

Mr. Watt, however, appeals to St Francis, “Sir, may I please attempt to clarify my position on this issue?” The good saint is clearly beginning to enjoy himself finally. In a jolly voice, he says, “I don’t see why not.” “But m’lord!” calls Richardson. “You opened this door,” cautions the saint, revealing not only a fondness for fair play, but for televisual courtroom dramas at least equal to that of Mr. Richardson.

“Sir, I would just like to say that most of that was written to illustrate merely that Mr. Fielding’s work was more reliant on classical forms of literature than that of Mr. Defoe or Mr. Richardson . . .” “Exactly! Thank you Mr. . . .” interrupts Richardson, clearly desperate to stop Watt. Mr. Watt presses on, “. . . however, I also went on at length to make clear that ultimately Mr. Fielding gave the genre something far more important than the mere narrative technique of Mr. Richardson . . .” “M’Lord, I object!” shouts Richardson, drenched in flopsweat, while the intrepid educator continues unabated, “. . . he brought a clear-eyed examination of the entire world, or at least the entirety of his world, including, thanks to his narratorial method, his own faults and foibles[10],” and with that, the learned man of letters took his seat, to the applause of not only the gallery, but the entire company of Joseph Andrews.

“Couldn’t have said it better myself,” said Parson Adams, “although, it wouldn’t have hurt to have read in a few of the classics in support.” “My but don’t that gentleman have a way with words?” added Mrs. Slipslop, “So articled, he is.” “Indeed, Slipslop, and a fine figure of a man, as well. I must have him for dinner – or perhaps breakfast?” mused Lady Booby to herself. Fortunately for his peace of mind, the learned Mr. Watt was seated in the gallery with the other academics, and too far away from Lady Booby to hear her tentative designs upon himself.

The attentive reader will no doubt have noticed that your humble narrator, somewhere in the passages above, abandoned use of the past/present/future verb tense when characters are speaking of actions taken on the temporal plane. I have done this, not only for expediency, but for my own sanity, as well as the readers’. For, just as a slice of cake, or a single biscuit, is sufficient to satisfy the curiosity of the taster as to the general texture, scent, and taste of the snack in question and leaves them wanting more, eating the cake entire, or the whole dish of biscuits quickly makes the taster sick, and the necessity of baking more makes the chef tired of the whole thing and wishing he’d never started. So it is with humour, however true-to-life (or Afterlife, as it were). What is initially amusing quickly sours and wears on both the reader and writer and may eventually spoil both’s appetite for the narrative itself. As the reader has noticed, at some point previously, I have begun simply using the past tense for all events taking place on the temporal plain. No doubt, the mere memory of the earlier tensorial gymnastics will serve as a reminder of how it is really done, perhaps lending a soupçon of mirth without overly complicating the reading. If the reader is wondering why, in the midst of the narrative, I have bothered with this explanatory tangent, it is because of an uproar in the gallery which completely derailed these somber proceedings; an event which is only just now drawing to a close. It seems that Captain Mirvan’s and Sir Clement Willoughby’s attention was drawn to Madame Duval when that lady made their presence known by saying rather too loudly to Monsieur Du Bois, “What the devil are they going on about? I don’t see what all the fuss is about, bunch of poncey Englishmen prattling on about nothing. Ma foi, you’d never see this sort of thing in a proper French Afterlife, I don’t mind saying.” Captain Mirvan, encouraged on by Sir Clement, and after his own inimitable fashion, responded volubly and with unnecessary violence, calling down damnation on all French writing and writers, arousing the martial ardour of Messrs. Hugo, Balzac, Voltaire, Flaubert, Dumas, Moliere, and others. This in turn roused a number of English authors, not so much in defense of the captain, as in simple British disapprobation of all things French. Peace was finally restored when Mssrs. Sartre, Gandhi, Russell, Sakharov, Leroux, Roberts interposed themselves between the factions and bailiff Shakespeare crowned some of the more belligerent skulls on both sides with his staff. An embarrassed Ms. Burney/Madame d’Arblay, clearly out of patience with both the captain, and Mme. Duval, plucked Mme. Duval’s head-dress from her head and while that lady was panicking over her appearance and bemoaning the destruction of her curls, the valiant authoress belabored the captain with her parasol, demanding “Behave yourself!” to the general delight of everyone, but the particular delight of Sir Clement, who received a few licks of his own and, somewhat surprisingly, Mrs. Mirvan who has clearly been spending quite a bit of the abundance (or absence) of time in the Afterlife rethinking some of her life choices – as if she had actually had any choice, her marital status having been imposed on her by her creator; which brings up an interesting point on the subject of free will which, fortunately for the reader, I will now pass over in favor of continuing the relevant narrative.

Chapter Four

The proceedings proceed, after a fashion

Mr. Richardson clears his throat. “M’lord, I now wish to move on to a second, and possibly even more grievous fault of Mr. Fielding’s, made clear in his book, Joseph Andrews; to whit, his misogyny – his clear loathing of the female of the species . . .” “Yes, we all know what ‘misogyny’ means,” declares the eyerolling saint. “. . . his reduction of the female to their grossest physical attributes, his . . . his, um . . .” he shuffles papers furiously, searching for something, “. . . he . . .” finally, he drops his papers, “well, he clearly harbours a deep-seeded hatred for women; most of his female characters are loathsome, none are any better than they should be, and the few females in his book with any claim to virtue, however spurious, are subject to the vilest of assaults, brought on by their own deep-seeded wantonness . . .” “’Seated’,” interrupts Shakespeare. “. . . excuse me?” asks Richardson. “The term should be ‘deep-seated’ not ‘deep-seeded’,” explains the Bard, “I just thought a man of letters like yourself would want to be correct in his language.” This naturally brings on another wave of giggles and titters, and brings a rush of blood to Richardson’s face, for what esteemed writer of the English language would want to be corrected in public, and especially a public filled with a mixture of the leading lights of English literature and the literary equivalent of 20th Century football hooligans and yobbos, like Capt. Mirvan, whom, having recovered from his creator’s chastisement, issues both a raspberry and a two-fingered obscene salute toward Richardson. Mr. Dicken’s Sam Weller chimes in with a “’Tis true enough, a gen’l’m’n orter be familiar vith ‘is tools, as the butcher said arter cuttin’ off his thumb.”

“As I was saying,” Richardson continues, with a face red as an apple, “Fielding clearly is prejudiced against women and, as feminist literary criticism of the 20th and 21st century has shown us all, that is a . . . well, it’s a really, really bad thing. A case in point is his obsession with the female breast. Everything a reader needs to know about one of Fielding’s females can be ascertained by the description of their breasts, as the scholar Nina Prytula makes clear – by the by, Madame Prytula isn’t here, is she?[11]” Richardson is clearly relieved when there is no response, having apparently learned his lesson with Mr. Watt, and happy that, for the time being at least, he will not have to further alter his strategy. He continues, “For example, Fielding points out the bovinity of Mrs. Slipslop when he writes, “nor did she resemble a cow so much in her Breath, as in two brown Globes which she carried before her[12],” “He wrote WHAT?!” came an ear-piercing shriek from the lady in question, who had apparently never gotten around to actually reading the book. “Furthermore,” Richardson continues, “his females are all either grossly iniquitous and barbarously mannish, as in the cases of Lady Booby and Mrs. Slipslop, both of whom attempt to seduce Mr. Andrews – Lady Booby, not once but twice! – in the space of a mere twelve pages[13]!” “And who could blame us?” says Lady Booby breathily, “Just look at him!” “And not only were these two harpies . . .” “I object!” cries Lady Booby. “. . . behaving most scandalously, they are taking on a traditionally recognized masculine role by being the sexual aggressor!” “Well, he certainly wasn’t ever going to get ‘round to it, was he?” purrs Lady Booby coyly. “As Madame Prytula points out,” continues Richardson, “these actions are definitively Amazonian, in that “Amazons are figures of social and sexual inversion—women who render themselves unwomanly by defying the conventions of patriarchy,[14]” and what, may I ask you is the point of spending hundreds, if not thousands of years building up a perfectly good patriarchy if we are to allow a man, one of our own, to create women who openly defy it? This sexual inversion is increased when, instead of responding as any red-blooded man would, Mr. Andrews rather pleads his Virtue, showing himself to be inadequate and feminine both as a man and a servant! Even the supposedly female paragon of Virtue, Fanny, proves to be just as guilty of sexual inversion as the rest for, regardless of the fact that while she does find herself in the traditional role of rape victim saved from a fate worse than death by a man, namely Parson Adams, she would never have been in that situation if it weren’t for Fielding’s insistence on unnatural female characters! For if Fanny had behaved in a manner consistent with traditional literary femininity, she would have been safe at home. Instead, upon hearing of her beloved’s misfortunes, she abandons any claim to femininity when she strikes out on a quest – decidedly a man’s role – to save Mr. Andrews! We must face facts – she, or rather Fielding on her behalf, asked for it!”

“Mr. Richardson please,” protests Saint Francis, “surely you go too far sir!” “I – I go too far?” retorts Richardson, “’Tis Fielding’s gone too far! While I will admit that my own dear Pamela had to put up with an attempted rape or three, they were all in complete accordance with her role as a virtuous servant and young lady, not one of Fielding’s Amazonian buccaneers! Do not mistake me however, for I do not blame the characters themselves; they were simply written that way. All the blame lies with their creator. However, what might the damage be if these unnatural and malformed virtue-less viragos were turned loose in a real world, especially one filled with proper Ladies, gentlewomen, serving wenches, and even prostitutes, yes, prostitutes!, all fulfilling societal expectations, and behaving in the prescribed feminine fashion for females in their respective places. It would be catastrophic! Imagine if the delightful and innocent Evelina should follow their example and decide not to be ruled by traditional mores!” “Sir Clement certainly would’ve gotten a dainty knee in the wedding tackle at the very least, I imagine,” calls Mr. Bennett, while Mrs. Bennett blushes and hides her head in shame and Elizabeth nods in agreement. “Or what if,” Richardson continues, “Defoe’s Roxana were to suddenly stop worrying about the morality of her actions? Why, she might even decide to keep her children!” “Might work out better for them,” says Miss Amy, “certainly couldn’t work out any worse for them, and t’would save me and my mistress no end of trouble and grief.” “And what of the men in that world, m’lord, if robbed of the opportunity to repent their evil ways when finally inspired by the flawless virtue of a lady?” “Damme,” mutters Capt. Mirvan, “don’t he half go on?” before subsiding once more before a glare from Miss Burney. “M’Lord,” Richardson rants on, “only consider Fielding’s own version of an afterlife. It is one in which only the lowly, the criminal, and the undeserving are admitted to heaven, or Elysium as he styles it, and only those guilty of the most heinous crimes receive damnation in the pit. All others are simply returned to earth to ‘try again’, including clergy, statesmen, soldiers, virgins, and virtually all with any clear claim to morality[15]. Imagine creatures created by a man so bereft of morality, of religion that he could elucidate such an heretical view of heaven itself, turned out upon an unsuspecting world!”

An attractive woman dressed after the 20th Century fashion rises from that section of the gallery where the academics have been sitting, listening, and of course, arguing amongst themselves. “Excuse me, but may I say something?” “No!” snaps Richardson shrilly, “No you may not!” but he is overruled by both Saint Francis and Shakespeare, who, paraphrasing himself, declares, “The gentleman doth protest too much, methinks.[16]” “Pray continue, good lady,” says the saint, “but first, may we know your name?” “I am Regina M. Janes, former Professor of English at the University of California, Berkely. I’m sorry to dispute an author of Mr. Richardson’s eminence, but I believe he is at the very least mistaken regarding Mr. Fielding’s views on the Afterlife at the very least, if not also on his views on morality.” “How so?” “Well sir, I believe I proved conclusively in my paper, “Henry Fielding Reinvents the Afterlife”, that Mr. Fielding actually continues the tradition of Non-Conformist writers Isaac Watts and Elizabeth Singer Rowe[17], and that many of Mr. Fielding’s views on religion, and especially the Afterlife came, within an hundred years or so of his death, to be widely accepted[18], and that none of his views, or at least very few, even approached heresy. In my own words, ‘he hybridizes classic conceptions and Christian anticipations. Christian orthodoxy is not violated—the context is classical—but its sense of possibility is stretched.[19] In short sir, many of the ideas that Fielding elucidates in “A Journey to the Next World”, especially the reunion with previously departed family members, particularly children became, if not part of Christian Orthodoxy, then at least Christian tradition,[20]” after which she takes her seat to the applause of the assembly.

