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To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (3926)2/11/2001 12:07:34 PM
From: Tunica Albuginea  Respond to of 3951
 
blank/error,TA



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (3926)2/11/2001 12:30:26 PM
From: pat mudge  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3951
 
I'll respond to your post later, but before I do I've copied an article I thought worth sharing.

From today's LATimes:

Five writers and one theme: [sanctuary]

The Dream You Deserve

By Harlan Ellison

It happened maybe sixty years ago, but I remember it as ice-sharp as if it had happened this morning. I was standing on the sidewalk outside our house, 89 Harmon Drive, Painesville, Ohio; it was sometime in the ‘40s and I was probably five or six or seven. I looked around at everything, and I said to myself, in one of those blissfully, naively arrogant moments that come only to youngsters for whom the concept of death is as mimetic as a John Woo movie, “All this is mine, all I have to do is go get it.”

Without knowing its shape or parameters, I meant, of course, “the world.” The world was all mine. All I had to do was go get it. At the time that was a bit of a problem, because I wasn’t allowed by my parents to cross the street.

But now it is six decades later, and I have a lot less of the race ahead of me than when I was thunderbolted by my epiphany in Ohio. Now I am, I’m told, “a famous person.” Well, at least famous enough to get my picture in the paper. And I am here to pass on the totality of all the worldly wisdom I’ve accrued. You could do worse: I win most every night on Jeopardy.

(Here’s the best truth I know for certain. Never attribute to “evil” that which you can chalk up to ineptitude.)

Look at the photo. That’s where I live. It is a great house filled with my wife Susan and books and music and Susan and toys and comics and Susan. It is precisely and exactly where I am supposed to be. Because I have spent my life treasuring the magic of individualism. No mealy-mouthed desires to fit in, to be one of the crowd, to dress and speak and live like whatever is considered Acceptable at that given moment. When I was a kid they called such people “characters.” Eccentrics, freaks, weirdos, iconoclasts, curmudgeons, pains in the ass. Yeah, I can get down with that, alla that.

I am right where I’m supposed to be, and just who I made myself. (I’m fond of telling college audiences that what they see before them is a “self-made man,” thereby demonstrating the horrors of unskilled labor.) I have no fall-back position of whining and denial and rathole rationalizations, in these ugly times, when, if you watch Judge Judy, you discover that no one is responsible for having done any of the crummy things they’ve been brought to the bar to explicate. Everything is always somebody else’s fault these days.

Well, dawg, I am here to tell you that I am not only responsible for every second of my life --- no bad breaks, no tough luck, no intervention of gods, no bad genes, no inimical forces arrayed against me --- I am just exactly who I wanted to wind up being.

Spare us both the use of the word “arrogant,” I’m light-years past that pale opprobrium, and as an Artist I accept “self-indulgent” with the remonstration of Quentin Crisp, who said, “Artists in any medium are nothing more than a bunch of hooligans who cannot live within their income of admiration.”

My home is my Xanadu. It is San Simeon without all the tacky religious objects. Shangri-La, Atlantis, Camelot, the best playground I could imagine. Success (he said somberly) is achieving in adult terms that which you desired as a child. If you wanted to be a cowboy, you now run a cattle ranch, you’re a success. If you liked playing doctor and nurse, and now you’re a brain surgeon, you’re a success. I always wanted a house full of secret passages and toys and books and music, and I wanted to make a living as a Professional Liar.

Look at the photo. You see a man as happy in this painful, E-mail voice-mail deregulated nickel&dime George Dubya world as he deserves to be. You don’t necessarily get the dream you hungered after, kiddo. But you always get the one that you earned, the one you deserve.

Why does that knowledge make me smile, huh, whaddaya think?

[Harlan Ellison has had 74 books published; he is a novelist, screenwriter, critic and the recipient of numerous writing awards.]

I agree with everything he says except for illness. I have lost two friends to cancer, one this past week, and both were good people in every since of the word. Neither deserved to die before her “four score and twenty.” Other than that, Ellison is right on.



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (3926)2/11/2001 12:52:38 PM
From: BDR  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3951
 
OT- The world according to Rubin:

Prosperity is not created by people but by governments.
More specifically, higher taxes lead to greater prosperity.
People cannot advance themselves without the help of a government program.
Tax dollars are the property of the government not the people who pay them.
Spending by taxpayers is irresponsible but spending by Congress is not (actually, that is Al Gore's line).
Cutting taxes is fiscally irresponsible but proposing new spending programs is not.
We can trust Congress not to spend the surplus.

Republicans are as guilty as Democrats when it comes to spending so I am not pretending they have the high ground on this issue. Give them a surplus and they will find a way to spend it.



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (3926)2/11/2001 4:20:58 PM
From: Tunica Albuginea  Respond to of 3951
 
Mucho, seems like in spite of all the prosperity , people just
don't want to hear about it...

nytimes.com

nytimes.com

TA



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (3926)2/14/2001 9:19:43 AM
From: Tunica Albuginea  Respond to of 3951
 
Mucho Mass, an enlightened post to Rubin.It is simple.
It is not difficult to recognize a crock, IMHO.
A crock is defined as somebody who uses devious underhanded
methods,obfuscation, lying and blue smoke and mirrors,
to achieve bad goals.That was Rubin's and Clinton's modus
operandi.

Ron Reece here tells you why

Message 15348451

BTW, the above duo is also the reason for the Nasdaq's collapse,also IMO,

TA

===============

you said



Message #3926 from Mucho Maas at Feb 11, 2001 9:03 AM

OT--A Prosperity Easy to Destroy
By ROBERT E. RUBIN
nytimes.com