Entries Tagged 'electric' ↓

Which Electric Cigarettes Are Compatible With Eachother?

imageI get a lot of emails asking me about which brands and styles of electric cigarettes are compatable. Can you use a battery from brand “A” on a cartomizer or atomizer of brand “B”? In this article I will try to outline some of the brands that I know to be compatable. Please feel free to post a comment if I have missed anything or mistaken anything.

The E-9 Style or Two Piece Designs

The E-9 style is one of the most popular styles because of it’s ease of use and two piece design. Unlike the three piece ecigarettes that have a separate atomizer, the E-9 style has the atomizer built in to the disposable cartridge. The “E” stands for “electric” and the “9″ refers to the 9mm thread pattern. I would recomend this style to anyone who is new to the world of ecigarettes.

E-9 Brands That Are Compatable With Eachother

Some companies that provide the E-9 style are:

Green Smoke – They sell exclusively the E-9 style and they do it right. In my opinion this is the best company out there. The product is top quality, the customer service is un-beatable and the free shipping is super fast.

Smoke 51 – They sell two different styles, one of them is the E-9 style. They call it the Duo because of the two piece design.

Premium Ecigarettes – This one is also the E-9 style, They also offer a really

cool USB charging case that no other company offers for the E-9 style ecig.

E-Cig Brand – They offer many different styles, One of them is the E-9 style. This company probably has the least expensive ecigarettes but you can only order them directly from china. They also offer a simple starter kit for $19.95 if you are curious about ecigs and want to try them out without spending a lot to begin with. This kit comes with 1 rechargable battery and two cartomizers. You can buy a charger later if you enjoy the ecig.

Zero Tar – They offer a few different styles of ecig, one of them is an E-9 style that they call the E-Vaporizer Kit That pretty much covers what I know of about the E-9 style and which companies provide them.

The Trio or Three Piece Designs

The three piece design is the second most popular design. The difference from the two piece design is that they have a separate atomizer, unlike the duo design which has the atomizer built into the nicotime cartridge.

Trio Brands That Are Compatable With Eachother

These are some of the three piece designs that I know of that will work with eachother:

The Blu Ecigarette – This ecigarette is one of the highest quality on the market and a good starter for someone new to ecigs. The starter kit includes a charging case that is exclusive to the Blu Ecigarette and that no other company offers anything quite like it. The case will ensure that you always have a fully charged battery.

Smoke 51 Trio – The Smoke 51 Trio is another high quality three piece ecigarette. the starter kit comes with everything you need to start vaping and even includes one extra nicotine cartridge.

The Luci Ecig – Yet another high quality three piece electric cigarette. They offer four different versions of their starter kit, each with different amenities.

The Instead eCig – Instead is one of the only companies that sell their kits with e-liquid so that you can refill the cartridges. Most of the other companies just want you to buy the pre-filled cartridges.

The Dragonfly ecig – This one is not fully compatible with the above brands but I decided to include it because the battery has the same thread pattern. The cartridges slips into the atomizer rather than onto the atomizer. but you can use the battery with any of the above models.

For the Full Artice Please Read Real Ecig

Zephyr 4.5 “A Different Kind Of Normal”

I AM DOWNTOWN. The air is chill and the traffic thrums and stalls around me like angry geese, horns going off in a cavalcade. My arms are full of things a man in my financial situation has no right to afford, but I have a cheque due from the management company for a bunch of voice-overs I did the previous week and they even paid me to sign a pile of forms I didn’t exactly read. I’m excited but nervous because I feel the change in the air and it’s not just the first flakes of winter snow.
            I ignore the incipient fender benders around me and step over a homeless guy lying in front of the department store asleep with his cock out and the biggest take-away mocha chill latte I have ever seen in my life spilled across the pavement beside him, a rich woman’s small dog lapping unseen at the edge of the puddle with its eyes going wide as it steps into a little of the human sensorium. The black guys at the entrance of the shop eye me like a rival gangsta, which I ignore because, you know, I’m cool with that shit, and I nod on the sly and make up some kind of fucking hand signal for a laugh that makes one wince and the other screw up his face in bewilderment. Oh yeah, and I have dropped about fifteen of these tiny little cute pills I found down the back of the couch, gagging on the lint, the pink hearts familiar to me and not actually candy as you might expect. They give me a fire in my belly and an iron rod I have to practically strap to the side of my leg as I amble into the big lit-up store, ignoring the more Christmassy decorations with my arms already half-filled with shit I shouldn’t be buying.
            I’m moving house soon. That explains the back-of-the-sofa foraging and also why I am not at home at 6pm without a good excuse, no-one to cook my dinner or give me the hairy eyeball when I turn up at nine smelling like woodsmoke or brine or ectoplasm or Asian pussy with no real explanation to offer to a family who apparently all knew about the ridiculous one-man play my life had become. It just lacked a title. Perhaps, Zephyr the Amazing Doofus. I could think of a dozen things more harsh if it wasn’t for my happy pills and I’ll be frank with you that it’s a nice surprise to get a little holiday from the black mood that has been following me of late.
            I have only just recovered from finding myself standing somewhere in the middle of the Eighth Century pushing corpses into a swamp with just a handful of unspeaking, black-cowled so-called priests as my accomplices. As Seeker glibly explained – troublingly so for someone who is practically a born-again-Christian – by the time Ash and the guy from the Jackass crew’s bodies turn up, they’ll have been decayed for centuries and unidentifiable. I thought I read or watched something once about peat bogs actually preserving people better, but I am not going to get into a slanging match with a bunch of Wallachians who don’t actually speak anyway, except among themselves, and even then in low whispers.
            I am buying the essentials: clean underwear, rewritable DVDs, disposable razors, cue tips, a new hairbrush, toothbrush, shoe brush, boot polish and five cans of leather refresher that makes the emo chick behind the counter raise her heavily-pierced eyebrow, an effort by itself, and she laughs gently and makes some joke about me having a fetish and because I’m a little high I just nod and leer and say, “Yes, Veronica, and that is not all I can do,” and successfully creep her out. If I had my mask on she would so be mine. I dig the purple highlights in her hair, the chalky face, the pubescent cleavage straining at the secretarial white button-up blouse the shop makes her wear. I think of Cusp and my daughter Tessa simultaneously and it’s not the most comfortable sensation I’ve had all week.
            In front of a display of the latest holo-projection TVs my Zephyr phone starts blurping and I look over my shoulder, knowing already I am going to risk it despite the mild shopping turbulence around me. I pile my things onto the carpeted step beneath one of the TVs that is showing news footage of the Pope setting down in Newark and whoever it is on the other end of the phone, I cannot hear a fucking word they are saying. I cut the line and realise I have five text messages, three of them from Seeker about “team business,” one from the guy who still manages my web forum and one from Streethawk, of all people, asking if the rumours are true that we’re putting together a new squad. Sorry Bruce, no homos allowed, is what I think to myself and then catch myself on the television suddenly, brows crinkled as I ponder how exactly I turned out to be such a homophobic beeotch given my upbringing – and it’s disorienting trying to work out why I can see myself on the holoscreen until I realise a salesman is demonstrating a handicam to a bunch of East China tourists who look like they have never seen an electric light let alone a DVD camera.
            The phone rings again. I put my finger in my other ear. It’s the guy from the web forum again, I can’t remember his name for the moment as he’s telling me something about an irate fan who keeps demanding he pass on a message about the end of the world. I give a good laugh – it’s not easy being Zephyr on the phone when I’m not in costume and I’m surrounded by other people – and I tell my little helper not to worry about it and I have a pretty good idea who it is. This is a lie, of course, but I am not about to go sweating the psychiatric foibles of every loser who finds himself at contactzephyr.com.nu(.)
            On the regular televisions I see shaky footage of a guy in a wrestling suit straining like someone with a blocked ass and then he swells and blisters and grows to about the size of a small elephant and goes all red and angry-looking and the words COALFACE appears as the surface of his body blackens and cracks open like the mantle of a volcano and I have to admit to myself, that’s one nasty-looking motherfucker, and that’s why I am glad it appears to be just a TV show. I pick up my purchases and decide to go buzz the perfume section and see about buying an early birthday present for Tessa, marvelling at my uncurtailed freedom and wondering where exactly it is that I am going to sleep once Beth settles on a date for taking back the apartment.