‘M’Lord,” says Richardson, “I would now like . . .”

“Mr. Richardson,” interrupts the long-suffering saint, “I believe you have made your point, at least as well as it’s ever going to be made – Mr. Fielding and his creation are immoral, irreverent, irresponsible, and a hazard to all right-thinking literature – is that not correct?” “Well, yes, m’lord, however . . .” “Does the prosecution intend to bring forth any new information? Anything that might smack of actual fact, and not simply misused statements and opinions clearly used in support of a personal animosity toward Mr. Fielding?” “If m’lord will grant me but a moment,” says the flustered Richardson, again pawing furiously through his papers, “I believe . . .” “Enough, Mr. Richardson,” the saint says gently, “your attempts to prove your various points have done rather more damage to your argument than good, and engendered, I imagine, a fair amount of ill will toward yourself.” “Indeed,” declaims Mr. Coleridge, “I’ve always felt Richardson as full of hot air as a blacksmith’s bellows, and he’s certainly proved it today! Let’s hear from Fielding, it’ll be like a breath of fresh air![21]

“Gentlemen, please,” says the saint, “all things in their time. Mr. Richardson, may I presume from your having collapsed into your chair that you are now at rest?” Richardson, a moistened kerchief over his face waves an enfeebled hand. “Very well, does anyone else wish to join Mr. Richardson’s position?”

I would like to say something,” announces Mr. Johnson in a sonorous, authoritative voice. “Very well, you may proceed Mr. Johnson.” “I wish only to say in support of my vaunted colleague Mr. Richardson, that Mr. Fielding was, is, and will always be an immoral, intemperate, dissolute Blockhead, who would have been of more service to mankind had he been employed in a stable, rather than inflicting his half-witted musings on a gullible, credible public. Indeed, I knew enough of the man to not need to bother reading Joseph Andrews![22]” The great man scans the room to see if anyone will be impertinent enough to dispute him. When there is not, he sits, with a look of supreme self-satisfaction.

Chapter Five

One last surprise witnesses; Fielding’s defense; At last, a verdict

When no one else rises to speak against Mr. Fielding, Saint Francis opens the floor to “any who would speak on behalf of Mr. Fielding or Joseph Andrews?” An uncomfortable hush falls over the assemblage, as it is one thing to crack wise in the midst of a Richardsonian raving, but quite another to openly disagree with the immortal and revered Dr. Johnson.

Finally, Miss Austen rises to her feet. “Much has been said here today about Mr. Fielding’s faults, as exhibited by both himself and his characters. For myself, I prefer not to think of his faults, whatever they may be – for who among us would favourably endure such examination? I would rather keep my focus on what, in this particularity is important; that is his, and indeed Mr. Richardson’s contributions to English letters. Both had a profound effect upon my own humble talent, for I absorbed much from each, and that absorption found itself wrung out onto the pages of my own writing. I must own that I am appalled at the public disrespect undeservedly poured out upon one of my literary heroes[23], the good Mr. Richardson (at which Mr. Richardson revives somewhat, while the assembly shifts uncomfortably, for who would not at finding themselves unexpectedly either praised or excoriated by possibly the most-loved lady in all of literature?), while admitting my own embarrassment on his behalf regarding his unwarranted and unbecoming attack on Mr. Fielding (at which the revival and discomfort switch places), also one of my heroes whose style inspired my own, despite what some critics may say[24].”

“After all,” she continues as sweetly as if she hadn’t just essentially torn strips off everyone present, though to no less effect, “one only has to look at the opening paragraphs of my own Pride and Prejudice to see Mr. Fielding’s influence. My own admittedly less “noisy” narrator also makes very unmistakably open appearances on pages 231 and 364[25].” “Hear, hear,” calls Mr. Collins, which prompts Miss Austen’s lip to curl slightly. “My own satirical style borrows much from his example, and I daresay that not only my own works, but those of countless other brilliant humorists and satirists would be much less dazzling had we not had the sterling example of social satire set for us by him.”

After Miss Austen takes her seat, the room is quiet, for none are foolish enough to follow both Dr. Johnson and Miss Austen, no matter how much all writers and scholars love to argue about books.

Saint Francis clears his throat. “I feel it is time to hear from Mr. Fielding himself. If you please, sir?”

Mr. Fielding rises to his feet and takes in the whole assembly with a wide grin, “Thank you m’lord. I would first like to thank all those who have spoken on behalf of myself and my children – for what are an author’s characters but his children? Your kind words have been most gratifying. I also say that while I agree – at least in part – with virtually everything Mr. Richardson has said, particularly in regard to myself, for I am an imperfect man, and an imperfect creator. However, I feel it all to be essentially irrelevant in these circumstances. I also cheerfully own my indebtedness to that worthy gentleman, for it is obvious that my first two prose works were entirely dependent upon his own work. However, I will say in my own defense, and on behalf of my children, that while Mr. Richardson’s Pamela provided the impetus for my writing, I was not writing about his Pamela. I merely took his creation as a starting point to make my own observations regarding our society. I was not mocking Pamela’s virtue, but the use Mr. Richardson – and by extenuation, society – makes of it. It has long been my observation that in most, if not all, societies, the idea that virtue is its own reward receives much lip service, but no more. That hypocrisy, which invariably manifests itself by harnessing virtue to the wagon of self-gratification, is really my target in my novels, including Jonathan Wild and Tom Jones.” “What’s new, Pussycat, whoa-oa-oa-oaoa!” “Furthermore, I maintain that the main difference between Mr. Richardson’s Pamela and my own Shamela and Joseph Andrews is not characterization, but intent – as the illustrious scholar David W. Toise so aptly notes in his “A More Culpable Passion”: Pamela, Joseph Andrews, and the History of Desire,[26]” – Mr. Richardson tells his readers what to think, while I trust the reader to think for themselves, and that they will come to a proper conclusion, and that, I think is the point of all this literature; not to tell people what to think, but to make them think. It is my belief and sincerest hope that I and my children have done so, at least in some small part. I also hope that they have found no small entertainment in my children’s antics, for the world can always use a good laugh, if nothing else. Thank you.” Fielding bows and sits.

At last, Saint Francis, satisfied that everyone with anything to say on the matter had been heard, says, “My Lords and Ladies, Gentle Men and Women, and all others, it is the considered opinion of this court that the charges, however sincerely felt, are unworthy of serious consideration. They are dismissed with prejudice, and the characters, creatures, and environs of the novel The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews and of his Friend Mr. Abraham Adams are to be admitted to the appropriate temporal plane as soon as it can be arranged. All reasonable effort shall be made to effect an adequate separation between the creations of Mssrs. Richardson and Fielding to avoid confusion, but since that is the problem, and much of the delight, with reality – that the unexpected so often happens – no extreme measures will be taken, and if it happens, then they can just lump it, like all of us had to do. Now . . . I was told there would be cake . . .” There was, indeed, cake.


[1] Douglas Adams, “Restaurant at the End of the Universe,in The Ultimate Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, (New York: Ballantine, 2002).

[2] William Shakespeare, The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. Act 3, Scene 1, 86. http://shakespeare.mit.edu/hamlet/full.html

[3] Ian Watt, The Rise of the Novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding. 238. http://www.ricorso.net/tx/Courses/LEM2014/Critics/Watt_Ian/Rise_Novel.pdf

[4] Ian Watt, 238.

[5] Ian Watt, 183.

[6] Ian Watt, 248.

[7] Ian Watt, 263.

[8] Thomas Gray. “Henry Fielding,” English Poetry 1579-1830: Spenser and the Tradition. http://spenserians.cath.vt.edu/CommentRecord.php?action=GET&cmmtid=6028

[9] George Gregory. “Henry Fielding,” English Poetry 1579-1830: Spenser and the Tradition. http://spenserians.cath.vt.edu/CommentRecord.php?action=GET&cmmtid=7996 

[10] Ian Watt, 287.

[11]Nina Prytula, “’Great Breasted and Fierce’: Fielding’s Amazonian Heroines.” Eighteenth-Century Studies, Volume 35, Number 2, Winter 2002, pp. 173-193. doi:10.1353/ecs.2002.0015. Apparently, Richardson is inaccurately alluding to the concluding paragraphs of Nina Prytula’s paper

[12] Henry Fielding, Joseph Andrews and Shamela. (Oxford: Oxford University Press), 27.

[13] Henry Fielding, Joseph Andrews and Shamela. 24-36.

[14] Nina Prytula, 175.

[15] Fielding, Henry. “A Journey from this World to the Next.” Chap.VII. Delphi Complete Works of Henry Fielding. Delphi Classics, Series 3, 2013. Nook.

[16] Shakespeare, William. The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark., Act III, Scene II, 219. http://shakespeare.mit.edu/hamlet/full.html

[17] Regina M. Jane. “Henry Fielding Reinvents the Afterlife.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Volume 23, Number 3, Spring 2011, pp. 497. doi:10.1353/ecf.2011.0001.

[18] Jane, 496

[19] Jane, 497.

[20] Jane, 499..

[21] Samuel Taylor Coleridge,  Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. 5 July 1834. Project Gutenberg. Kindle edition. 1 July 2005. http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/8489. Coleridge something similar in 1834.

[22] Samuel Johnson, “Henry Fielding,” in English Poetry 1579-1830: Spenser and the Tradition. http://spenserians.cath.vt.edu/CommentRecord.php?action=GET&cmmtid=2248. Johnson says much the same here.

[23] Lynn Shepherd, interview by Laurel Ann, “Jane Austen and the ‘father of the novel’ – Samuel Richardson.” Austenprose – A Jane Austen Blog. 10 August 2010. https://austenprose.com/2010/08/10/jane-austen-and-the-father-of-the-novel-samuel-richardson/

[24] D. A. Miller’s Jane Austen, or The Secret of Style, pp. 408-9, qtd. in Jill Campbell’s “Fielding’s Style.” ELH, Volume 72, Number 2, Summer 2005. Mr. Miller refers to the “noisy narrators” of Fielding and Thackeray. It is probable that this is what Miss Austen is referring to.  

[25] Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice. (New York: Penguin Classics, 2014).

[26] David W. Toise, “A More Culpable Passion”: Pamela, Joseph Andrews, and the History of Desire.” Clio. Summer 96, Vol. 25 Issue 4, p 410. https://web-b-ebscohost-com.proxy.lib.miamioh.edu/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=3&sid=8e7b8b58-07a3-4624-9f37-fa62ec8169fb%40pdc-v-sessmgr02

Bibliography

Adams, Douglas. “Restaurant at the End of the Universe.in The Ultimate Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, (New York: Ballantine, 2002).

Austen, Jane. Pride and Prejudice. New York: Penguin Classics, 2014.

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. 5 July 1834. Project Gutenberg. Kindle edition. 1 July 2005. http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/8489

Fielding, Henry. “A Journey from this World to the Next.” Chap.VII. Delphi Complete Works of Henry Fielding. Delphi Classics, Series 3, 2013. Nook.

Fielding, Henry. Joseph Andrews and Shamela. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Gray, Thomas. “Henry Fielding,” English Poetry 1579-1830: Spenser and the Tradition. http://spenserians.cath.vt.edu/CommentRecord.php?action=GET&cmmtid=6028

Gregory, George. “Henry Fielding,” English Poetry 1579-1830: Spenser and the Tradition. http://spenserians.cath.vt.edu/CommentRecord.php?action=GET&cmmtid=7996 

Jane, Regina M. “Henry Fielding Reinvents the Afterlife.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Volume 23, Number 3, Spring 2011, pp. 497. doi:10.1353/ecf.2011.0001.

