Showing posts with label America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label America. Show all posts

Sunday, July 17, 2016

It's The Ideology

It wasn’t a gun.  It wasn’t a bomb. It wasn’t a machete.   It was a truck.  2 -3 minutes.  84 now dead, including 10 children. Do you understand now? It’s not the weapon.  It’s the ideology. ~  A viral Facebook post.

I’ve had an epiphany. Yes, I totally understand now.  If someone with a twisted ideology or some random radical Islamist wants to take out a crowd of people then he’ll find a way.  It might be fertilizer rife with ammonium nitrate, it might be a box cutter, it might be a baseball bat (as happened in Deltona Florida in 2004) or it might be a simple kitchen knife as happened in Osaka in 2001.  Most recently of course, it was a truck.  "Where there's a will, there's a way," goes the old saw.

Saturday, July 16, 2016

140 Characters and a Meme

We’re two weeks removed from our nation’s 240th Independence Day and the founders' great experiment is experiencing an upheaval unlike any that I can recall since the protests of the Vietnam War over 40 years ago. 


Over two centuries ago, America was the revolutionary undertaking that a doubting old world viewed with a bemused expectation of imminent collapse. For more than two centuries America has weathered the storms of war, strife, corruption and a temporary sundering. It's managed to put some issues behind it. But one issue, one wound will not heal. Whenever we think that the scab might fall off we manage to pick it and open the lesion afresh. It's our trauma that's scarred the nation since before it was a nation. 

It's the can that the founders and their successors managed to kick down the national road for over 200 years.  And once again, for that umpteenth time, we stand with that can before us with the decision to pick it up and finally dispense with it or kick it for another generation to deal with.  That can is of course race relations and the can kickers have been our nations leaders; by and large old white guys. The original can kickers couldn't come to agreement despite their reputation for being enlightened and ahead of their time. 

Monday, February 29, 2016

Trumping America

"It's amazing to me. A guy with the worst spray tan in America is attacking me for putting on makeup.”  "Donald is not going to 'Make America Great.' He's going to make America orange!"
~ Marco Rubio on Donald Trump

Historically presidential election years are characterized by truths and half-truths, partisanship, accusations, a fair bit of slander and enough melodrama to fill up several seasons of daytime TV.  They’re a Machiavellian daytime soap.  It’s popular to look back longingly at elections past and glorify them for having the dignity that never was.  And so we always try to lean on that nostalgia and the pretense that each upcoming election will rediscover statesmanship.  Yeah this election has squashed any hope of decorum. This election year a process that has at least historically pretended to having dignity has all of the decorum of a rolling barrel of random trash.  And that barrel was set in motion by the antics of one Donald J. Trump.  He came onto the political scene with all of the grace and tact of an exploding gasoline truck. 

Monday, February 22, 2016

Brief Notes from a Political Dreamer

I’m a dreamer apparently.  I’ve always thought of myself as being pretty matter of fact; pragmatic to the point of being stodgy.  I guess not.  Since I’ve hitched my political wagon to one Bernard Sanders I’ve been relegated to the ranks of the starry eyed idealists; Utopians with big ideas and small chance for success.  I’ve been told by the Hillary crowd that a vote for Sanders is tantamount to a vote for the GOP.  “We like Sanders," they say in that patronizing, I'm talking to an 8 year old tone.  "He’s got good ideas but they aren’t realistic.  Hillary has a better chance of beating Trump.”



Saturday, February 20, 2016

The Quadrennial Games

It’s time once again for the quadrennial party.  You know the one.  That over the top orgy of backbiting, name calling, sore losers, graceless winners, allegations of cheating, actual cheating, xenophobia, jingoism, backroom deals, payoffs, under the table money and other assorted bad behavior.  Thought I was going to write about the Summer Olympics didn’t you?  Maybe another time.  This is about the presidential elections. 

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Sodden Holiday Thoughts

We’re approaching that holiday time of the year once again.  Actually if you believe corporate it’s been holiday season since sometime around Labor Day.  Time to buy the little woman a Lexus or a Mercedes to go with the thousand dollar bauble from Zale’s.  Break out the camping gear because Black Friday is a-comin’ and you gotta blow off a couple weeks of PTO so that you can save a hundred bucks on a TV.  Every year about this time I try to come up with some holiday theme.  It gets a little harder every year and I was despairing a bit until Starbucks dropped a big present under the tree and a self-styled evangelist put a giant bow on it.