 

THE PHONE IS ringing while I take a dump and it’s not just my sullen alpha waves that mean I don’t move a muscle, letting it drone on and on and on, my thoughts a thousand miles away and the sky outside filling up with black ink.
            Eventually the phone is quiet. I shower, do my “ablutions,” which is a term I guess writers of Stoker’s era used to avoid describing the messy business I clean off my knuckles with tissue paper the consistency of gauze wrap as I sigh, filled with discontentedness, and then stand at the wide bank of apartment windows gazing across the cityscape as night descends like an inexpertly hung stage curtain, staggering down unevenly but eventually consuming the whole thing in darkness until the audience, uncomfortable in their seats, shift and wonder what purpose this development, how does the staging match the set design in bringing forward the central themes of the piece, assuming an author somewhere, intentionality, a coherent structure, the inevitability of climax and resolution, only to find the circus has moved on and run off with the price of their admission.
            My life, for the moment, lacks all of these details. When I go to dress, half-a-quart of milk gurgling in my stomach and a vague craving for Swedish meatballs unconquered, I realise my costume smells like a homeless man’s trolley. The comparative luxury of my situation affords me a clean outfit and the almost Japanese ritual of the process of costuming myself in leather and turning the old suit inside out and hanging it to air in the wallspace obscures the central fact I now have few reasons to dress like an ordinary person, that without those silently knowing figures so recently extracted from my life I am one hundred per cent superhero on call without much else to show for my existence.
            While I might long for a different kind of normal, the feeling of familiarity and safety brought by my leather encasement is a comfort I might find hard to describe if I had to, if there was anyone else with which to share my thoughts except you, my phantasmal darling. Briefly I think of Cusp, Seeker, Vulcana, Devil Betty, handicam footage of my daughter and Shade turning pirouettes at mach over the Silver Tower. While I admit I am feeling sorry for myself, and it might be the comedown from self-medication making it such a drag, the tomb of the apartment and the desecration of my sacred private life revealed by the bare refrigerator, strewn magazines and empty pizza boxes underlines the reality beneath my funk. I am no has been when I am Zephyr, yet even slumping on the sofa and staring at the disconnected television and I am already moving imperceptibly back toward being that person who, in a parallel life, declined to climb the maddening tower and went on to live a plain, inglorious and altogether unremarkable life. Perhaps I would’ve been happier. Perhaps I could’ve kept Beth, though it’s questionable I could’ve wooed her in the first place without my lightning trick and incredible strength to seduce the girl she so quickly ceased to be upon our graduation. More likely I would’ve met some girl behind the desk of a pharmacy, a library, a video store, raised a brood of weird-looking children and continued on through ignominy to the anonymity of death.
            Oh God.
            In the bathroom I contemplate my face in the mirror, my mask gone. Whatever fate awaited me – presuming the intersection of my life with that lightning bolt was anything other than fated – the very fact of my existence is underwritten by my paternity. Electrical storm or no, whatever else, they tell me I am John Lennon’s son. The Preacher Man. Yet we look nothing alike. Or, almost nothing alike, unless there’s something I’m missing.
           There is an iconic image of Lennon from the Summer Rebellion. I move through the apartment to my computer in the wallspace, many of my things in boxes in preparation for the move. Excel spreadsheets from Sal Doro’s disc about the Azzurro Corporation is open from my half-hearted review of the web of complex company structures and asset holdings that one of Sal’s journo colleagues had inexplicably to hand. It is quickly minimised as I pull up Firefox and perform an image search to get the picture I am after. It’s just a few seconds between this and that and then my alleged father’s face is staring out at me, the Preacher Man bearded and cross-legged in a white linen robe with heavy beads around his neck, floating in the air over the writhing hordes of protesters and London bobbies with Perspex shields and grimaces marring their moustachioed faces. He has one hand raised above him and the word “stop” nascent on his lips. Distracted that moment by a cameraman, perhaps an inherited trait after all, he turns his face sixty degrees towards the viewer and unintentional immortality. Put that in your cosmic peace pipe and smoke it, grandpa.
            I’m eating at my parents’ place tomorrow night. All will be revealed, I suppose.
            I sigh and wish I had a cigarette and my eyes drift down the initial table of thumbnails from the internet search and suddenly I find myself looking at quite a different, but nonetheless familiar face.
            My half-brother, Julian.