Johnson, Samuel. “Henry Fielding,” English Poetry 1579-1830: Spenser and the Tradition. http://spenserians.cath.vt.edu/CommentRecord.php?action=GET&cmmtid=2248

Miller, D. A. Jane Austen, or The Secret of Style, pp. 408-9, qtd in Jill Campbell’s “Fielding’s Style.” ELH, Volume 72, Number 2, Summer 2005, https://miamioh.instructure.com/courses/126579/files/folder/readings?preview=16580331

Prytula, Nina, “’Great Breasted and Fierce’: Fielding’s Amazonian Heroines.” Eighteenth-Century Studies, Volume 35, Number 2, Winter 2002, pp. 173-193. doi:10.1353/ecs.2002.0015.

Shakespeare, William, The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. Act III, Scene I, 86, and Act III, Scene II. http://shakespeare.mit.edu/hamlet/full.html

Shepherd, Lynn, “Jane Austen and the ‘father of the novel’ – Samuel Richardson.” By Laurel Ann. Austenprose – A Jane Austen Blog. 10 August 2010. https://austenprose.com/2010/08/10/jane-austen-and-the-father-of-the-novel-samuel-richardson/

Toise, David W. “A More Culpable Passion”: Pamela, Joseph Andrews, and the History of Desire.” Clio. Summer 96, Vol. 25 Issue 4, p 410. https://web-b-ebscohost-com.proxy.lib.miamioh.edu/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=3&sid=8e7b8b58-07a3-4624-9f37-fa62ec8169fb%40pdc-v-sessmgr02

Watt, Ian, The Rise of the Novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding. 238. http://www.ricorso.net/tx/Courses/LEM2014/Critics/Watt_Ian/Rise_Novel.pdf

Another Post YOU Shouldn’t Read: Independence Day Edition

Well, another July 4th has come and gone. I’m sorry to say that in the last few years I’ve looked forward to it less each year. It’s not that I don’t love my country – I do. I just think that we should be doing better. At this point, I’m gonna go out on a limb and reiterate that most of you should just stop reading now. If you don’t, don’t say I didn’t warn you.

Part of my antipathy regarding the 4th comes from being the owner of a dog who is terrified by fireworks. If it was only the 4th, I could deal with it, but for the last several years, it seems like the 4th runs from mid-June to about the 10th of July. Ralph is an old dog, and we have to keep him more stoned than Cheech and Chong for about 3 weeks, Ralph doesn’t really enjoy getting out of his head – if dogs were political, Ralph would be a staunch conservative.

Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy a good fireworks display, but this yearly explodafest is just ridiculous. I mean, what’s the point? Does your willingness to blow shit up for an extended period of time somehow make you more patriotic than me? Or is it just another instance of our national conviction that more is always better (an attitude I also struggle with, particularly in regard to books and food)?

It seems to me that all this patriotism has gotten out of hand – or rather that actual patriotism is something we pay lip service to rather than actually living it. We’re big on displaying the flag. I had an old military friend who lives in Seattle tell me how he really liked how here in Indiana there are so many homes and businesses with American flags flying – apparently there’s not a lot of that where he lives.

In fact, there’s a nice big American flag, complete with solar-powered light so the flag can be seen even at night, at the end of my driveway -my driveway is on an easement, and the landowner is an old Marine. The thing is, I just don’t get it. I’ve lived overseas, and traveled quite a bit, and I don’t remember seeing anything like this flag obsession anywhere else. Everyone else in the world seems to know where they live without having to be constantly reminded, and I don’t believe that the British, Germans, Italians, Norwegians, Nigerians, Egyptians, South Africans, Mexicans, Canadians, etc. love their countries any less than we do ours. Here, it’s everywhere. On our houses, our cars, our car dealerships, our clothes, our tattoos – and I’m making allowance for military people’s tattoos. That’s a tradition I have no problem with.

I will admit that there are some instances where the flag thing might come in handy. Take, for example, the “Red Dawn” scenario that so many of us seem to be so looking forward to. It would be reassuring to the invaders to have such a glaring confirmation that they’ve invaded the right country. Conversely, if they were planning to invade Canada or Mexico, they’d be far more likely to realize their mistake before too much damage was done. They could just pack their gear back up, mumble “Excuse us, we must have taken a wrong turn,” and proceed peacefully to their intended target.

On the other hand, it seems like it could also work against us. Take all these immigrant “invasions”. It seems possible that, without all the visible confirmation that they have indeed reached the “Land of the Free, Home of the Brave”, they might just keep on going and accidentally “invade” Canada – since the U.S. is apparently so inconsequential that we have to constantly remind ourselves where we are. Just a thought.

Something else that troubles me is that so many of us can’t even manage to be consistent in our blatant patriomania. It’s not at all unusual to see people proudly displaying the American flag right alongside the flag of the greatest threat to our nation we’ve ever seen (for those of you who haven’t been keeping score, it’s the battle flag of the Confederacy). That one blows my mind, especially here in Indiana, given our state’s proud contributions to preserving the Union (of course, Indiana was also pretty much ground zero for the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan back in the early 20th Century – that may be where the confusion comes in). Still, it seems odd that even people stupid enough to revere both flags can’t see the incongruity of it.

On a side note, in case there are any of those semi-neo-Confederates still reading who are bringing up the “heritage” argument, and insisting that destroying statues is tantamount to destroying our history, I would ask them why is your “heritage” more important than the heritage of those whose ancestors suffered so horribly under yours? Why should they “get over it” when you refuse to?

Anyway, back to the flag thing: Another thing that really bothers me is how the flag assumes prominence in places where, to me, it shouldn’t – like in church. It is my feeling that if you’re a Christian, that should take precedence over everything else, ie., love and worship of God takes precedence over love and worship of country. If that is true, then why is the American flag given the place of honor? Here’s a link to the VA’s guidance on flag display. Here are the rules, according to the American Flagpole and Flag Company, which are quite a bit more detailed: see Rule 6. It explicitly states, “When displayed from a staff in a church or public auditorium, the flag of the United States of America should hold the position of superior prominence . . .” So much for “have no other Gods before me”.

Frankly, it also creeps me out when we sing hymns that seem to focus more on worship of country than God as well. I don’t expect it to stop, especially in my little country church, which is home to an exceptionally large proportion of veterans (including my wife and I). In fact, I’m probably losing a lot of cool points with any fellow congregants who might’ve ignored my warnings and continued to read this. To them, I would just say that I’m not saying we can’t be both Christians and patriots – just that one needs to take precedence over the other.

I think what troubles me most about the whole flag thing is that it’s just too easy. Nothing important is ever easy. It seems to me that if all we have to do is put up a flag, or slap a sticker on our car, stick a flag pin on our lapels, or buy a t-shirt to show how patriotic we are, then that patriotism is useless, worthless. That sort of patriotism is all about us, not our country. It seems that if we’re actual patriots, then we ought to be actively working to make our nation better, and that’s hard work.

Finally, I just want to say that I don’t think there’s anything particularly wrong with displaying the flag, especially if it’s done properly, but if that’s all you’re doing to make this country better, then why are you even bothering? Just something to think about.

Another Post You Shouldn’t Read: Unless You Already Don’t Like Me.

Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe – Frederick Douglass

I’ve been struggling with whether to write something about the murder of George Floyd (and by extension, all the others like him), the protests, and the riots. Like many of you, I’m outraged by what is going on in our streets.

I don’t like rioting and looting, but I like defenseless people being killed by those who are sworn “to serve and protect” even less. As far as I’m concerned, if you don’t think that systemic racism is an integral part of our judicial, economic, and political systems, then you don’t know our history and are not paying attention.

I feel like to not speak out against those things is to be part of the problem, and I don’t want to be part of the problem. On the other hand, pretty much everything I have to say has been said much more eloquently and capably by smarter people and better writers than I am.

I kind of feel like what the country doesn’t need right now is another 50-something, white, middle-class, Christian male chiming in with his special take on racism (it’s evil and pervasive in this country – sorry, couldn’t help myself).

So, I’m going with my “special take” on something that’s contributing to the problem that hasn’t been covered quite so completely – Christians.

Yup, Christians. We’re a big part of the problem, going back to the days of slavery when far too many of us were cherry-picking the bible to prove to ourselves that owning people was not only right, but OUR right, and what’s more, was good for those we owned. We used it to justify our evil actions to ourselves, and used it to make sure that those we owned stayed docile and manageable. Note that this also includes justifying our ongoing genocide against Native Americans.

Far too many of us are basically still doing the same thing.

I was heartened by the number of Christians who were disgusted and outraged by the murder of George Floyd. I felt like we were getting somewhere maybe. Then the riots started, and suddenly too many of those same people were saying, “What happened to George Floyd was wrong, but all this destruction of property is REALLY wrong,” and then went on to talk about how those people should be protesting the “right” way.

“Those people” have been protesting peacefully for years, decades even, and many of us Christians were outraged and ferociously outspoken about it, especially when we felt those protests disrespected our flag or our country.

We Christians are big on the bible, and we love it when we can slap a verse on something that’s going on today and sit back in our smug self-righteousness, point at “them” and say “See? God warned us about this, and now they’re gonna get it!”

Of course, it always seems to center around the idea that we’re supposed to be a Christian nation and, because of our misguided tolerance, us good Christians have allowed evil foreigners, unions, atheists, and liberals to hijack the country. It all adds up to manufactured outrage about things that just aren’t so. Things like “they” took God out of school – but what about the idea that God is with us wherever we are? Or, and this is another personal favorite, “they” have taken God out of our government – seriously? Take a look back at our history and tell me when God has ever been even remotely considered by our government when making decisions. That’s not to say he’s never been invoked. He has. All the time. Almost always in the most hypocritical, self-serving, manipulative way possible.

Like I said, we seem to think those verses only apply to “them”, but think about this. Up to, and including now, Christianity has been far and away the predominant religion in this country. All this systemic racism has flourished with Christians at the helm. Now, it seems to me that we are reaping what we have sown. We are watching our country tear itself apart while denying our complicity in our nation’s most fundamental sin – racism.

Because we are all complicit. We are all guilty. I’ve never thought of myself as a racist, but I look back now and see that I have repeatedly said things that were unquestionably, indisputably racist (and they weren’t all in the distant past), without even realizing what I was doing. That’s how ingrained our nation racism is. I’ve realized that I’ve been a racist all my life, without even knowing it, and I’m ashamed of myself.

Anyway, as often happens, my mind has gone off on so many tangents while writing this, that I’ve decided to break it up into multiple posts. I’ll try to title each one so that you’ll know from the title whether you should read it or not.

I’m going to close for now with this: Christ never seemed to value property over life. Why do we? It seems like focusing on the riots is like focusing on coughing up blood without bothering to cut out the cancer that is actually killing us.

Shelley Gorin’s Review of Thumperica!: Eat It, Kirkus!

Since I’ve already posted the Kirkus review of my novel, Thumperica! A Novel of the Ghost of America Future, I feel that, in the interest of presenting a fair and balanced view, I have a responsibility to post the following review from Shelley Gorin, a woman of undeniable taste and depth. Enjoy!

Thumperica!: A review by Shelley Gorin.

The definitive evidence for me of a book being worth reading, or at least being something I’m connecting with on some level, is that overly-cliche’d “inability to put it down.” No matter how “quiet” I try to get in order to have time to read, my life ends up full of nearly-nonstop interruptions. If I’m not really into a book, those interruptions will have me justifying putting it down constantly, and then having an excusably-hard time getting back into it. If I’m really drawn in, however, I’m shushing the interruptions and sacrificing sleep to get it finished. 

Thumperica was both of those for me, at different times. That’s just the normal consequence, I think, of a major hurdle that naturally has to be overcome when setting the stage for the events of a story that’s just enough outside our humdrum daily life and circle of awareness to require some deeper explanation. America TM’s state at the opening of the book seems almost completely unbelievable without such further explanation… almost.

Due to the nature of having to lay a LOT of groundwork and presenting a rather fantastic world (that most of us would not like to admit openly – or even privately – could actually come true), there was a lot of detail and explanation that came along with the core story, especially at the outset. At the start, copious amounts of footnotes seemed almost distracting. They ended up, however, being one of the book’s strengths, and something I clung onto to help me navigate the difficult groundwork.