Saturday, November 7, 2015

Mountain Musings

“I believe that a man gets closer to God out there in the big, free West,”  ~  William F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody.

There’s something both invigorating and spiritual in sitting on a porch in the warmth of the late afternoon sun, listening to the gurgle of a creek not 10 yards away. Aside from that creek the only sounds are the wind and the occasional screech of a circling hawk.  I’m alternately reading and glancing up from my book at the red cliffs that overlook the cabin.  Bighorn sheep clamor on those cliffs.  Downstream the green, yellow and orange leaves on young aspens shiver in the cooling autumn wind.  They shine and shimmer like colored coins. 

Wow I guess I didn’t fully appreciate the quiet until I got back home to the San Francisco Bay Area and went to my gym a week later.  The noise was like getting whacked in the face with a baseball bat; clanging steel, grunting and shouting and of course the dreck and cacophony that the tone deaf call music.  Walking in I hunched over from the sheer weight of the din.
             Ante Up! Yap that fool!
Ante Up! Kidnap that fool!
It's the perfect timing, you see the man shining
Get up off them god damn diamonds! Huh!
Ante Up! Yap that fool!
Ante Up! Kidnap that fool!
In the locker room I got ready for my work out and said to myself in disgust that “I could eat alphabet soup and shit better lyrics.”  Maybe a little too loud as the guy a few lockers down shot me a look.
High mountain valley

Gridlock
                                                            

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Jackson Hole - Horse Thieves and Celebrities; Cheap Beer and Overpriced Pretzels


We’d pulled into Jackson late on a Saturday night a bit disoriented, very hungry and too dog tired to worry about food.  Well the wife didn’t worry about food but I opted for some overpriced room service; but I repeat myself because room service is culinary grand larceny.  What we found in the morning when we headed into town was not the Jackson that I remembered from childhood when we visited on a family vacation.  Understand that I don’t have the faintest recollection of my childhood Jackson but I can state with positive certainty that my childhood Jackson was not this Jackson. I couldn't imagine that the Jackson that my parents brought me to was a haven for the 1 percent. 

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Dropping Benjamins in Jackson

It was a 14 hour pull from Nevada to Jackson, Wyoming.  We limped into Jackson at about 9 on a Saturday night.  The grand plan had been to leave Fernley early and drive as far as we could and get a room for the night.  As far as we could drive turned out to be Jackson and Jackson apparently had no room to spare.  We drove past hotel after motel after inn and every one displayed that increasingly depressing NO VACANCY sign.  Uh, this was a problem.  My Jackson reservation was for the next day; at 3 PM to be exact.  I frankly had expected that we would end up spending the night in Pocatello or American Falls in Idaho but the allure of Wyoming and the Grand Tetons provided the adrenaline to keep me going.  Well, that and a river of Dr. Pepper. 


Thursday, October 1, 2015

Goin to Jackson (Wyoming)

I'm goin' to Jackson, I'm gonna mess around,
Yeah, I'm goin' to Jackson,
Look out Jackson town. – Song “Jackson” ; Billy Ed Wheeler and Jerry Leiber. 

Okay, the song that Johnny Cash made famous wasn’t referring to Jackson, Wyoming but the tune rambled through my head as we made our drive.

It was a long pull getting to Jackson, Wyoming from Fernley, Nevada where we spent our first night.  Fourteen hours on the road but not all of it driving.  We stopped for photos, for food, for coffee, water or soda.  We stopped to stretch and we stopped to relieve ourselves of the coffee, water and soda.  We left Fernley in the black of the morning and arrived in Jackson in what seemed a blacker night. 

Friday, September 25, 2015

Getting Away: Fernley Nevada

On the road from the San Francisco Bay Area to the Yellowstone area.  The adventure begins. 

Fernley Nevada; established 1905.  We’re on the road trip, headed for the mountain states.  Fernley wasn’t exactly where I’d expected to land on the first day out.  I’d hoped to reach Winnemucca on the first night but “civilization” (and I use that term loosely) wouldn’t let go of its nasty, relentless grip. 