HST Writings: Fear and Loathing in Blog Country.

This text file appeared on Godnet way back when. –Christine O

Pictures to go with the story can be found at /hst/ralph

—-

 

“Fear and Loathing in Elko” is a short story by Hunter S. Thompson

that appeared in Rolling Stone #622, January 1992. In this sad screed,

our favorite gonzo journalist describes an alleged encounter with

Justice Clarence Thomas, prior to his nomination and appointment to

the U.S. Supreme Court. Shortly before this story’s publication,

Thompson was tried and acquitted on charges of sexual harassment

and assault. He referred to his arrest as a “lifestyle bust.” Readers

can draw their own conclusions regarding the moral of this tale.

 

Some typographical errors and omissions were inevitable. Having

compromised HST’s copyright protection, I expect him to pursue me like

a rat across the tundra…

 

                                 –Fontenelle

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

A Wild and Ugly Night With Judge Clarence Thomas…Bad Craziness in

Sheep Country…Sexual Harassment Then and Now…A Nasty Christmas

Flashback and a Nation of Jailers

 

Fear and Loathing in Elko

 

by Hunter S. Thompson

 

from Rolling Stone #622, January 23, 1992

 

[Part I] Memo From the National Affairs Desk: Sexual Harassment Then and Now…The Ghost of Long Dong Thomas…The Road Full of Forks

 

Dear Jann,

 

   God damn, I wish you were here to enjoy this beautiful weather with me. It is autumn, as you know, and things are beginning to die. It is so wonderful to be out in the crisp fall air, with the leaves turning gold and the grass turning brown, and the warmth going out of the sunlight and big hot fires in the fireplace while Buddy rakes the lawn. We see a lot of bombs on TV because we watch it a lot more, now that the days get shorter and shorter, and darkness comes so soon, and all the flowers die from freezing.

 

   Oh, God! You should have been with me yesterday when I finished my ham and eggs and knocked back some whiskey and picked up my Weatherby Mark V .300 Magnum and a ball of black Opium for dessert and went

outside with a fierce kind of joy in my heart because I was Proud to be an American on a day like this. If felt like a goddamn Football Game, Jann — it was like Paradise…. You remember that bliss you

felt when we powered down to the farm and whipped Stanford? Well, it felt like That.

 

   I digress. My fits of Joy are soiled by relentless flashbacks and ghosts too foul to name….Oh no, don’t ask Why. You could have been president, Jann, but your road was full of forks, and I think of this when I see the forked horns of these wild animals who dash back and forth on the hillsides while rifles crack in the distance and fine swarthy young men with blood on their hands drive back and forth in the dusk and mournfully call our names….

 

   O Ghost, O Lost, Lost and Gone, O Ghost, come back again.

 

   Right. and so much for autumn. The trees are diseased and the Animals get in your way and the President is usually guilty and most days are too long, anyway….So never mind my poem. It was wrong from the start. I plagiarized it from an early work of Coleridge and then tried to put my own crude stamp on it, but I failed.

 

  So what? I didn’t want to talk about fucking autumn, anyway. I was just sitting here at dawn on a crisp Sunday morning, waiting for the football games to start and taking a goddamn very brief break from

this blizzard of Character Actors and Personal Biographers and sickly Paparazzi that hovers around me these days (they are sleeping now, thank Christ — some even in my own bed). I was sitting here all alone, thinking, for good or ill, about the Good Old Days.

 

  We were Poor, Jann. But we were Happy. Because we knew Tricks. We were Smart. Not Crazy, like they said. (No. They never called us late for dinner, eh?)

 

  Ho, ho. Laughs don’t come cheap these days, do they? The only guy who seems to have any fun in public is Prince Cromwell, my shrewd and

humorless neighbor — the one who steals sheep and beats up women, like Mike Tyson.

 

  Who knows why, Jann. Some people are too weird to figure.

 

  You have come a long way from the Bloodthirsty, Beady-eyed news Hawk that you were in days of yore. Maybe you should try reading something besides those goddamn motorcycle magazines — or one of these days you’ll find hair growing in your palms.

 

  Take my word for it. You can only spend so much time “on the throttle,” as it were….Then the Forces of Evil will take over. Beware….    

 

  Ah, but that is a different question, for now. Who gives a fuck? We are, after all, Professionals….But our Problem is not. No. It is the Problem of Everyman. It is Everywhere. The Question is our Way; the Answer is our Fate…. and the story I am about to tell you is horrible, Jann.

 

  I came suddenly awake, weeping and jabbering and laughing like a loon at the ghost on my TV set….Judge Clarence Thomas….Yes, I knew

him. But that was a long time ago. Many years, in fact, but I still remember it vividly….Indeed, it has haunted me like a Golem, day and night, for many years.

 

  It seemed normal enough, at the time, just another weird rainy night out there on the highdesert….What the Hell? We were younger, then. Me and the Judge. And all the others, for that matter….It was aDifferent Time. People were friendly. We trusted each other. Hell, you afford to get mixed up with wild strangers in those days — without fearing for your life, or your eyes, or your organs, or all of your money or even getting locked up in prison forever. There was a sense of possibility. People were not so afraid, as they are now.

 

  You could run around naked without getting shot. You could check into a motel in Winnemucca or Elko when you were lost in a midnight rainstorm — and nobody called the police on you, just to check out

your credit and your employment history and your medical records and how many parking tickets you owed in California.

 

  There were Laws, but they were not feared. There were Rules, but they were not worshiped….like Laws and Rules and Cops and Informants are feared and worshiped today.