The first handful of chapters were admittedly hard for me to stick with – they hit me like Tolkien’s Silmarillion, that was so detailed and so outside my brain’s normal ability to retain an overload of information outside its little bubble, that I had to keep re-reading pages and chapters it to try to get it to stick. There was a LOT of detail in Thumperica’s first chapters that left me going, “Wait, what? I can’t remember what that was. Who was that again?”… and a LOT acronyms. I couldn’t read it, originally, any time my anxiety was flared up, because my brain just got overloaded with info and stopped taking it in. 

However, instead of leaving it and not coming back, I kept going back to pick it up and push through. Part of that was a promise – I said I was gonna read it! Most of what initially hooked me, though, was the hidden humor and the play on names… I’d be reading along, trying to keep up, and suddenly do a spit-take. There were also a few times I thought, “Oh man, Lloyd’s not right in the head,” and smiled. But mostly I stuck it out because there was just enough “could be true” woven in, that I wanted to see just how this whole mess of a nation might turn out.

In all frankness, Thumperica is a WEIRD book. It is clearly written by someone who has little interest in following status-quo success recipes for best sellers. It’s probably not going to make the New York Times best seller list (though who knows?), but it’s a worthwhile read. I want to say it was about a quarter of the way through that I found I was staying up late to finish chapters, or I was shushing interruptions. It happened subtly. But sticking it out through the initial info overload was worth it, once the chess pieces started to move.

There were many moments where I felt the plot was over the top – a country couldn’t POSSIBLY become THAT effed up. And yet, if Scripture tells us that things like adultery actually occur in the heart, or that a man is as he thinks in his heart, Thumperica is a frightening exposure of just how dark, depraved, and gluttonous mankind can be, if we are brutally honest with ourselves. And if that fantastic and depraved world is unrealistic, the fantastic and depraved thoughts in our own minds are not. As such, Thumperica is a book that might make you a wee bit uncomfortable, if you’re prone to self-examination. And if our basest human instincts (not simply sexual, as some might assume, but greed, power, control, all-who-aren’t-like-me-are-bad, or mine-is-bigger kind of thinking) are left to run amok; if we become, personally or as a country, increasingly desensitized over generations to things like basic human conscience and dignity, and we re-write the rules or re-spin the sacred to support such things, is it truly that far-fetched?

Is that not exactly what we’ve already done as a nation? We can’t be naive enough to think that we as a people have not been guilty of genocide, degradation, or humiliation of races and peoples on the scale of Hitler, in our past. The kind of world presented in Thumperica is certainly extreme, but it is already in existence; it already HAS been in existence. And it may be in a bit of existence in each of us. 

Further back in mankind’s history, “civilized” humans once killed other humans for entertainment; they certainly have killed for lust or power or greed in our generation as much as in the first. If someone held a magnifying glass to our basest thoughts or perhaps gave them free reign, it’s frighteningly possible that things could decline to the state in which Thumperica begins. They seem too far-fetched and yet too near to what we wish not to see in reality; they could have easily been predicted by Irving’s Owen Meany, and it feels as though they were. There are elements of this book that seem to be a nod that one. And though my first instinct was to laugh and how absurd it all sounded, there is enough in my life experience to say that the comedy of it all reveals a real tragedy underneath.

I am left wondering what my own part might be in the macabre play, if I keep my eyes closed.  I truly did not know where this book was going, or could possibly go; it certainly didn’t go where I thought it would. It didn’t wrap up with a neat little bow, and it didn’t follow predictable patterns of overused plot devices. But that’s the reality of the world in which we live – rarely does anything go as expected, and even knowing that mankind repeats itself endlessly (“nothing new under the sun,”) that knowledge doesn’t help us prevent those twists and turns, or even stop the unfairness of it all.

But sometimes…. sometimes, evil will overreach and be its own undoing. And that is the hope for those seemingly doomed under it all in this book and in life – if we question those things our conscience can’t abide, and we’re willing to risk fighting for it, even when the odds are stacked, maybe evil things will stumble.The book certainly leans strongly left, but even those leaning strongly right can find good substance here, if they’re willing to set aside party and politics enough to let it simply be a magnifying glass on mankind left to its own devices. It wouldn’t matter what party or what political leaning a person claimed, the potential is there for anyone willing to question what blind allegiance to blind national ambition can lead to.

Thumperica is NOT a book I’d recommend my mother read, or a Sunday School class, or anyone easily offended – unless being offended is the very thing they need. There are elements to the book that won’t be fitting for the book club, but they just might be the food for thought we need in the days and years ahead. 

Goodbye Silence, I’ve had Enough: A Disclaimer for Everything That Follows

Some of you may have noticed that I haven’t been writing much of anything here for quite some time. The primary reason is because I find it really hard to write when I’m angry, and I’ve been extremely angry for most of the last two years.

I’ve started to write posts numerous times, and each time, I would start out writing in my usual witty, charming style, and the more I wrote, the angrier I got (because of my predilection for writing about things I care about), and everything became nothing more than just a rant, and there is more than enough of that sort of thing floating around out there. In the end, I would just get disgusted with myself for writing stuff that would just add to the problem.

I’ve realized that part of the problem is the Facebook (and yes, I know how stupid that is). All too often, I find myself just looking for things to make me angry (amazing how well that works, isn’t it?). I’ve begun to think that I need to just jettison the Facebook because I don’t need all that negativity in my life. Of course, it’s not just the negativity that gets to me: much of the positivity gets to me too, especially when the same people who are posting memes seemingly designed to save my soul or bring me closer to God are also posting the most mind-numbing, hateful, and simply unAmerican propaganda.

Most of the time, I resist the urge to respond to that stuff, mainly because I know that the people who are posting that stuff don’t really even mean it. One of the problems with the Facebook is that it often causes me to feel, not even angry really, more just saddened, about people whom I genuinely like/love/admire. People who, in the way they actually live their lives, give the lie to the memes and sentiments they promulgate on social media.

It’s gotten so bad that I find myself waking up in the middle of the night, trying to think of ways to respond that would get my point across without seeming like an attack on them (and yes, I know that is ridiculous too. I’ve never claimed to be a rational person, and noone else has ever claimed that either. If you’re looking for the poster-child for mental and emotional stability and maturity, look elsewhere).

I hate feeling that way. Especially because I’m pretty sure that most of them are better human beings – and better Christians – than I am. At least I think they are.

I never thought I’d miss the days when the most annoying thing about the Facebook was the pictures of people’s dinners. Now, it’s kind of refreshing to see those.

I’ve always said that the only reason I’m on the Facebook is to promote my writing. Obviously, that has just become a justification for my own stupidity (plus, I really love all those puppy videos), so I’ve come to the conclusion that I need to either A) close my Facebook account or, B) start writing something so I’ll have something to promote.

Since I also use the Facebook to keep in touch with friends and family, I’m going to try option B.

I don’t know that what I’m going to be writing is going to be all that funny – although I hope to get back to that. I know that many of you (even those of you who I’m closest to) aren’t going to like a lot of the stuff that I’ll write, and that’s okay. If our friendship isn’t strong enough to survive it, it was never much of a friendship to begin with.

Keep in mind that what I’m going to be writing is largely just going to be my opinion. I’ll try to include links to any material I use as a reference. Also keep in mind that I’m not really trying to convince you of anything – if the Facebook has taught me anything, it’s taught me that that is a fruitless effort – you’ll either agree with me or disagree with me, there’s little or no chance of either of us changing our minds.

I’m going to be writing this stuff just to get it off my chest, and to maybe give you something to think about. I’m not trying to start an argument. Feel free to not read it, you won’t hurt my feelings. If you do read it, remember, I’m not trying to hurt your feelings either.

My First (and Probably Last) Ever “Sermon”

As some of you might know, on the 2nd of September, I spoke at my church, Whitewater Christian, about our annual mission trip to Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

All-in-all, I felt like it went pretty well (there were no lightning strikes, and nobody suggested cancelling my membership!).

Anyway, my daughter shot video of it on her phone. Unfortunately, her phone is an Iphone 8, and my computer’s a PC, and apparently they don’t play well together. After several days of struggling and cursing, we finally figured out how to get it off her phone and onto my computer. Sadly, it’s also a huge file, and I can’t figure out how to shrink it enough to be able to share it here (I was able to put it on the Facebook).

I decided that I would go ahead and post the text here, for those of you are interested. Enjoy!

Also, I welcome any comments about what I had to say. If, at the end of it (presuming that you make it to the end of it), you discover an interest in joining us next June, or wanting more information, just give me a holler.

And now, with no further ado, here it is:

 

Ever since I volunteered to do this, I’ve thought long and hard about what I was going to say up here. I have frequently wished that I’d thought about that before I volunteered – I could’ve saved myself and you all what may be a really weird and uncomfortable experience. However, I didn’t, and here we are.

Like I said, I’ve thought a lot about what I was going to say. I could recite mountains of horrific statistics, but statistics reduce people to numbers, and only tell part of the story. Besides, all you’ve got to do is Google “Pine Ridge Indian Reservation” and you can find all of the horrible statistics you want.

I could talk about the history of the Sioux people—the wars, the broken treaties, the 180 or so years of oppression they’ve faced. I could talk about the death of Sitting Bull, Wounded Knee, the Dawes Act, the Indian Schools that took children from their homes, cut their hair and beat them for speaking their native language, the other ways we’ve tried to force assimilation on them, the way, every time we found something on their land that we wanted, we just laid that Eminent Domain on them and took it. In all honesty, if you’re interested, that stuff’s pretty easy to find on your own. Also, even all of that stuff only paints part of the picture.

I could talk about whose fault it is that things are as bad on the Rez, and why so many of them stay there (spoiler alert: it’s mostly—not all, but mostly—our fault), but that’s only just another little bit of the picture.

I thought, well shoot—I can just tell them stories about what I’ve seen out there (and you all know how I love to tell stories). I could tell you about the young woman with 4 little kids walking about 25 miles one way on a scorching hot June day, just because she had no money, and had heard that someone there had free diapers.

I could tell you about the two older women, each pushing a grandchild in a stroller, on a 30 mile, one-way walk on a below-freezing day in mid-winter, to get to the nearest Western Union office because someone had sent them money for food.

I could tell you about the two boys who were on the school bus that discovered their father hanging from a tree along the road side.

I could tell you stories that would break your hearts, but again, those are only part of the picture.

Or, I could tell you stories that would make you feel really good about yourselves for helping to keep this thing going: about how we picked up that young woman and her kids, got them something cold to drink, took them to camp for supper, loaded them down with diapers and food, and gave them a ride home—how we picked up those two older women and took them where they needed to go.

I could tell you about refurbishing churches and community centers, building wheelchair ramps and outhouses, about feeding hungry children, and comforting the heart-broken, mowing playgrounds and parks, about the smiles on those dirty faces, and how they light up and come out of the woodwork when that Whitewater Christian Church bus pulls into Potato Creek, and how they cry and we cry, and they chase the bus begging us not to leave every year at the end of the week, and we could all go home feeling good about ourselves, but even the good stuff is only part of the picture.

I’ve been studying the Sioux people for as long as I could read, and I’ve been going on this trip for, I think, 14 years, and I have to admit that, even with all that I only know bits and pieces of the picture.

All I can really talk about is what I’ve seen, and I’ve seen some amazing things.

See, I’ve come to believe that this little group is about a lot more than just helping the Sioux. I’ve come to believe that this group, for me anyway, is representative of something a whole lot bigger, something that can help not only the Sioux, but the whole country.

I see and worry, as we all do, about how divided this country has become. Liberal VS conservative, Christian VS Muslim, gay VS straight, religious VS secular, etc., and those divisions can be broken down even further, until it’s literally brother VS brother.

We’re all so obsessed with being right, so proud of our beliefs and opinions that we’re willing to put them above everything else, no matter the cost.

Don’t worry, I’m not gonna get all political on you here, but I think you know what I’m talking about.

Anyway, a few years back, I was trying really hard on the trip to post what we were doing on the Facebook every day, to try to keep folks informed, and hopefully generate more interest for the following year.