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Teasing Tatanka and Other Travel Plans

Tatanka – Lakota Sioux word for American Bison (buffalo)
If a bear charges you after a surprise encounter, stay still and stand your ground.  National Park Service Advisory

The plans are pretty much in place.  The accommodations are all booked, the basic itinerary is set and in less than two weeks it’ll be time for us to over pack, throw fishing and camera gear and mountains of other stuff and junk into the car that we won’t need and will never touch and head out on vacation.  I’ll leave the boilerplate “out of office” email message that says I’ll have no cell phone or internet service while I’m gone.  You see this is all part of the new American work protocol in which your employer expects you drop everything, leisure, kids's birthdays, sex and death (a family member's or yours), if and when duty calls.  By saying that you don't have any service you're trying to sound like you're saying, "Gosh I'd really like to but I'm in the wilderness."  But what you're really saying is "Fuck off:" Everyone leaves the same basic message, “Hi, I’m sorry I missed your email but I’m at Silicon Valley and there’s no internet or phone service here.”  I mean really how many places are left where you have no phone or internet service?  Actually I know of one.  That will be the cabin in Montana we’re renting for 5 nights out of the two weeks we'll be gone.  It’s about 20 miles from the nearest town and there really is no phone or internet. 


Saturday, August 22, 2015

Participating in the American Demise

There's been a buzz in the news cycle during the last couple of weeks about yet another national plague; one that’s rotting the culture and moral fiber of America.  It has nothing to do with sexual preference or email-gate: not about Muslims or right wing Christians; and it isn't over a warming earth or smarmy, sanctimonious political windbags.  Nope, none of those.  The new national scourge is, hold onto your butts sports fans – participation trophies.





For those who’ve been on a cruise or just naturally choose to avoid stupidity, participation trophies became part of the national debate when professional football player James Harrison announced that the trophies that were given to his children would be returned.  Said Harrison; “I came home to find out that my boys received two trophies for nothing, participation trophies! While I am very proud of my boys for everything they do and will encourage them till the day I die, these trophies will be given back until they EARN a real trophy. I'm sorry I'm not sorry for believing that everything in life should be earned and I'm not about to raise two boys to be men by making them believe that they are entitled to something just because they tried their best...cause sometimes your best is not enough, and that should drive you to want to do better...not cry and whine until somebody gives you something to shut u up and keep you happy.”

And so, for the time being at least, our new national Yoda on America’s moral fiber is a professional football player; appropriate for a sports crazed nation that is absolutely, insanely and unabashedly goggle eyed gaga over football. Of course it was Harrison’s right to strip his kids of the trophies. It’s not like he beat them or sucker punched a woman.  That he had to announce it to the world would be puzzling if not for the fact that Harrison has a penchant for stirring the pot.  And stir it he did as the battle lines were drawn and the pros and cons of participation trophies were debated in every medium and I suppose damn near every sports bar in the nation.  The anti-trophy crowd’s argument was outlined by Nancy Armour of USA today; “Yet somewhere along the way, someone had the misguided notion that kids should live in a la-la land where everything is perfect, there are no hardships or heartbreaks, and you get a shiny trophy or a pretty blue ribbon just for being you…No wonder study after study has shown that millennials, the first of the trophy generations, are stressed out and depressed. They were sold a bill of goods when they were kids, and discovering that the harsh realities of life apply to them, too, had to have been like a punch to the gut.”  Pardon me, I feel a sneeze coming on –“BULLSHIT.”  Ah that feels better.

So there we have it.  The collapse of America is imminent because of participation trophies.  Okay, that’s hyperbole but I’ve exaggerated for a reason, because folks have gone off the deep end over cheap hardware.  Consider NBC Washington anchor Jim Vance who opined, “It’s child abuse to give a kid a trophy that he has not earned.” We’re talking about children here folks; children playing games.  But as too often happens with youth sports the adults are butting in and fucking up the works; because that’s what adults do.

Having two kids who participated in youth sports and having coached youth sports I guess I have a little experience in the area.  My kids got participation trophies.  They’re packed away in a plastic bin somewhere.  My kids; one 32 and one 29 seem to be doing just fine thank you and I don't even think that they remember the trophies.  They work, they’re raising kids and they’ve gone through some hard times; particularly my daughter who I often consider one of the grittiest, most tenacious people I know.  I have a nephew who got a participation trophy for tee ball.  A few years later his dad died and the boy became the man of the house and remained so all the way through his college graduation. 