 

  Like I said: It was a different time. And I know the Judge would tell you the same thing, tonight, if he wanted to tell you the Truth, like I do.

 

  The first time I actually met the Judge was a long time ago, for strange reasons, on a dark and rainy night in Elko, Nevada, when we both ended up in the same sleazy roadside Motel, for no good reason at

all….Good God! What a night!

 

  I almost forgot about it, until I saw him last week on TV….and then I saw it all over again. The horror! The horror! That night when the road washed out and we all got stuck out there — somewhere near Elko in a place just off the highway, called Endicott’s Motel — and we almost went really Crazy.

 

 

Yours,

HST

                                 

 

P.S. And, speaking of crazy, take a look at this riff on the Judge and Sexual Harassment that I received yesterday from that brute who runs the Sports Desk. He must have been drunk when he wrote it — but whiskey is no excuse for this kind of brainless, atavistic gibberish.    

 

  I want that screwhead fired! He was harmless once, but ever since Judge Thomas got confirmed for the High court, he has been mauling women shamelessly. Last week he pinned my secretary against a hot wall

in the mainframe room and almost twisted her nipples off. Then he laughed and said it was legal now, and if I didn’t like it, I could take him to court [see enclosed memo, below]. It was addressed to me,

but I have a feeling we’ll be seeing it soon, taped up on the wall of the Men’s Room — and probably the Women’s Room too.

 

Special Advisory From the Sports Desk

To: HST

From: Raoul Duke, Ed.

 

 

 

  I need your help, Doc. They’re trying to bust me on Sex charges. The snake has come out of the bag, and soon they’ll be after you. Your phone will be ringing all night with obscene calls from Radical Lesbian Separatists.

 

  You know how I feel about Victims, Doc, and also how I worship the First Amendment — along with the Fourth, of course….

 

  And all of the others, including our God-given Right to praise the President when he pulls off a Great Victory and rips the nuts off the

Enemy. It was wonderful, Doc. We beat them like shit-eating dogs. They came, they failed, and now we will gnaw on their skulls. When the going gets tough, the tough get going, eh? Right! Fuck those people! Death to the Weird! We will march on a road of bones! Sieg Heil!    

 

  (Whoops. Strike that.) What I meant to say was Hot Damn! We’re back in the Saddle again! And I don’t mean maybe….Right. You know me, Doc. I’m a gracious Loser — but when I win, I must Kick Ass!    

 

  That is the Law of Nature: Life is a brainless struggle, and “the Meek” will jabber and die like brain-damaged rats in a maze, long before they will ever have time to even think about inheriting the

goddamn Earth — much less the White House.

 

  No. don’t worry about that, Doc. The Nigger is on the run all over the World, and we want to keep him that way. (Or “her” or “it” or “them” if you what I’m saying….) They are not necessarily Black, Doc, and many are not of our Gender….

 

  But so what?  They are Niggers, and we’re Not! Hell, yes! That’s what it comes down to. They were Fools! It was like the Charge of the Light Brigade. They rode into the Valley of Death, and We stomped them….They were Wrong from the start, but they fooled a lot of people, for a while….    

 

  Thank God we got off that stinking Death Ship while we still had the chance, eh?….They screeched like Hyenas for a while, but then they ran like Rats. Shit on them. That’s what I say. Those bitches got their tits caught in a wringer.    

 

  Okay. Congress is a sinkhole of Whores. We all know that. Shit. Sexual Harassment is what Congress is all about. It was the Way of Our Forefathers, and it is Right!    

 

  Hot damn: I feel good about Myself today, Doc. I feel innocent for a change…. and I guess you feel the Same Way, eh?

 

  Jesus. They had us on the run there, for a few days. The Fat Lady was ready to sing, and I was starting to guilty about almost Everything…. Especially touching Women — or even myself, for a

while. It was Horrible. It got so I was afraid to ride the same elevator with a woman. It was too risky. What if she was one of these crazy New Age bitches that want to kick you in the nuts and then get you busted for “fondling” them?

 

  What kind of life would it be if you went to jail or got ruined every time you tried to flirt with a pretty woman? Let’s face it, Doc. We are all Rapists, one way or another. The trick is not to get Busted

for it….Which is almost what happened, Doc. BUT IT DIDN’T. No! We were NOT Guilty! They called us bullies and Mashers, but we were only falling in Love….

 

 

 

–Raoul Duke, Sports

                                 

 

[Part II] Fear and Loathing in Elko: Bad Craziness in Sheep

Country….Side Entrance on Queer Street….O Black, O Wild, O

Darkness, Roll Over Me Tonight

 

 

  It was just after midnight when I first saw the sheep. I was running about eighty-eight or ninety miles an hour in a drenching, blinding rain on U.S. 40 between Winnemucca and Elko with one light out. I was soaking wet from the water that was pouring in through a hole in the front roof of the car, and my fingers were like rotten icicles on the

steering wheel.

 

  It was a moonless night and I knew I was hydroplaning, which is dangerous…. My front tires were no longer in touch with the asphalt or anything else. My center of gravity was too high. There was no visibility on the road, none at all. I could have tossed a flat rock a lot farther than I could see in front of me that night though the rain

and the ground fog.

 

  So what? I thought. I know this road — a straight lonely run across nowhere, with not many dots on the map except ghost towns and truck stops with names like Beowawe and Lovelock and Death and

Winnemucca….

 

  Jesus! Who made this map? Only a lunatic could have come up with a list of places like this: Imlay, Valmy, Golconda, Nixon, Midas, Metropolis, Jiggs, Judasville — all of them empty, with no gas

stations, withering away in the desert like a string of old Pony Express stations. The Federal Government owns ninety percent of this land, and most of it is useless for anything except weapons testing and poison-gas experiments.     