And it worked—sort of. I got a message from a girl I went to high school with, saying that what we were doing sounded great, and that she and her partner Lisa, would love to join us the next year. She just wanted to know if them being Quakers would be a problem.

Well, I have to admit, I handled the situation badly. I think I hurt her feelings pretty deeply, and I feel really bad about that. Anyway, Dave and I spent a lot of time talking about it. After all, this is a Christian mission. We have a lot of very conservative Christians come on this trip. Often times, they bring their kids, and other people’s kids. Did we want to risk alienating individuals and possibly even entire churches to let a gay couple come on the trip?

Now, Dave and I are both pretty upfront about our own weaknesses and failings. We both know that we’re no better, and our sins, even the ones we still have the energy to commit, are no less evil than anyone else’s. We’ve also had alcoholics, drug abusers, gluttons, liars, gossips, speakers of profanity and obscenity, the selfish, and the prideful on this trip, and that’s just the guys in the front seat of my truck. I don’t know what the rest of the group gets up to, and I don’t want to know.

We’ve also had gay folks on the trip, and it was never an issue. We’d just never had a gay couple before. What would all those good Christians think? How would they explain it to their kids?

The more we discussed it, however the more we realized that all too often, we can’t get the Christians to come, and those that do come rarely come back.

Then we asked ourselves, Who are WE, to say who can and can’t do the Lord’s work? Who are WE to tell someone, No, WE don’t approve of your lifestyle, or your habits, or your issues, and so you aren’t good enough to help us try to help these people?

So, we came to the conclusion that anyone, conservative or liberal, republican or democrat, Muslim or Christian or atheist, Baptist or Catholic, gay or straight or whatever, is welcome to join us, as long as they’re willing to work with a Christ-based mission.

We don’t ask anyone to hide themselves. We don’t ask anyone to pretend to be anything they’re not. We don’t ask people to LIE just to “fit in”. It seems hypocritical to drive all the way to S. Dakota to “minister” to people who are often alcoholics, drug addicts, transsexual or gay, people from broken homes, people in broken homes, the neglected, marginalized, and ostracized, if we are ourselves neglecting, marginalizing, and ostracizing people who just want to help.

Who better to witness to an alcoholic than an alcoholic? Who better to witness to a kid who’s been neglected and abused by his family than someone who has been neglected, abused, and cast out by their own family?

The thing I’ve come to believe is this: this mission is about way more than just helping out the Sioux. It’s about ministering to everyone who comes into contact with us, whether they’re outside the group, or a part of it. I think that’s true of any real ministry.

We, as Christians, have to be willing to get out of our comfort zones, and Pine Ridge is about as far out of the standard middle-class mid-westerner’s comfort zone as you can get.

This year, we were invited, as a group, to attend the Sun Dance. That’s never happened to us before. It’s kind of like inviting a bunch of Buddhists to Easter services at the Vatican. We were deeply honored.

Now some would say that it’s a pagan ritual, and it’s certainly not a Christian thing, but I could see some eerie parallels between it and Christianity. First, there is a crosspiece lashed to the tree that is essentially makes it a cross. The tree has to be carried in by hand, much like Christ carried his own cross. Of course this being about a 30 foot cottonwood tree, it took a lot of us.

The dancers all wore sage crowns, and twists of sage around their wrists and ankles, the crown and twists wrapped in strips of red cloth. Now I don’t pretend to know what they represent in the Sun Dance, but they reminded me of the bloody crown of thorns and the piercing of Christ’s hands and feet.

Shoes were not permitted. It reminded me of the bible, where God told Moses to take off his shoes, because he was standing on holy ground, and when he later told Joshua the same thing.

There were some parts that I kind of wish Christianity had: Some of the dancers had a rope with buffalo skulls tied along it attached to piercings in their backs, and they crawled on their hands and knees, 4 times around the Sun Dance circle, dragging those skulls. If the rope didn’t pull free in those 4 rounds, then others would assist the man to pull hard enough to rip the skewers out, freeing him from the rope

It was explained to me that these were guys who had committed some grievous sin/offense in the past year, and this was how they atoned for it.

Now, don’t get me wrong: I know that Christ has paid the price for our sins. I know that, through him, we are forgiven. The problem is not with Christ, but with me. There are things I’ve done, for which I believe Christ has forgiven me, that I cannot seem to forgive myself for, and I often think that, if I can’t let it go, if I keep my regret and my secret shame alive, can I really be forgiven? I hope that makes sense. I think we’ve probably all got things like that that continue to haunt us, even after we repent and ask forgiveness.

I’ve always wished that we had some way of clearing the slate for ourselves, so, even though I saw that part of the Sun Dance as unnecessary (from a Christian viewpoint), I can see value in it.

That’s the thing about getting out of our comfort zone: THAT is how we learn, not only about others, and what the world looks like through the eyes of others, we learn just as much about ourselves, and what we think and why we think the way we do. It’s how we grow.

But you don’t have to go to a Sun Dance or a sweat lodge ceremony to get out of your comfort zone on the Rez. I love the look a middle-class, mid-western, middle-aged, Christian mom gets on her face when a grubby little 5 or 6 year-old Sioux kid tells her to go commit an obscenely impossible act to herself. That’ll shake you out of your comfort zone really fast.

Those kids will test you. They’ve been let down by so many people, that they’ve learned to not trust anyone. They’re just like us—they want to be loved, but have been so beaten down and abused by the world, so let down by those they should be able to depend upon, that they’ve often decided that they are the problem, that THEY are unlovable.

I’ve seen 10 year olds tell us that they’re possessed by the devil, or that they’re evil. And they often do their best to prove it, acting up, starting fights, hitting our people and other kids, cursing, and generally raising hell, and making themselves and everybody else miserable.

And I’ve seen those same shocked, middle-class, middle-aged, mid-western soccer moms persevere, with love and loving discipline through a really tough week.

Finally, I’ve seen both those kids and soccer moms weeping and clinging to each other at the end of the week, because those soccer moms had to go home.

That’s another great thing about getting out of your comfort zone—if you stay out of it long enough, it grows to encompass where you’ve gone. Your world is much, much bigger and better. You find, if you go often enough, that people you once referred to as “Those people” become actual people, with names and everything. They become part of your circle of friends, and even family, and you become part of theirs.

Now, people often ask “what did you accomplish on the trip?” or the ever-popular, “How many baptisms did you have?”, “How many souls did you save?” A harder question is “are you doing any good? Are you making any difference?”

The truth is, I don’t know. I believe we are. Granted, it often feels like we don’t accomplish much. In 15 years, we’ve only had two baptisms, and those were kids who were part of the group. We’ve saved 0 souls—only God can do that.

As far as “are we making a difference, or doing any good,” there’s no easy answer for that. Only the Sioux and God can really answer that. I believe however, that it is not our job to worry about the harvest. Our job is to plant the seeds, and to try to nourish them as they grow. The harvest is God’s job.

I do know that being involved in this mission has done me a lot of good. It has humbled me. It has made me aware of how blessed I am. It has made me think less of myself, and more of others.

It has made people who are marginalized, and ostracized (and I’m talking about our people here, not the Sioux) feel loved, and accepted, and part of the family of God, sometimes for the very first time.

I’ve seen this trip open the eyes of our youngsters to injustice in the world, and to how much, and how blessed they are, to have full bellies, and a roof over their heads.

I’ve seen it force Christians to really use those Christianity muscles, again, sometimes for the first time.

I’ve seen people make pretty serious sacrifices to continue being a part of this group, and never ask for credit.

That’s the thing about this group that I was talking about earlier, how it represents for me something thatis good, not only for us, or for the Sioux, but for the whole country. It brings us together, and it’s not about US or what we think: it’s about God, and serving him.

In our group, we’ve got wild-eyed hippie liberals like me and staunch, even rabid, conservatives. We’ve got the old and the young. We’ve got the gay, the straight, and the really confused. We’ve got biblical literalists and those who think much of the bible is meant as allegory. We’ve got Fundamentalists and progressive Christians, regular church-goers, and the unchurched. We’ve got people who are, at best, on the fence about what they believe. The one thing we all have in common is a willingness to put our differences aside and work together, with love and acceptance, to accomplish the will of God. A dedication to something greater than ourselves.

Just think what a country this could be if we could all do that.

Finally, I want to say this: Whitewater Christian Church is only a tiny country church, and yet the seed YOU planted 15 years ago is still growing. It has not only continued but, because of the work you’ve started and supported, has sprouted new seeds. Two churches in Tennessee have, for the at least the last 3 or 4 years, started going out their own trip to pine ridge. Another little country church in Spartanburg has started their own annual mission trip to Appalachia.

Missions aren’t just for missionaries. You guys are all an important part of this mission group. Whether you go with us or not, this whole thing would have dried up and died years ago. Your support, your contributions, your prayers are what makes all these things I’ve talked about possible, and I thank you, deeply and sincerely.

I hope that you feel a little bit better informed about what’s going on with the group now. Does anyone have any questions?

 

 

A Free Preview of Thumperica! A Novel of the Ghost of America Future

As you may or may not know, I have actually written (and published) a full-length novel entitled: Thumperica! A Novel of the Ghost of America Future. I’m pretty proud of it, I think it’s pretty darned good (of course, all parents think their baby is beautiful, even the parents of ugly ones), and I think it’s got some important food for thought on the direction this country is headed. It’s available in print, and as an ebook on both Amazon.com and Barnes and Noble.com

It’s been on sale for about a month and, although there have actually been some sales, I’ve got a long way to go before I get on the best seller’s lists (8 down and 4,992 to go! Stephen King is probably not losing sleep yet.).

At any rate, I’ve decided that maybe a free first taste might be just the thing to generate some interest (yes, I do mean sales. You see right through me, don’t you?), after all, it seems to work for heroin (not that my book is bad for you in any way, unless you think that being caused to think is a bad thing, in which case, I think you need to rethink your thinking).

Anyway, all this self-promotion (and yes, I do mean shameless begging) is getting a little embarrassing, so without further ado, please enjoy the foreword and 1st chapter of Thumperica!

The cover of the ebook edition, designed by yours truly.

 

Glossary of Acronyms

 

AARP—American™s Actively Resisting Persecution

ACRONIM—Agency for Contraction of Rightful, Officially eNdorsed Idioms and Meanings.

ANGEL—Angelic Nymph of God’s Exquisite Love

BIEF—Better Ingredients in Every Food

CA or C of A—Church of America™

CEOPIPOTUSGAME—Chief Executive Officer of the President-in-Perpetuity of the United States and God’s Annointed Messenger on Earth

CIO—Chief Information Officer

CMO—Chief Military Officer

COO—Chief Operations Officer

CPO—Chief Pastoral Officer

CSO—Chief Security Officer

GOON—Guardians Of Our Nation

HARLOT—Hospitality And Recreational Leisure Operations Trainee

MORON—Manual Operative Rebuilding Our Nation’s Strength

NIGGERR—Non-white Inhabitant Generously Given Equal Rights and Responsibility

OHLS—Office of Hospitality and Leisure Services

SAPS—Symbol of America™’s Power and Spirit

THUG—Titan Helping Us Grow

TIA—Thump Intelligence Agency

TRUTH—Truthfully Reliable Unbiased TrutH: the national propaganda agency

VEGGIES—Very Exceptionally Good Green Invigorating Edible Substance

WENCH—Wonderfully Equipped, Naturally Cheerful Hostess

 

 

Foreword:

The United States of America:

Twenty Sixteen

To

Present

 

Excerpt from Silas Joiner’s book, What Happened? How We Got Here, and Who’s to Blame, published by Liberty Island Underground Press, in 2183:

In the early part of the 21st century, mankind collectively went completely off the deep end. Decades of war, terrorism, fear, economic collapses, a resurgence of nationalist movements, creeping paranoia, distrust of establishment politics, and willful ignorance, fueled by organized campaigns of misinformation caused the United States to elect the bizarrely coiffured, financially and morally bankrupt businessman, and reality television falling star, Ronald Thump, president[1] in 2016.