As a coach I gave out more than a few of these trophies.  The kids were happy, for a moment; and then the trophies were more or less forgotten in favor of the pizza party and handed to the parents who I imagine put them up on a mantle to collect dust and take up space until they were finally put away in storage.  These are mementos, nothing more, nothing less.

Give a kid a trophy and the leap is made that he won't be prepared for real life.  Okay, wanna get the little blighters ready for the real world?  Let's talk behind their backs; spread rumors about them; throw them under the bus; flip them a bird and drop an "F" bomb on them if they reach in front of you for the bowl of potatoes at the dinner table and by all means decrease their allowance as you load more chores on them. 

Over the decades I’ve become weary of that time worn notion that somehow athletics prepare kids for life, build character and toughen the spirit.  I’ve adopted John Wooden’s idea that “Sports don’t build character, they reveal it.” It isn’t up to the coach, the team or an activity to do the parent’s job of preparing a child for life, molding character and building a foundation that will stand up to life’s storms.  As for Ms. Armour and her notion that millennials are depressed; well maybe she needs to take a little stroll out of the sports department and take a visit to the news department.  Everyone’s depressed lady.  Americans are working brutal hours, are afraid to take vacation time and are bringing home less of the bacon (which by the way costs more per pound and has less lean and more fat); our government is a bureaucratic, bickering snag to progress; we’ve been at war for more than a decade; personal privacy is extinct and the front runner for the GOP presidential nomination is nuts-a-rama.  And Nancy Armour is worried about trophies?

What is truly disappointing is that the national debate about youth sports has centered on hokum; a non-issue.  Whatever happened to the other issues?  You know the ones that are apparently too trivial to catch the ire of Washington news anchors.  It would be refreshing to see Google get blown up with stories and debates about:
                Kids burning out at a young age because they’re pushed by parents and coaches to travel hither and yon playing a sport year round in that often futile hunt for the D-1 scholarship.
                Coaches falsifying records to pack their teams with ringers.
                Coaches teaching kids the "benefits" of flaunting league rules.
                Coaches and parents acting out at games, all the way from abusing umpires, officials and the other team to coming to outright fisticuffs.
                Kids undergoing major orthopedic surgeries because they’re pushed to do too much too soon.
                The use of steroids by kids as early as 8th grade.
                Coddled kids?  What about those uber-talented youngsters who get to skate from youth through college not being able to read at grade level?  What about the star athletes who, during their youth, aren't held accountable for any aspect of real life, be it basic responsibility or differentiating between wrong and right.  As long as they produce runs and wins, hey, it's all good - just try not to get caught next time. 

If we’re going to have a national tirade about participation awards why are we picking on kids?  What about the tens of thousands of adults who jog a 10K at 15 minutes a mile?  They get medals. And while kids usually forget about their awards the adults literally slaver over their medals; they paper their walls with them  At the risk of sounding like a geezer, back in my day you didn’t get a medal unless you finished in the top three. Everyone else got a cheapie little ribbon.  I’ve got less of a problem with an 8 year old getting a trophy than an adult getting a fancy medal for taking pictures along the course with a cell phone. 

Sports is America's graven image.  Professional sports are a business for both owners and players where character, fair play and sportsmanship are for the most part relegated to the worn, dusty shelves of nostalgia.  College sports are a morass of hypocrisy, greed, corruption and oceans of money misapplied.  But youth sports are for the most part and for the vast majority of kids supposed to be a fun activity.  Yes there are opportunities for life lessons; to learn about teamwork, appreciate camaraderie, develop healthy habits, hone skills and coordination, learn perseverance and maybe develop a lifelong activity. Youth sports have become the last bastion of sport as a game; where fun is supposed to trump yes - real life.  



                

Monday, March 9, 2015

Evacuating Suburbia

Throw out them LA papers
And that moldy box of vanilla wafers.
Adios to all this concrete.
Gonna get me some dirt road back street
~  From L.A. Freeway, Lyrics by Guy Clark

“Concrete and cars are their own prison bars”
~ From Toes, Written by Zac Brown, John Driskell Hopkins, Shawn Mullins and Wyatt Durette

Retirement talk has been revolving around the domestic circle a lot lately.  Mine, not the wife’s.  You see she’s been retired and according to her it’s the shit (that’s urban slang for she likes it).  I know this because she tells me it’s the shit all the time, quite often after I've dragged my worn out bones into the house after a day at the office and an hour on the freeway with a few thousand of my fellow Americans feeling like shit; about 10 pounds of it in a 5 pound sack (which is old school for suburbia blows).  