 

 My plan was to keep moving. Never slow down. Keep the car aimed straight ahead through the rain like a cruise missile….I felt comfortable. There is a sense  of calm and security that comes with driving a very fast car on an empty road at night….Fuck this thunderstorm, I thought. There is safety in speed. Nothing can touch me as long as I keep moving fast, and never mind the cops: They’re all hunkered down in a truck stop or jacking off by themselves in a culvert behind some dynamite shack in the wilderness beyond the highway….Either way, they wanted no part of me, and I wanted no part of them. Only trouble could come of it. They were probably nice people, and so was I — but we were not meant for each other. History had long since determined that. There is a huge body of evidence to support the notion that me and the police were put on this earth to do extremely different things and never to mingle professionally with each other, except at official functions, when we all wear ties and drink heavily and whoop it up like the natural, good-humored wild boys that we know in our hearts that we are… These occasions are rare, but they happen — despite the forked tongue of fate that has put us forever on different paths….But what the hell? I can handle a wild birthday party with cops, now and then. Or some unexpected orgy at a

gun show in Texas. Why not? Hell, I ran for Sheriff one time, and almost got elected. They understand this, and I get along fine with the smart ones.

 

  But not tonight, I thought, I sped along in the darkness. Not at 100 miles an hour at midnight on a rain-slicked road in Nevada. Nobody needs to get involved in a high-speed chase on a filthy night like

this. It would be dumb and extremely dangerous. Nobody driving a red 454 V-8 Chevrolet convertible was likely to pull over and surrender peacefully at the first sight of a cop car behind him. All kinds of weird shit might happen, from a gunfight with dope fiends to permanent injury or death….It was a good night to stay indoors and be warm, make a fresh pot of coffee and catch up on important paperwork. Lay

low and ignore these loonies. Anybody behind the wheel of a car tonight was far too crazy to fuck with, anyway.

 

  Which was probably true. There was nobody on the road except me and a few big-rig Peterbilts running west to Reno and Sacramento by dawn. I could hear them on my nine-band Super-Scan shortwave/CB/Police radio, which erupted now and then with outbursts of brainless speed gibberish about Big Money and Hot Crank and teenage cunts with huge tits.    

 

  They were dangerous Speed Freaks, driving twenty-ton trucks that might cut loose and jackknife at any moment, utterly out of control. There is nothing more terrifying than suddenly meeting a jackknifed Peterbilt with no brakes coming at you sideways at sixty or seventy miles per hour on a steep mountain road at three o’clock in the morning. There is a total understanding, all at once, of how the captain of the Titanic must have felt when he first saw the Iceberg.    

 

  And not much different from the hideous feeling that gripped me when the beam of my Long-Reach Super-Halogen headlights picked up what appeared to be a massive rock slide across the highway — right in

front of me, blocking the road completely. Big white rocks and round boulders, looming up with no warning in a fog of rising steam or swamp gas….    

 

  The brakes were useless, the car wandering. The rear end was coming around. I jammed it down into Low, but it made no difference, so I straightened it out and braced for a serious impact, a crash that would probably kill me. This is It, I thought. This is how it happens — slamming into a pile of rocks at 100 miles an hour, a sudden brutal death in a fast red car on a moonless night in a rainstorm somewhere on the sleazy outskirts of Elko. I felt vaguely embarrassed, in that long pure instant before I went into the rocks. I remembered Los Lobos and that I wanted to call Maria when I got to Elko….

 

  My heart was full of joy as I took the first hit, which was oddly soft and painless. No real shock at all. Just a sickening thud, like running over a body, a corpse — or, ye fucking gods, a crippled 200-

pound sheep thrashing around in the road.

 

  Yes. These huge white lumps were not boulders. They were sheep. Dead and dying sheep. More and more of them, impossible to miss at this speed, piled up on each other like bodies at the battle of Shiloh. It

was like running over wet logs. Horrible, horrible….

 

  And then I saw the man — a leaping Human Figure in the glare of my bouncing headlight, waving his arms and yelling, trying to flag me down. I swerved to avoid hitting him, but he seemed not to see me, rushing straight into my headlights like a blind man….or a monster from Mars with no pulse, covered with blood and hysterical.

 

  It looked like a small black gentleman in a London Fog raincoat, frantic to get my attention. It was so ugly that my brain refused to accept it….Don’t worry, I thought. This is only an Acid flashback.

Be calm. This is not really happening.

 

  I was down to about thirty-five or thirty when I zoomed past the man in the raincoat and bashed the brains out of a struggling sheep, which helped to reduce my speed, as the car went airborne again, then bounced to a shuddering stop just before I hit the smoking, overturned hulk of what looked like a white Cadillac limousine, with people still inside. It was a nightmare. Some fool had crashed into a herd of sheep at high speed and rolled into the desert like an eggbeater.    

 

  We were able to laugh about it later, but it took a while to calm down. What the hell? It was only an accident. The Judge had murdered some strange animals.

 

  So what? Only a racist maniac would run sheep on the highway in a thunderstorm at this hour of the night. “Fuck those people!” he snapped, as I took off toward Elko with him and his two female companions tucked safely into my car, which had suffered major

cosmetic damage but nothing serious. “They’ll never get away with this Negligence!” he said. “We’ll eat them alive in court. Take my word for

it. We are about to become joint owners of a huge Nevada sheep ranch.”    

 

  Wonderful, I thought. But meanwhile we were leaving the scene of a very conspicuous wreck that was sure to be noticed by morning, and the whole front of my car was gummed up with wool and sheep’s blood. There was no way I could leave it parked on the street in Elko, where I’d planned to stop for the night (maybe two or three nights, for that matter) to visit with some old friends who were attending a kind of Appalachian Conference for sex-film distributors at the legendary Commercial Hotel….

 

  Never mind that, I thought. Things have changed. I was suddenly a Victim of Tragedy — injured and on the run, far out in the middle of

sheep country — 1000 miles from home with car full of obviously criminal hitchhikers who were spattered with blood and cursing angrily

at each other as we zoomed through the blinding monsoon.

 

  Jesus, I though Who are these people?