These events were followed closely by an explosion of corporate imperialism, accompanied by a corresponding increase in world-wide poverty. National governments, apparently feeling left out, or perhaps just not recognizing their own growing irrelevance, responded with an increase in totalitarianism and nationalism.

Roughly half-way through his first term, President Thump resigned, citing health issues and pointing out that it had absolutely nothing at all to do with the blizzard of indictments against members of his staff, cabinet, and administration, as well as himself. In his farewell address, he stated: “I’m tired. I’ve been working so hard, and, I must say, doing such a great job—wouldn’t you agree?—I thought so. I’m going to take a little break, just a little break—I know, I know, I’ll miss you too—but I’m leaving you in good hands. Great hands—the best hands—C’mere Mike, show ‘em your hands—look at how big his hands are—he’s a chip off the old block, trust me, you’re in good hands. And don’t worry, I’ll be keeping an eye on things. If things start to go bad—and how could they with this guy in charge, am I right? Of course I am. You know it, I know it, everybody knows it—but I promise you—I will be back, and we’ll keep working together to make America the greatest and most powerful country the world has ever seen.” This, of course, is only an excerpt from the rambling 45 minute speech. Following the speech, Thump disappeared from public life completely, leading to speculation among his enemies that he had died. His political base however, continued to insist, for hundreds of years, that he was still alive, and just hasn’t resumed power because everything is going just fine. Vice President Michael Shilling was sworn in as President.

Before his resignation, President Thump had begun building his Mexican Border Wall, but the collapse of the U.S. economy left it unfinished. Mexico, completely disgusted, and unable to support the number of illegal immigrants flooding across its borders from the U.S., completed the wall in 2019. Numerous wars broke out world-wide, increasingly fought by corporate-owned mercenary armies.

Public confidence in conventional institutions continued to disintegrate: in 2019, the satirical news website The Onion was designated “America’s most trusted news source.” One popular comment was, “Well, at least with the Onion, I know it’s bullshit. With the rest, who knows?” The entire staff of The Onion resigned in disgust.

Shilling took credit for “forcing” Mexico to pay for the wall, and, campaigning on a platform of “Still Making America Even Greater Again” won a second term, aided by the disenfranchisement of minorities, immigrants (anyone less than 3rd-generation American on both sides), homosexuals, and the implementation of a complex illiteracy requirement (people with a high school diploma or less, got two votes, as did collegiate business majors. Humanities and Liberal Arts majors got ½ vote each. In Shilling’s words, “We’re giving power back to the good and godly Christian people who made this country great.”).

Early in his second term, Canada began erecting its own wall. The European Union collapsed, and took Great Britain with it, possibly out of spite. Industry stalled, as did much scientific research and advancement[2]. Poverty, disease, starvation, drought, and warfare began to wipe out huge portions of the world population (ultimately by as much as 60%, over the next 100 years, thanks to the reportedly “inadvertent” release of several man-made viruses). President Shilling was impeached and 92% of the nation’s Senators, Representatives, and governmental officials were indicted for high crimes and misdemeanors.

A special election was held, and ThumpCorp, former President Thump’s corporation, ran for the office of President, citing the historic “Citizens United” ruling by the Supreme Court as precedent[3]. It won in a landslide. Thump’s fifteen-year-old son and CEO of ThumpCorp, Viscount Thump, was sworn in as CEO of the President of the United States of America.

In 2022, President ThumpCorp, citing increasing civil unrest, suspended habeas corpus, established privately-run industrial “patriotism retraining” camps, and began implementing huge cuts to the national military, increasing reliance on defense contractors like the Koch Rangers, the Cheney Freedom Fighters Inc., the Republican Guard, and its own personal military and security force, the Thumpers. Texas seceded[4] again, setting a precedent that would gain popularity in the coming years.

In 2024, President ThumpCorp won a second term, campaigning on “Still Making America the Greatest Ever Again,” after disbanding Congress and the Supreme Court, completing privatization of the U.S. military, and revoking presidential term limits. The nation splintered.

Eventually, a total of six new nations would emerge from the wreckage of the former Superpower: Texas, the New Confederate States of America[5], the Indian Nations[6], Cascadia[7], the Nation of Zion[8], and the United States of America[9], leaving the original United States of America™ (trademarked in 2025), a mere fragment of its former self. Most of Southern California broke off and sank, and the ocean flooded the remainder, from roughly San Francisco to Mexico.

All of these nations built walls wherever no natural boundaries, such as mountain ranges or major rivers existed. Alaska, apparently feeling the need for an even stronger, more authoritarian leader, seceded and was voluntarily annexed by Russia. ThumpCorp’s government responded by suing Russia for a refund. Everyone apparently just forgot about Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the American Virgin Islands, which were happy to win their independence by default.

The splintering of nations was not limited to the U.S.A. The United Kingdom also split into its component parts. Around the globe, nationalism continued its slide into tribalism, resulting in countless civil wars, and such a constant redrawing of national boundaries that soon Cartography had the highest suicide rate of any profession.

In 2025, ThumpCorp declared itself “President-in-Perpetuity of the United States of America™,” at the same time that a coalition of the three largest and most powerful evangelical organizations, the Diehards In Christ, the Knights of Heaven, and the Evangelicals Against the Destruction of Society[10], proclaimed CEOPIPOTUS Viscount Thump “God’s Anointed Messenger on Earth.” Shortly thereafter, the three organizations combined to form the Church of America. CEOPIPOTUSGAME Thump quickly announced Christianity as the official religion, and the Church of America as the official church of the United States of America™

Over the next one hundred years or so, chaos reigned worldwide, with national borders shifting constantly. More walls went up. Eventually, everyone either died, ran out of ammunition, or just decided they’ve had enough. National borders stabilized. The more totalitarian regimes were too busy trying to control the undesirable portions of their own populations, and stopping the flood of refugees from their lands to devote time or resources to conquest. Gradually things settled down, and people began rebuilding.

 

Part One:

Stupid New World

October 2183

 

 

New Thump City[11]:

The United States of America™

 

Hubert Dillerschlinger

 

Inside the dark and dusty ACRONIM office[12], Hubert Dillerschlinger was not a happy man. A very literate and, he liked to think, literary man, he spent all day, every day, all alone[13] in this room, his desk flanked on one side by a table supporting a gigantic, ancient dictionary, and another table with a matching thesaurus on the other. These were the tools he used to mutilate language to please morons, twisting meanings and mutilating beautiful words to give tacitly legal justification for the powerful to mock the powerless.

A short, baby-faced, bespectacled, balding, slightly overweight black man of forty-two years, he had started out as a messenger, and slowly worked his way up through the clerical ranks despite his race. Of course, his bookish demeanor and natural timidity had certainly helped, as had his Germanic surname; Hubert suspected that many of his superiors, having never deigned to meet him, were probably unaware of his race[14].

Hubert had dreams beyond this office however; he dreamed of writing a book – a book that would change the world, that would expose the rot in America™ to the light of day, and change the corrupted hearts and minds of the people, causing them to turn away from their xenophobia, from their fear of each other, from their prostituted, state-sponsored religion, and spur them to take their freedom back[15], but for now, he had to turn HONESTY into an acronym for the “revamped”[16] Office of TRUTH, and Y’s were always a bitch to work with.

The office acronyms were bad enough, but what really stuck in Hubert’s craw were the job titles. He felt that while most people, if they thought about it, could see through the office acronyms, it was the titles and terms by which they were referenced, that did the most damage. If girls were taught from an early age to want to grow up to be a HARLOT or a WENCH, if boys were raised to think that being a THUG, or a GOON was the highest aspiration a boy could have, if working class children grew up thinking of their parents (and themselves) as MORONS and SAPS, then they would always think of themselves as harlots, wenches, thugs, goons, morons, saps, etc., even though, deep down, they would know what those words really meant. As a NIGGERR who had risen to the ranks of middle-management, he knew that much.

Hubert looked at the clock; quitting time, thank God. “Are we ready to call it a day, Mr. Johnson?” he asked his GOON, Charlie Johnson, who was dozing in the corner[17].

“Hmh? Oh.” Charlie looked at the clock on the wall, “Yeah, yeah. I was about to say that.” Charlie wiped at the line of drool dripping from his chin. “I was just resting my eyes for a minute,” he said, for the benefit of the ThumpCom CompleteSecure camera mounted in the corner.

Hubert assumed the traditional position while Charlie patted him down to make sure he hadn’t pocketed anything, Like there’s anything here to steal, they both thought, and then Charlie escorted Hubert through security, and out to the street.

“See you tomorrow Hubie.”

“Yes sir, Mr. Johnson. Seven o’clock sharp, just like always.”

The two parted; Charlie headed to the bar, and Hubert for home. As he walked the potholed streets and broken sidewalks, past the murals and statues of the various Thumps and other national heroes, he saw some GOONs beating a handcuffed kid for spray painting “Fuck ThumpCorp!” across the bottom of a mural showing Genghis Thump[18] riding a bald eagle as he slaughtered some generic enemies of the nation. Everywhere he looked were flags, banners, and stickers displaying the golden Thumpsticka, the Revolving T of Thumpian Progress (building a better next week, tomorrow!) The few people on the street made a point of not noticing each other, as they scurried from one door to another, like roaches hiding from the light. It made him sick. This is no way for people to live.

It was only a thirty minute walk from the office to his apartment (twenty if he was feeling particularly brave or extra late, and took the old subway tunnels that crisscrossed the city, but like most of the not-that-desperate, he preferred the streets), and he didn’t see one smiling face or even anyone making eye contact. It all made him that much more glad to be home. At least in his apartment, he had his books, and there were no people to remind him of how alone he was.

While unlocking the door to his basement apartment, Hubert surreptitiously checked the door for signs that it had been opened. The toothpick was still wedged into the doorframe, but the short length of monofilament line glued to the inside top of the doorframe was protruding on the outside of the door. Someone had been inside, someone who didn’t want him to know. That meant government men, probably GOONs. Thieves wouldn’t have cared, and wouldn’t have bothered closing the door, much less replace the toothpick, and TIA agents would have been smart enough to realize the toothpick trick was too well known. Either that, or they thought he was stupid enough to rely on it anyway.

Either way, it made him happy. There was nothing the least bit incriminating in his apartment, and, knowing that they had been here made finding both the listening device and the drugs they’d hidden much easier. He left them both alone. He had nothing to hide from the bug, and, if they (whoever “they” were, this time) really wanted to get him, then getting rid of the drugs would just tip them off that he was onto them[19].

He changed his clothes, and then heated up a Wealthy Choice meal[20]. He hated the very idea of them, but as exploitative and condescending as they were, he had some faint hope that at one point, the food may have had more than a passing acquaintance with a farm, as opposed to a laboratory. He knew he should just be happy that, as a government employee, he could afford to eat at least that well. He felt vaguely guilty as he thought of the vast majority of Americans™ who couldn’t, and had to make do with BIEFburger[21] and VEGGIES[22] or worse, for every meal. As always, he didn’t know whether to be relieved or disappointed when it turned out to be almost completely tasteless. After dinner, he cracked a can of Thumpweiser, selected a book – The Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, cleverly printed with a cover from Mein Kampf[23] – from his meager collection, and sat down to read[24].

When the alarm on his Trumplex wristwatch beeped, he laid the book aside, removed the watch, leaving it on the arm of the chair[25], and used a remote control to start random playback of the sound effects he had recorded of himself coughing, going to the bathroom, fixing a drink, and making various other “no need to worry, I’m right here at home” noises.

He slipped quietly out the door, setting his little traps, softly closing it as the recording played a particularly harsh coughing fit. He made his way out the back of the building into the dark streets, winding his way through the street markets, past the buildings with their giant murals of the various Thumps and other national heroes. When he reached the Only The Best Chinese Takeout, he stepped inside.

A counter ran the full width of the room, trapping the customers in a short but extremely wide waiting area, and the air reeked of rancid oil and burnt meat and noodles. There was only one other customer. “Use your bathroom?” Hubert asked the surly old woman seated on a stool behind the payment console, reading Atlas Shrugged as smoke from the cigar[26] clamped between her teeth rose into her rheumy, unblinking eyes. She stared at him for a moment, and jerked her nicotine-stained thumb toward a door marked “Private.”