Sunday, February 15, 2015

Two Stories; Giving and Taking

This is a story about two stories.  Both are typically American.  Both reflect values.  One story is about values cherished.  The other is about values gone awry.  The stories tell a story; about what is good in America and what is wrong with America.  Each story is about responsibility; accepted and denied. Both stories were on the recent nightly news and were broadcast within minutes of each other.  One story can warm the heart and bring a tear.  The other story is a groin kick that makes you wonder about the double dealing we often think pervades our society.    

Saturday, December 6, 2014

In The Land of the Mustangs

The three ambled slowly along the hard scrabble trail, rocky white clumps that crumble underfoot and disintegrate into grainy sand; a landscape peppered with knots of spiny sagebrush.  Looking at the trio you feel desolation; a desperate loneliness;drifting as if looking for something or someplace but you don’t know what or where.  They headed for the ridge that would soon swallow them up taking them to..
A family group of mustangs stops at a water hole

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Visiting the Founders' Dilemma

“I can only say that there is not a man living who wishes more sincerely than I do to see a plan adopted for the abolition of slavery.”  ~ George Washington

“21 Aug. 1805…bought a negro woman Lucretia Jame’s wife, her 2. sons John & Randall and the child of which she is pregnant, when born, for £180.”  ~ Thomas Jefferson’s Memorandum Book  

We traveled the Old Dominion from the northeast corner at Arlington over the state line from DC to the southwest corner at Abingdon, just a tobacco spit away from the Tennessee border.  Along our route we made house calls on some former presidents.  The presidents are long since gone but their homes, from Washington’s Mount Vernon just south of DC to Jefferson’s Monticello on the eastern edge of the Blue Ridge, all remain in magnificent restoration.  Four of our nation’s first five presidents hailed from Virginia, George Washington (1) Thomas Jefferson (3) James Madison (4) and James Monroe (5) and we visited the homes of all four. 
 
Reproduced Slave's Cabin at Mount Vernon

Thursday, September 18, 2014

On The Civil War Trail

“The Civil War defined us as what we are and it opened us to being what we became, good and bad things... It was the crossroads of our being, and it was a hell of a crossroads.”
~ Shelby Foote, The Civil War: A Narrative

Unharmed he reached the nearest sufferer. He knelt beside him, tenderly raised the drooping head, rested it gently upon his own noble breast, and poured the precious life-giving fluid down the fever scorched throat.
This done, he laid him tenderly down, placed his knapsack under his head, straightened out his broken limb, spread his overcoat over him, replaced his empty canteen with a full one, and turned to another sufferer. 
~ Excerpt of Confederate Gen. Joseph B. Kershaw’s account of the Angel of Marye’s Heights.

“And let the perpetual light shine upon them.”
~ My wife Cora.

We left Washington DC for a driving tour of Virginia.  Our drive crisscrossed Virginia's Civil War trails.  You can't hardly drive for a few hours in Virginia without coming across a site related to the Civil War.  If it isn't a building or a battlefield it might simply be a sign describing a particular spot as being some general's headquarters or a place where a skirmish took place.  The white signs are along highways, on country roads, near schools and on the fringes of shopping malls. 

Confederate cannons on the hills above Fredericksburg

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Song of Appalachia

On Google Maps Hiltons, Virginia looks to be only a short jog from Abingdon where our hotel was.  In fact the directions will tell you that it’s only 27 miles away.  The directions will also tell you though that it’s about a 50 minute drive.  Well that didn't look at all right when we started out until a few minutes into the drive when we left the the town limits of Abingdon for a narrow, winding road through the woods and farms of that little corner of Appalachia. This section of Virginia is about a tobacco spit away from the border with Tennessee.

A familiar Baptist Church in Appalachia

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Reporting From Washington

Reporting from Washington.  You hear that at least once every evening on the nightly news.  That’s because DC is, as Reggie Jackson once said of himself, “the straw that stirs the drink.”  Or is that Wall Street?