 

  Who indeed? They seemed not to notice me. The two women fighting in the back seat were hookers. No doubt about that. I had seen them in my

headlights as they struggled in the wreckage of the Cadillac, which had killed about sixty sheep. They were desperate with Fear and Confusion, crawling wildly across the sheep….One was a tall black

girl in a white minidress…and now she was screaming at the other one, a young blond white woman. They were both drunk. Sounds of struggle came from the back seat. “Get your hands off me, Bitch!” Then

a voice cried out, “Help me, Judge! Help! She’s killing me!”

 

  What? I thought. Judge? Then she said it again, and a horrible chill went through me….Judge? No. That would be over the line. Unacceptable.

 

  He lunged over the back seat and whacked their heads together. “Shut up!” he screamed. “Where are your fucking manners?”

 

  He went over the seat again. He grabbed one of them by the hair.

“God damn you,” he screamed. “Don’t embarrass this man. He saved our lives. We owe him respect — not this god damned squalling around like whores.”

 

  A shudder ran through me, but I gripped the wheel and stared straight ahead, ignoring this sudden horrible freak show in my car. I lit a cigarette, but I was not calm. Sounds of sobbing and the ripping

of cloth came from the back seat. The man they called Judge had straightened himself out and was now resting easily in the front seat,

letting out long breaths of air….The silence was terrifying: I quickly turned up the music. It was Los Lobos again — something about

“One time One Night in America,” a profoundly morbid tune about Death

and Disappointment:

 

                A lady dressed in white

                With the man she loved

           Standing along the side                            of their pickup truck

                A shot rang out in the night

                Just when everything seemed right   

 

  Right. A shot. A shot rang out in the night. Just another headline written down in America….Yes. There was a loaded .454 Magnum revolver in a clearly marked oak box on the front seat, about halfway between me and the Judge. He could grab it in a split second and blow my head off.    

 

  “Good work, Boss,” he said suddenly. ” I owe you a big one, for this. I was done for, if you hadn’t come along.” He chuckled. “Sure as hell, Boss, sure as hell. I was Dead Meat — killed a lot worse than

those goddamn stupid sheep!”

 

  Jesus! I thought. Get ready to hit the brake. This man is a Judge on the lam with two hookers. He has no choice but to kill me, and those

two floozies in the back seat too. We were the only witnesses…. This eerie perspective made me uneasy….Fuck this, I thought. These people

are going to get me locked up. I’d be better off just pulling over right here and killing all three of them. Bang, Bang, Bang! Terminate the scum.

 

  “How far is town? the Judge asked.

 

  I jumped, and the car veered again. “Town?” I said.

 

  “What town?” My arms were rigid and my voice was strange and reedy.

 

  He whacked me on the knee and laughed. “Calm down, Boss,” he said. “I have everything under control. We’re almost home.” He pointed into the rain, where I was beginning to see the dim lights of what I knew

to be Elko.

 

  “Okay,” he snapped. “Take a left, straight ahead.” He pointed again and I slipped the car into low. There was a red and blue neon sign

glowing about a half-mile ahead of us, barely visible in the storm. The only words I could make out were NO and VACANCY.

 

  “Slow down!” the Judge screamed. “This is it! Turn! Goddamnit, turn!” His voice had the sound of a whip cracking. I recognized the tone and did as he said, curling into the mouth of the curve with all

four wheels locked and the big engine snarling wildly in Compound Low and the blue flames coming out of the tailpipe….It was one of those

long perfect moments in the human driving experience that makes everybody quiet. Where is P.J.? I thought. This would bring him to his knees.    

 

  We were sliding sideways very fast and utterly out of control and coming up on a white steel guardrail at seventy miles an hour in a thunderstorm on a deserted highway in the middle of the night.    

 

  Why not? On some nights Fate will pick you up like a chicken and slam you around on the walls until your body feels like a beanbag….BOOM! BLOOD! DEATH! So long, Bubba — You knew it would End like this….

 

  We stabilized and shot down the loop. The Judge seemed oddly calm as he pointed again. “This is it,” he said. “This is my place. I keep a few suites here.” He nodded eagerly. “We’re finally safe, Boss. We can do anything we want in this place.”

 

  The sign at the gate said:        

 

                ENDICOTT’S MOTEL

                DELUXE SUITES AND WATERBEDS

                ADULTS ONLY/NO ANIMALS

 

  Thank god, I thought. It was almost too good to be true. A place to dump these bastards. They were quiet now, but not for long. And I knew I couldn’t handle it when these women woke up.

 

  The Endicott was a string of cheap-looking bungalows, laid out in a horseshoe pattern around a rutted gravel driveway. There were cars parked in front of most of the units, but the slots in front of the brightly lit places at the darker end of the horseshoe were empty.

 

  “Okay,” said the Judge. “We’ll drop the ladies down there at our suite, then I’ll get you checked in.” He nodded. “We both need some sleep, Boss — or at least rest, if you know what I mean. Shit, it’s been a long night.”

 

  I laughed, but it sounded like the bleating of a dead man. The adrenalin rush of the sheep crash was gone, and now I was sliding into pure Fatigue Hysteria. The Endicott “Office” was a darkened hut in the middle of the horseshoe. We parked in front of it and then the Judge began hammering on the wooden front door, but there was no immediate response….”Wake up, goddamnit! It’s me — the Judge! Open up! This is Life and Death! I need help!”

 

  He stepped back and delivered a powerful kick at the door, which rattled the glass panels and shook the whole building. ” I know you’re in there,” he screamed. “You can’t hide! I’ll kick your ass till your nose bleeds!”

 

  There was still no sign of life, and I quickly abandoned all hope. Get out of here, I thought. This is wrong.  I was still in the car, half in and half out…The Judge put another fine snap-kick at a point

just over the doorknob and uttered a sharp scream in some language I didn’t recognize. Then I heard the sound of breaking glass.  

 

  I leapt back into the car and started the engine. Get away! I thought. Never mind sleep. It’s flee or die, now. People get killed for doing this kind of shit in Nevada. It was far over the line. Unacceptable behavior. This is why God made shotguns…      

 

  I saw lights come on in the Office. Then the door swung open and I saw the Judge leap quickly through the entrance and grapple briefly with a small bearded man in a bathrobe, who collapsed to the floor after the Judge gave him a few blows to the head…Then he called back to me. “Come on in, Boss,” he yelled. “Meet Mister Henry.” 