He stepped into the tiny, reeking bathroom, stood there for a moment, then turned, opened the door, and rushed back out, dragging a wave of stale stench behind him. As the foulness washed over him, the other customer blanched and pulled his shirt collar up over his nose, and Hubert told the old woman, “There’s no toilet paper. Also, I’d like a number 24.”

She scowled even more deeply, and handed him a fistful of napkins. He returned to the bathroom, where he closed and locked the door, laid the napkins on top of the toilet tank, and quietly knocked “shave and a haircut” on the back wall. From the other side, came the “two” knock, and he finished with the “bits.” Half of the wall panel behind the toilet folded back, revealing a man with a gun.

Hubert stepped through, and shook the man’s hand, “Phil, good to see you.”

“And you,” the man smiled, “you’re the last to arrive. I was starting to worry.”

“I just took a longer route this time.” Hubert went down a flight of steps, into a room with several people who all looked up at his entrance. An extremely large, young, black man in an Only The Best Chinese Takeout t-shirt stepped forward, nodded in welcome, took Hubert’s hooded jacket, squeezed into it, and started up the steps. “Don’t forget to flush,” Hubert called after him, then shook his head as he thought, It’s a good thing we all look alike to them.

The young man – Kwantrell – was a decoy. He would pose as Hubert for the camera upstairs and leave, then return with Hubert’s coat in a backpack. When Hubert left, he would wear Kwantrell’s OTBCT jacket, and his own coat in a delivery bag, leaving Kwantrell’s in a designated place.

A tall, fiercely handsome man with a movie-star smile shook Hubert’s hand. “Good to see you Hubie.” Tough, strong, picturesquely scarred and meaningfully tattooed, Ajax Steele was an honest-to-God hero, a man of action and the most-wanted resistance leader in America, and surrounded, as always by a crowd of starry-eyed young female admirers hanging on his every word. Hubert respected the man for his reputation, loathed him for his personality, and sometimes seriously questioned his mental capacity. Still, Hubert had to admit he’d been good for recruiting, bringing in as many male admirers as female to the cause. He was one of those guys that women wanted, and men wanted to be.

“Good to see you too, Ajax.”

“Let’s get down to business,” Ajax said to the crowd, and they all surrounded the table. “I hereby call this meeting of the AARP to order.” He pounded the table with the ancient six-shooter (reputed to have belonged to either Wild Bill Hickok, John Wayne, or General George Patton, depending on how much alcohol Ajax had imbibed before telling the story) that he used as a gavel, and grinned at Hubert. “Sorry Hubie, I know you hate it when I do that.”

“I just don’t think it’s safe.”

“Ah, you worry too much. Anyway, let’s get this show on the road. Hit it, Mr. Secretary.”

Hubert gritted his teeth as he returned Ajax’ smile. Just call me Hubert, you moron. “Okay, Clari, you’re up first.”

Clari, a stocky, middle-aged woman cleared her throat, and reported that her crews had tunneled into four of the six known GOON munitions storage facilities and were close to breaching the others. In the four already accessed, they were making slow, but sure, progress in sabotaging the ammunition. “If we can get more equipment, it’ll go a lot faster though.”

Ajax instructed Luis, their head of supply to get with Clari, find out what she needed, and do everything in his power to get it for her. “Alf?” he asked, turning to another man, “how’s it going on bypassing the internet filter servers[27]?”

That’s okay, you just run the meeting then.

Alf, a heavy-set, older man with food in his beard cleared his throat, stood up, and proceeded to give a lengthy report, very little of which was even remotely understood by anyone else present. As far as Hubert could tell, Alf and his techies were busy backward learning a CCIT blahblahblah, blah, blah blah choke packet and attempting to install a blah, blah, blahblahblah, blahblah, blah, black hole cluster controller in the resource blahblahblahblah in order to tweak and upload a blah, blah, and blahblah, blah blahblahblah, blah in the blahblah blah blahblahblah in order to subinterface an X1200 blahblahblahblah blahblahblah encoding into the blah of the blah and blah blah, or something to that effect.

When he sat down Ajax, Hubert, and the rest did their best to appear to consider his report. “Uhhhh,” Ajax said, “. . . and that’ll do it, you think?”

“Oh yeah, no doubt,” Alf said, “as long as the . . .,” and he was off and running again while Hubert’s and everyone else’s eyes glazed over. Eventually, Alf wound down.

“Okay then . . . that’s great . . . really great work Alf,” said Ajax. “Thanks for clearing that up for us.” Before Alf could erupt into another burst of tech-speak, Ajax asked, “Does anyone else have anything to report?”

Alf’s hand shot up.

No, no, no, don’t do it, keep moving, keep it moving.

“Pete, Michelle, how are the new recruits working out?” asked Ajax, clearly not noticing Alf’s hand, which waved like a fifth-grade teacher’s pet practicing semaphore.

Perhaps I’ve misjudged you, Ajax.

The meeting continued until all past and current business had been covered, and plans had been laid for their next steps. Like all staff meetings, it was long, boring, and not really worth recording, and long. Very long.

“Okay then, I think we’d better call it a night.” Ajax slammed his six-shooter down. There was a pop and a puff of smoke, one of Ajax’ groupies grunted, and everyone else ducked. “What the—“ Ajax said, looking at the gun, “—I could’ve sworn I unloaded . . .”

Hubert took the gun from him, while others examined the groupie who’d been hit. She was lucky—the powder was old, and the bullet didn’t have enough velocity to even break the skin.

“Are you happy now?” Hubert asked Ajax.

“Hell no, I’m not happy,” Ajax said, “that bullet was an antique too, part of the set. Do you know how much money I just lost?”

Hubert looked at him disbelievingly, or at least mostly disbelievingly.

“I mean, yeah, I’m happy that Julie—Jenny?—Ginny?—dammit, her—that she’s not hurt or whatever too, of course.”

Hubert was speechless.

Ajax wasn’t. “That’s why gun safety is so important people!” he announced to the room. “Think about what could have happened, and let that be a lesson to you all. These things are nothing to fool around with.”

After that, the assembly broke up, everyone leaving individually by various exits. Ajax waved Hubert over; “Hubie, I’ve been thinking. I still think we need a better name, one with some . . . uh . . . some oomph to it.”

“Oomph?”

“Yeah. I was thinking something like The Avengers, or The Guardians; it’s not fair—all these security groups have such cool names and our name sounds like somebody throwing up, you know what I mean? I mean, dammit Hubie, even our competition all have better names than us[28]

This again? “Ajax, it’s just a name. It doesn’t matter what we’re called, it’s what we do that’s important.”

“Yeah, but still . . . I was hoping you’d be able to help out, you know, because of your job, you know?”

“I think we’ve got more important things to worry about, don’t you?” Hubert put on Kwantrell’s jacket, and handed the gun back to Ajax. “Listen, you think about it and we’ll talk about it next week, okay?” He started up the stairs.

“But that’s what you said last week!” Ajax called after him.

Hubert waved without turning around. It’s what I’m gonna say next week too, you jackass. Good God, it’s going to be a long revolution

[1] As previously noted, establishment politics were viewed very, very unfavorably at this point in time. In fact, Thump’s bloviating style, abrasive attitude, and monumental disregard for anything that didn’t have his name on it, worked in his favor. Voters seemed to think that he must be a political outsider, as he was simply too big an asshole to get anywhere within the system.

[2] Except, perhaps ironically, cosmetic surgery, certain recreational transplant procedures, erectile dysfunction medication, penis enlargement procedures, and cryogenics, all of which became prohibitively expensive for virtually all but the richest and most powerful.

[3] One campaign ad stated, “The Supreme Court said I’m a person: If I can buy a politician, why can’t I just be one?” The campaign was hailed as a return to truth and transparency in politics.

[4] The first successful national campaign for peace occurred at this point, when the remaining states unanimously refused to go to war to force Texas to rejoin the Union. The day the secession was announced, The New York Times headline was, “Finally Some Good News!”

[5] Same as the old CSA, with the addition of Kentucky and W. Virginia.

[6] Essentially everything from Texas to Canada, and from the Rockies to the Mississisippi River

[7] The northwest, from what was left of California, to the Rocky Mountains.

[8] Arizona, Utah, and Nevada.

[9] What used to be known as New England.

[10] Somehow, the irony-challenged leaders of these organizations never considered the inevitable acronymization of their collective names, until it was enshrined in the national consciousness.

[11] Formerly New York City. Now the capitol of the United States of America™

[12] “ACRONIM” had been formed not long after the accidental acronym DICKHEADs became part of the public consciousness, largely to prevent similar embarrassments in the future.

[13] Except, of course, for his GOON, who made sure he didn’t slack off on his work, and made sure he got through security every day.

[14] Although it is possible, maybe even likely that they knew: It is entirely possible that Hubert’s advancement was the result of a little known government program known as Affirmative Action, a program aimed at proving that equal opportunities were available to all, by ensuring that a token number of (mostly lower-level) government positions were filled by minorities, as a way of “proving” that racism in America™ was a thing of the past. It is also possible that they were simply unable to find a white candidate willing to spend all his time with his nose in books, thinking about words.

[15] It’s good to have a dream.

[16] Frequently changing the names of agencies and offices, under the guise of rooting out corruption, along with “appointing special investigative task forces” and other false flag operations generally removed the need for any further changes.

[17] Give the guy a break. The only thing more boring than making acronyms all day, is watching someone make acronyms all day.

[18][18] CEOPIPOTUSGAME #23 (They started the count over with Viscount Thump).

[19] Being a black, low-level executive in America™ was a dangerous and complex life.

[20] Wealthy Choice: made from only the freshest meals left over by the very best people. You may not be rich and famous, but now you can eat like them at affordable prices. Now beggars CAN be choosers—eat like a winner, not like a loser; eat Wealthy Choice. From Thump Foods.

[21] a line of affordable meat-adjacent food products from Thump Laboratories’ Digestibles Division. BIEF was one acronym Hubert tried very hard not to think too much about.

[22] also from Thump Laboratories.

[23] Mein Kampf ranks high on the list of Approved Reading Material, right between the collected works of Ronald Thump, and Ayn Rand’s works,

[24] While clearly, the disguised books would have been considered incriminating, there was no safer place in Thumperica to hide something than a book, which were largely just considered knickknacks for those with delusions of intellect.

[25] It is widely (correctly) suspected that all TrumpTronix products have GPS tracking devices installed.

[26] One of the major accomplishments of President ThumpCorp’s first term was the repeal of virtually all health and food safety regulations.

[27] While the internet was still operational, all internet lines coming from outside America™ ran through filter servers that screened out all undesirable information, and all American servers were strictly partitioned; the average citizen could still access social media, pornography, games, and entertainment, but most educational and defense-related information was blocked.

[28] From the “Some things never change” file: Liberals have historically always had trouble working together. Consequently, there are, at last count, 263 recognized resistance movements in the U.S.A.™, all of whom hate each other only slightly less passionately than they hate the current regime. Even the fact that many, possibly even most, individuals of the resistance are members of multiple resistance groups, and the fact that the biggest difference between most of the groups is the wording of their charters. Ajax is right about one thing, however: almost all the other groups have much cooler names than the AARP.

What I Think: About LGBT&Q Rights and Marriage Equality

Disclaimer:

You (yes, you) should only read the following post if you are actually interested is finding out what I think about LGBT&Q rights and Marriage Equality. I’m going to warn you right off the bat – this is probably not going to be very funny (of course, on the other hand, it may be; I’m a pretty funny guy). If you’re just looking for a laugh, or you don’t care what I think, then just move right along. It’s okay, I won’t be hurt.

Why I’m Writing This:

More and more, lately, I find myself being questioned about why I believe many of the things I do. Frequently, it is by people who are already convinced that I’ve gone completely off the rails, and are less interested in what I think, and why, than they are in seeing how far away from the tracks they think I should be on I’ve gotten (these people, of course, generally believe I should be on the same tracks as them).

I’m not writing this for them because frankly, I think that they’re mostly just looking for a fight, not a discussion. I’m writing this for the others, those few friends I have who, although they may believe I’m wrong, still have enough respect for me to genuinely want to know why I believe all the crazy stuff that I believe, and those who don’t actually know me, but may want to know what I think.