DC isn't a Budweiser or a white wine town; it’s a Scotch rocks town. 

DC oozes power.  It radiates from the buildings, flows down the Potomac, and jostles it’s way along the busy sidewalks.  You feel it in the streets, in restaurants and in bars.  There seems to be more business than tourism in the marble lobby of The Willard Hotel (known to locals as “The W”).  Folks in business suits greet each other with firm handshakes and then retire to a corner to discuss - what?  A peace initiative?  An appropriations bill?  What legislator to lobby (read: buy off)?  Possibly an obfuscation strategy, or for those old enough to remember, the old Ralph Kramden "Hamana hamana, hamana."  
The Willard Hotel's Marble Lobby
We’d planned an al fresco dinner at Bobby Van’s Grill and before leaving I mulled over the jeans I was wearing.  C'mon, a pair of jeans is the everyday ensemble in California.  I glanced down at my jeans and running shoes; nah; shit’s not gonna work.  Went to slacks and loafers.  Good move; I’d have stuck out like Old MacDonald – or Surfer Joe.  Either way it would've been a bad look.  You don’t see baggy shorts, jeans and a t-shirt in a DC restaurant - not unless the wearer is from California.

Strolling near The White House you know what you see; uniformed Secret Service, Park Police, DC cops, bomb sniffing German Shepherds and those fellows in gray suits and shades.  You also don’t know what you don’t see.  A tour bus operator pointed to a sniper at the top of a nearby building.  Chilling. 

If you come to DC you need to visit The Newseum; no you really NEED to visit it.  Dedicated to the fourth estate and the ideals of the First Amendment it sits on Pennsylvania Avenue, ironically between two infamous manure factories; The Capitol Building and The White House.  The Newseum is a big building of steel and glass, making it highly transparent, unlike the government buildings that flank it. Why do you NEED to visit it?  Because the press has become a popular whipping boy; it’s biased, its left wing, its right wing, it’s a corporate tool, it’s this, it’s that, but whatever it is it can’t be any good.  Right?  Everyone seems to have his own bias about the press, whether it came honestly or it came from Limbaugh, but the fact is that very often the press is the only check when the so called checks and balances of our government become unchecked and out of balance.  Lest we forget Watergate, Iran-Contra, and countless investigative reports that have uncovered government, waste, abuse, excess of power and assorted skullduggery.

Why do you NEED to see the Newseum?  Because in a powerful section about the former East Germany you see what happens when we don’t have a free press or a first amendment or we the citizens fall asleep at the switch and buy the government line, or the corporate line. You see in the East Germans the lengths to which people will go, when they yearn for basic freedoms; you know, kinda like that 1776 thing.  But what the hell, a lot of us are already asleep; night-night democracy.

There is also a film presentation that relives the press coverage of 9/11 through the words of the reporters that were there.  Just outside of the theater is a well used satin metal tissue holder.

At The Newseum there is a display of the 9/11 press coverage. 

There is also a permanent tissue dispenser

As we strolled Pennsylvania Avenue, I noticed a building that houses, figuratively at least, a butt load of my hard earned money; IRS headquarters.  Sigh

There might be better ways to sight see than going for a run in the early hours but I can’t think of one right now.  Forget that health stuff, the lighting is spectacular and if you aren't alone with the sights you’re about as close to alone as you’re going to be.  Two early morning runs through the National Mall and past the monuments yielded breathtaking sights in the dramatic light of sunrise.  What I missed out on were Homer and Marge in Bermuda shorts and all the other gazillion touristas. 

I was told by someone who claimed to be in the know that DC is empty now.  “Huh?”  I asked.  “Seems awfully full to me.”  She pointed out that a lot of folks leave town this time of year because Congress isn't in session.  I suppose that the dearth of crowds is the only thing that would tip you off that the blackguards have skipped town.  When they're on recess nothing gets done.  And when they're in town?  Nothing from nothing is nothing.

One of those morning runs and I happen on to the Vietnam Memorial.  I’m the only one there and the rising sun is shining on that long bright ebony wall.  The lawn and trees and the Washington Monument are all reflected as clearly as if that black surface were a mirror.  The reflection makes the thousands of names blend with the idyll of that park; the trees, the emerald lawn and Washington’s monument looking down on it all.  I get emotional at that monument.  It brings on a palpable wave of sorrow.