 

  I shut off the engine and staggered up the gravel path. I felt sick and woozy, and my legs were like rubber bands. 

 

  The Judge reached out to help me. I shook hands with Mr. Henry, who gave me a key and a form to fill out. “Bullshit,” said the Judge.

“This man is my guest. He can have anything he wants. Just put it on my bill.” 

 

  “Of course,” said Mr. Henry. “Your bill. Yes. I have it right here.” He reached under his desk and came up with a nasty-looking bundle of

adding-machine tapes and scrawled Cash/Payment memos….”You got here just in time,” he said. “We were about to notify the Police.”

 

  “What?” said the Judge. “Are you nuts? I have a goddamn platinum American Express card! My credit is impeccable.”

 

  “Yes,” said Mr. Henry. “We know that. We have total respect for you. Your signature is better than gold bullion.” The Judge smiled and whacked the flat of his hand on the counter. “You bet it is!” he

snapped. “So get out of my goddamn face! You must be crazy to fuck with Me like this! You fool! Are you ready to go to court?”

 

  “Please, Judge,” he said. Don’t do this to me. All I need is your card. Just let me run an imprint. That’s all.” He moaned and stared more or less at the Judge, but I could see that his eyes were not focused….”They’re going to fire me,” he whispered. “They want to put me in jail.”

 

  “Nonsense!” the Judge snapped. “I would never let that happen. You can always plead.” He reached out and gently gripped Mr. Henry’s wrist. “Believe me, Bro,” he hissed. “You have nothing to worry about. You are cool. They will never lock you up! They will Never take you away! Not out of my courtroom!”

 

  “Thank you,” Mr. Henry replied. “But all I need is your card and your signature. That’s the problem: I forgot to run it when you checked in.”

 

  “So what?” the Judge barked. “I’m good for it. How much do you need?”

 

  “About $22,000,” said Mr. Henry. “Probably $23,000 by now. You’ve had those suites for nineteen days with total room service.”     

 

  “What?” the Judge yelled. “You thieving bastards! I’ll have you crucified by American Express. You are finished in this business. You will never work again! Not anywhere in the world! Then he whipped Mr. Henry across the front of his face so fast that I barely saw it.

 

  “Stop crying!” he said. “Get a grip on yourself! This is embarrassing!” 

 

Then he slapped the man again. “Is that all you want?” he said. “Only a card? A stupid little card? A piece of plastic shit?”    

 

  Mr. Henry nodded. “Yes, Judge,” he whispered. “That’s all. Just a stupid little card.”    

 

  The Judge laughed and reached into his raincoat, as if to jerk out a gun or at least a huge wallet. “You want a card, whore face? Is that it? Is that all you want? You filthy little scumbag! Here it is!”    

 

  Mr. Henry cringed and whimpered. Then he reached out to accept the Card, the thing that would set him free…The Judge was still grasping around in the lining of his raincoat. “What the fuck?” he muttered.

“This thing has too many pockets! I can feel it, but I can’t find the slit!”

 

  Mr. Henry seemed to believe him, and so did I, for a minute….Why not? He was a judge with a platinum credit card — a very high roller. You don’t find many Judges, these days, who can handle a full caseload in the morning and run wild like a goat in the afternoon. That is a very hard dollar, and very few can handle it….but the Judge was a Special Case.

 

  Suddenly he screamed and fell sideways, ripping and clawing at the lining of his raincoat. “Oh, Jesus!” he wailed. “I’ve lost my wallet! It’s gone. I left it out there in the Limo, when we hit the fucking

sheep.”

 

  “So what?” I said. “We don’t need it for this. I have many plastic cards.”          

 

  He smiled and seemed to relax. “How many?” he said. “We might need more than one.”

 

  I woke up in the bathtub — who knows how much later — to the sound of the hookers shrieking next door. The New York Times had fallen in and blackened the water. For many hours I tossed and turned like a crack baby in a cold hallway. I heard thumping Rhythm & Blues — serious rock & roll, and I knew that something wild was going on in the Judge’s suites. The smell of amyl nitrate came from under the door. It was no use. It was impossible to sleep through this orgy of ugliness. I was getting worried. I was already a marginally legal person, and now I was stuck with some crazy Judge who had my credit card and owed me $23,000.

 

  I had some whiskey in the car, so I went out into the rain to get some ice. I had to get out. As I walked past the other rooms, I looked in people’s windows and feverishly tried to figure out how to get my credit card back. Then from behind me I heard the sound of a tow-truck winch. The Judge’s white Cadillac was being dragged to the ground. The

Judge was whooping it up with the tow-truck driver, slapping him on the back.  

 

  “What the hell? It was only property damage,” he laughed.

 

  “Hey, Judge,” I called out. “I never got my card back.”

 

  “Don’t worry,” he said. “It’s in my room — come on.”

 

  I was right behind him when he opened the door to his room, and I caught a glimpse of a naked woman dancing. As soon as the door opened, the woman lunged for the Judge’s throat. She pushed him back outside

and slammed the door in his face. 

 

  “Forget that credit card — we’ll get some cash,” the Judge said. “Let’s go down to the Commercial Hotel. My friends are there and they have plenty of money.    

 

  We stopped for a six-pack on the way. The Judge went into a sleazy liquor store that turned out to be a front for kinky marital aids. I offered him money for the beer, but he grabbed my whole wallet.

 

  Ten minutes later, the Judge came out with $400 worth of booze and a bagful of Triple-X-Rated movies. “My buddies will like this stuff,” he said. “And don’t worry about the money, I told you I’m good for it. These guys carry serious cash.”

 

  The marquee above the front door of the Commercial Hotel said:

 

                WELCOME: ADULT FILM PRESIDENTS

                STUDEBAKER SOCIETY

                FULL ACTION CASINO/KENO IN LOUNGE

 

  “Park right her in front, said the Judge. “Don’t worry. I’m well known in this place.”