I’m also not writing this to try to convince, or convert, anybody to my way of thinking. I’m just putting it out there in hopes that it will make people think. This will be the first of a series in which I address some of the common sources of division in our society, in hopes of, not only making you think, but of clearly and rationally stating my own position on these issues (sometimes it’s hard to make a case for something on the fly; that kind of conversation usually devolves into issues of “feelings”, without the availability of sources to back up a position or line of reasoning).

I figured I’d start with a fairly easy one; LGBT&Q Rights and Marriage Equality (gay marriage); not that it’s particularly easy, but it (to me anyway) is a little less emotionally charged.

To start with, I’m in favor of not only LGBT&Q rights (and for the sake of expediency, from here on out I’m just gonna call ’em gay rights, which I freely acknowledge is probably insensitive and politically incorrect, but I’m a lazy typist, and it’s my blog. I apologize for any hurt feelings this may cause), I’m in favor of equal rights for all. I believe in liberty.

For Reasons of Liberty:

Now, there are a lot of people, much smarter than I, who have done a lot of thinking about this stuff. Sadly, a lot of them (at least the ones I know of) are also a lot deader than I am, so I’ll just take this opportunity to share some of their thoughts with you:

John Stuart Mill, in On Liberty, said this (among other liberty-related stuff):

“the sole end for which mankind are warranted, individually or collectively in interfering with the liberty of action of any of their number, is self-protection. That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others . . . Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign.”

In other words, no harm, no foul – if it doesn’t hurt anybody else, it’s none of your business. Mill goes on to state expressly that this applies only to people, “in the maturity of their faculties,” i.e. adults who are capable of taking care of themselves. (it is a great book, full of a lot of pretty important thoughts on liberty, and what it means. I highly recommend it. You can probably find it online for free).

The preamble to the U.S. Constitution states:

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”

The parts about establishing justice, securing the blessings of Liberty, and providing for the common defense can be applied directly to this issue.

Justice

Being LGBT or Q is not illegal. It follows then, that in the interests of justice, they are entitled to the same civil rights as I am. Instead, states and the federal government are introducing more and more legislation designed to specifically allow discrimination against them, mostly under the guise of protecting my religious freedom which frankly, needs no defense. The Constitution is all the protection I need.

Honestly, I really feel that if your relationship with God is so tenuous that it can be irreparably harmed by baking a wedding cake or arranging some flowers for two dudes’ wedding, then you’ve probably got bigger issues that you should be working on.

Here are a couple of articles for your consideration: Washington Post and LA Times. I want to point out that the LA Times piece is from the Opinion section, and should be considered as opinion, not fact, but it is still worthy of consideration.

Liberty

It seems to me that to encroach on any citizen’s or demographic’s liberties opens the door to encroaching on the liberty of all. After all, if we can deny rights and protection to LGBT&Q folks, then that just creates a road map for how to deny them to my group or yours should they ever become unpopular.

Defence

I believe that to deny gay folks (or anyone else, for that matter) their liberty harms not only them, but our country. A few years back, when they made it legal for gay folks to serve in the military, there were a lot of people who were convinced that it would destroy our war-fighting ability. Clearly, it hasn’t. Back in my day, of course, it was illegal for gay people to serve, and then we were subjected to the namby-pamby hypocrisy of Bill Clinton’s “Don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, which basically said that gays could serve, as long as nobody knew they were gay.

The reasoning behind all that was that they were a security risk; if enemy agents found someone gay in the military, they could use that information to blackmail the gay service member into betraying classified information, or other treasonous acts. Not until 2010 did we face the fact that, if we removed the ban, we also removed the possibility of our enemies using that as leverage. By removing that ban, we actually made our country safer.

Of course, I can already hear the cries of “think of the children! We’ve got to protect the children!” I agree, we need to protect children; just not from gay folks. We need to protect them from pedophiles – there’s a difference, and here’s a link to a very informative paper on the subject: Facts About Homosexuality and Child Molestation. In case you didn’t take the time to read it, it basically cites a whole lot of studies which found no link between homosexuality and molesting children. The overwhelming majority of child molesters are just that – child molesters, with no sexual interest in adults of either sex.

For Reasons of Humanity:

To deny gay folks equal rights is to deny them their humanity; it tells them that they are less than fully human. Think about the damage that does to a person. To be told that your life is worth less than others, every day, in hundreds, if not thousands, of ways, both direct and indirect. That’s what happens every time a gay person’s partner is denied access to their hospital room because they’re “not family.” When they are rejected by society, by their own family. when they’re openly mocked, and all too frequently humiliated, beaten, and even killed. In fact, gay folks are way more likely to be the victims of hate crimes. Here’s a very informative NY Times article with links to FBI and Justice Departments stats and reports.

When they’re denied the right to marry, they are denied the same rights as straight folks, which seems even more ridiculous in these days of disposable marriages.

I had a good friend, who disagrees with me on a lot of these issues, ask me, “Why do they have to call it marriage?” The answer is simple; for the same reason that “Separate but Equal” didn’t work out for black folks.

I’ve never understood the idea that the existence of gay marriage somehow invalidates my own; the only people who can invalidate my marriage are me, and my wife, the long-suffering and wonderfully forgiving Jess. Two dudes or two chicks being married has no more effect on my marriage than two Muslims, or two Hindus, or two Catholics, or two Atheists, for that matter.

That same friend, who is a much better Christian, and human being, than me, brought up the biblical “marriage is between one man and one woman” argument. I countered that marriage in the bible often is one man and one woman, but it is also one man and two women (Jacob, Leah, & Rachel), one man and many women (Solomon), and apparently allowances were made for one man and one woman + one didn’t-have-any-choice-in-the-matter slave girl (Abraham, Sarah, and Hagar), just to name a few popular biblical variations on marriage. For that matter, were Adam and Eve even technically married?

I also don’t buy that whole “pastors will be forced to perform gay marriages against their will!” argument. Neither does Travis Weber, Director of the Center for Religious Liberty, a part of the Family Research Council, as conservative a bunch as you’re likely to find. He explains it much better than I could in this article, going into a lot of detail on the Constitutional protections for the clergy. He does, of course, only say that it’s not likely, and that it will probably be challenged in the courts, but what isn’t?

For Reasons of Religion:

I am a Christian. Now I know that there’s a lot of stuff in there that pretty clearly says don’t do gay stuff (at least as far as men are concerned. Oddly enough, women seem to have received a pass on this, perhaps to make up for all the other stuff they weren’t allowed to do), especially in Leviticus. However, there’s a lot of stuff in Leviticus that we no longer worry about. Things like: eating shellfish (Lev. 11:10-12), eating pork (Lev. 11:7,8), eating rabbit (Lev. 11:6), a whole chapter on female purification after childbirth (Lev. 12), and mistreating aliens (Lev. 19:33, 34) (of course, that’s a whole other post – bet you can’t wait), and a whole bunch of other stuff.

Now, I’m not being facetious (at least not too facetious), and I don’t want to turn this into a whole religious argument. Anyone who’s read any of my stuff can tell you that I’m not much of a theologian.

What I think, as a Christian, is that it is our duty to spread the word to everyone that God loves them, and spread the good news of his Grace and forgiveness. Jesus said that the greatest commandment was to love God, and that the second greatest was to love one another. I’m pretty sure he meant that to be pretty much all-inclusive.

As far as is it possible for gay folks to be Christian, I believe it is. I know that in my little country church, there is gluttony, gossip, trouble-making, foul-mouthed taking-of-the-Lord’s-name-in-vain, pridefulness, lack of forgiveness, pettiness, anger, sloth, smoking, and drinking, pretty much the whole gamut of sin, and that’s just me. If the body is supposed to be a temple, then mine is the temple of doom. That’s why I’m there; I need Jesus. They might too, and, if I behave toward them, or treat them, in a way that pushes them farther from Jesus, then I’m gonna have to answer for that, and I’ve already got enough to answer for.

Anyway, that’s what I think, and I also think I’ve beaten this dead horse enough for now. I welcome your opinions and comments on this, even if you don’t agree with me. Like I said, I don’t expect you to.

Thanks for reading anyway!

Ordinary, Red-Neck Indiana Farmer Defies Expectations, Finds Solution to Most of World’s Problems

My church is a pretty typical Indiana country church; it varies anywhere from pretty conservative to very conservative. A large portion of our congregation are veterans, and we have a large number of our children who are either currently serving in the military, or waiting for graduation to leave for basic training. We have a lot of farmers, and most of us who aren’t farmers grew up on farms.

It is home to a lot of ordinary people, but also has more than its fair share of characters; you know what I mean – people who, despite their seeming ordinariness, are just a bit skewed. They are the tellers of tall tales, or the basis for them. A few weeks ago, during the prayer request time, one of them stood up.

Now, if your church is like mine, most of the time, folks with a prayer request just raise their hand, and briefly share it when called upon by the preacher. Not this guy. I always look forward to this guy talking, because he doesn’t just make an announcement or a request, he always has a story, and I love stories. I’m going to share this one with you as close to exactly as I can remember it:

Larry’s Prayer Request:

Well . . . Shirley and I were at the Dayton Mall the other day, and she was off shoppin’, and I was lookin’ around, like I do, and I seen this woman sitting on a bench with one o’ them scarf things on her head. Now you know me, I like to talk to the girlies, so I went up and asked her did that thing have something to do with her religion.

She looked a little scared, but said yes, she was a Muslim. Well, we got to talkin’ and it turned out that she was from Iraq. She’d been here seven years, and still talked to her family back home every day on the phone. Now ain’t that somethin’?

I asked her how she liked it here, and she said she loved it. She couldn’t believe all the opportunities there were here. She said right now, she was working three jobs, and had just started her own business, and was trying to get it goin’. She said she didn’t have no opportunities like this for her back in Iraq. She just kept goin’ on and on about what a wonderful country this was.

I asked her about her family, and she said she worried about them all the time, and was tryin’ to save up money to bring more of them over here. She said a lot of them had been killed in all the fighting over the years, especially the men. She’d got pretty teary-eyed talkin’ about that, and I asked her if it’d be okay if I put her family on the prayer list at church.

She said, but aren’t you a Christian? And I said, well yeah, but it really sounded like her family could use all the prayers they could get. Well, that little gal started in cryin’ for real, and give me a big hug, and said yes, that’d be fine, and thank you very much, that would be wonderful. Then she told me to wait, and she run over to this little store, I don’t know if she worked there or not, but she bought up a big bunch of stuff, mostly for girl’s hair, flowers with clips, and the like, and run back over to me and gave ’em to me and said they were for the children in our congregation.

Well, about this time, Shirley come back, and seen this girl a’cryin’, and wanted to know what I’d done, so I told that gal good luck, and I hoped everything worked out okay for her and her family, and we got on out of there. So I want to put her and her family in Iraq on the prayer list. It don’t matter that they’re Muslims, they’re people, and they need the Lord’s help as much as anybody.

So we did.

It strikes me that Larry, an ordinary, redneck, Indiana farmer has found the solutions to much of the world’s problems. I don’t think that Larry’s offer to put Muslims on our prayer list is really that far out of the box. What is unusual is that Larry, unlike the rest of us, is less afraid of appearing foolish than most of the rest of us, and willing to speak openly and frankly with people differently than him, just to satisfy his curiosity about people. If that makes him a fool, then he’s God’s fool, which makes him wiser than most of us.

Note that he didn’t try to convert her, he showed her what a Christian is. He didn’t tell her she didn’t belong, he listened to her. He didn’t try to defend the violence that has cost her so much of her family, he sympathized with her. He didn’t project his fears onto her because of her appearance, he showed her his heart, and in doing so, maybe changed her perception of people like himself. I’m glad to be part of a church that’s home to a character like Larry; A character of character.

We could all learn a lesson from this ordinary, redneck, Indiana farmer, and, if we did, then we might start breaking down the walls that divide us, and maybe make a start on ushering in an age of understanding, empathy, and understanding; three things that really seem to have fallen out of fashion lately. Just a thought.