Some yards from the wall is a statue of three grunts.  You stand in front of them and you look at them but they don't look at you.  They look over and past you as if you’re not there; as if you weren't there. To me they seem to know that I wasn't there.  They're dismissive of me as they should be. Unquestionably those who were there see those men differently; more intimately.  To me the one on the left, with the machine gun appears bitter, the one in the middle, resolute, and the one on the right, just sad and weary.  All three wear a look of resignation.  They wear the emotions that pulled on each other, on each of us and on the nation as a whole during those years.  If you didn't serve you can't get it. I didn't serve and I don’t think I even know anyone who perished in that swamp.  The memory of those times still brings tears.  As I look up at those young men I want to ask their forgiveness for not helping with all the heavy lifting that a misguided government heaped on their young shoulders.  



Served or not, if you didn't live through that era, you can't get it either. To say that the country was divided is an understatement.  Americans squared off in nose to nose confrontations at demonstrations, in the office, at school and in the home.  If you believed in the war you saw your local recruiter. If you had the financial horsepower or enough grease and you didn't believe; or even if you did but lacked the testicular fortitude to enlist then you got a deferment.  If you were just a plebian you might just head for Canada.  Failing that you counted on lady luck in the draft lottery and if you lost; well as Country Joe put it, "Put down your books and pick up your gun, we're gonna have a whole lot of fun."  And add to that the racial unrest, and you had a cauldron of unrest and a big fucking mess.

Some will never get it; they’ll never get anything.  Like the fool that mocked the nurses portrayed in the Vietnam Women’s Memorial.  He had a jolly good time and his female companion laughed like a braying mule.  I wanted to call out to him to shut the fuck up but for some there’s just no remedy.  You can’t shame someone who has no shame.


And yes that Women’s Memorial is as moving as the Vietnam Memorial – maybe more so.  A nurse with an expression of sorrow cradles a fallen soldier while one behind her hopefully, desperately scans the skies for that dust off.


If you’re visiting DC, the National Mall is where it’s at.  Monuments and museums so numerous you would need more than a week to see them all.  The museums are enormous and you can’t dally at any single display in a museum and hope to get through it all.  You breeze along the displays and soak in what you can.  At the Smithsonian Museum of American History the wife got so engrossed in a display about the original flag that flew over Fort McHenry that it took her nearly a half hour to finish.  I finally had to drag her out, “You do realize that we only have two more days in DC.”  “What do you mean?” she asked. “I mean at the rate you’re going we’re going to spend both days here in this museum.”  I really hated to rush her along.  You couldn't pay that woman enough to actually read a history book but plop her into a museum or a historical site and she’s riveted. 

Constitution Avenue runs the length of the mall and along much of that boulevard a cottage industry has sprouted.  Trailers line the curbside hawking food and trashy souvenirs.  As you walk along the line you pass a food vendor and then a souvenir vendor and then another food vendor identical to the first food vendor and then a souvenir vendor identical to the first souvenir vendor.  Every shopkeeper in every trailer looks to be Southeast Asian.  And so you walk along Constitution Avenue with the green grass of the mall on one side and a line of cloned schlock traders on the other. 

Food and provisions on Constitution Ave. 

The original impetus to take this trip was, believe it or not; baseball.  The plan was originally to go to Yellowstone but when I looked on the San Francisco Giants website way back in January, I saw that they were offering a vacation to DC with lodging and tickets to three games.  Given the choice the little woman jumped on DC.  We took in two night games and bagged the third; a day game on Sunday.  I like baseball as much as the next guy but this is Washington DC.  And so as it turned out we went for three baseball games, took in two and then decided to drive through Virginia for a week.

We've left DC now.  I’m writing this sitting in a cottage tucked in Virginia’s Piedmont, in the shade of the Blue Ridge Mountains.  There’s no traffic, no commotion, no horns; no impatience that business demands and none of the pressure and urgency that embraces that most powerful city on Earth.  Out here the night sky is full of the stars that are made invisible by the lights of DC.  The city sounds have been replaced by a million crickets.  It’s almost as if we’d never been to DC.  Hell, almost as if it doesn't exist.