 

  Me too, but I said nothing. I have been well known at the Commercial for many years, from the time when I was doing a lot of driving back and forth between Denver and San Francisco — usually for Business reasons, or for Art, and on this particular weekend I was there to meet quietly with a few old friends and business associates from the Board of Directors of the Adult Film Association of America. I had been, after all, the Night Manager of the famous O’Farrell Theatre, in San Francisco — “the Carnegie Hall of Sex in America.”              

 

  I was the Guest of Honor, in fact — but I saw no point in confiding these things to the Judge, a total stranger with no Personal Identification, no money and a very aggressive lifestyle. We were on our way to the Commercial Hotel to borrow money from some of his friends in the Adult Film business.

 

  What the hell? I though. It’s only Rock & Roll. And he was, after all, a judge of some kind….Or maybe not. For all I knew he was a criminal pimp with no fingerprints, or a wealthy black shepherd from

Spain. But it hardly mattered. He was good company (if you had a taste for the edge work — and I did, in those days. And so, I felt, did the judge). He had a bent sense of fun, a quick mind and no Fear of anything.

 

  The front door of the Commercial looked strangely busy at this hour of night in a bad rainstorm, so I veered off and drove slowly around the block in low gear.    

 

  “There’s a side entrance on Queer Street,” I said to the Judge, as we hammered into a flood of black water. He seemed agitated, which worried me a bit.

 

  “Calm down,” I said. “We don’t want to make a scene in this place. All we want is money.”

 

  “Don’t worry,” he said. “I know these people. They are friends. Money is nothing. They will be happy to see me.”

 

  We entered the hotel through the Casino entrance. The Judge seemed calm and focused until we rounded the corner and came face to face with an eleven-foot polar bear standing on its hind legs, ready to

pounce. The Judge turned to jelly at the sight of it. “I’ve had enough of this goddamn beast,” he shouted.” It doesn’t belong here. We should blow its head off.”

 

  I took him by the arm “Calm down, Judge,” I told him. “That’s White King. He’s been dead for about thirty-three years.”

 

  The Judge had no use for animals. He composed himself and we swung into the lobby, approaching the desk from behind. I hung back–it was getting late and the lobby was full of suspicious looking stragglers from the Adult Film crowd. Private cowboy cops wearing six-shooters in open holsters were standing around. Our entrance did not go unnoticed.

 

  The Judge looked competent, but there was something menacing in the way he swaggered up to the desk clerk and whacked the marble countertop with both hands. The lobby was suddenly filled with tension, and I quickly moved away as the Judge began yelling and pointing at the ceiling.

 

  “Don’t give me that crap,” he barked. “These people are my friends. They’re expecting me. Just ring the goddamn room again.” The desk clerk muttered something about his explicit instructions not to….

 

  Suddenly the Judge reached across the desk for the house phone.

“What’s the number? I’ll ring it myself” The clerk moved quickly. He shoved the phone out of the Judge’s grasp and simultaneously drew his index finger across his throat. The Judge took one look at the muscle

converging on him and changed his stance.

 

  “I want to cash a check,” he said calmly.

 

  “A check?” the clerk said. “Sure thing, buster. I’ll cash your goddamned check.” He seized the Judge by his collar and laughed. “Let’s get this Bozo out of here. And put him in jail.”

 

  I was moving toward the door, and suddenly the Judge was right behind me. “Let’s go,” he said. We sprinted for the car, but then the Judge stopped in his tracks. He turned and raised his fist in the

direction of the hotel. “Fuck you!” he shouted. “I’m the Judge. I’ll be back, and I’ll bust every one of you bastards. The next time you see me coming, you’d better run.”    

 

  We jumped into the car and zoomed away into the darkness. The Judge was acting manic. “Never mind those pimps,” he said. “I’ll have them all on a chain gang in forty-eight hours.” He laughed and slapped me on the back. “Don’t worry, Boss,” he said. “I know where we’re going.” He squinted into the rain and opened a bottle of Royal Salute. “Straight ahead,” he snapped. “Take a right at the next corner. We’ll

go see Leach. He owes me $24,000.”    

 

  I slowed down and reached for the whiskey. What the hell, I thought. Some days are weirder than others.

 

  “Leach is my secret weapon,” the Judge said, “but I have to watch him. He could be violent. The cops are always after him. He lives in a balance of terror. But he has a genius for gambling. We win eight out

of ten every week.” He nodded solemnly. “That is four of five, Doc. That is Big. Very big. That is eighty percent of everything.” He shook his head sadly and reached for the whiskey. “It’s a horrible habit.

But I can’t give it up. It’s like having a money machine.”

 

  “That’s wonderful,” I said. “What are you bitching about?”

 

  “I’m afraid, Doc. Leach is a monster, a criminal hermit who understands nothing in life except point spreads. He should be locked up and castrated.”

 

  “So what?” I said. “Where does he live? We are desperate. We have no cash and no plastic. This freak is our only hope.”

 

  The Judge slumped into himself, and neither one of us spoke for a minute…. “Well,” he said finally. “Why not? I can handle almost anything for twenty-four big ones in a brown bag. What the fuck? Let’s

do it. If the bastard gets ugly, we’ll kill him.”

 

  “Come on, Judge,” I said. “Get a grip on yourself. This is only a gambling debt.”

 

  “Sure,” he replied. “That’s what they all say.”

 

 

[Part III] Dead Meat in the Fast Lane: The Judge Runs Amok…Death of a Poet, Blood Clots in the Revenue Stream…The Man Who Loved Sex Dolls

 

 

  We pulled into a seedy trailer court behind the stockyards. Leach met us at the door with red eyes and trembling hands, wearing a soiled bathrobe and carrying a half-gallon of Wild Turkey.    

 

  “Thank God you’re home,” The Judge said. “I can’t tell you what kind of horrible shit has happened to me tonight….But now the worm has turned. Now that we have cash, we will crush them all.”    

 

  Leach just stared. Then he took a swig of Wild Turkey. “We are doomed,” he muttered. “I was about to slit my wrists.”

 

  “Nonsense,” the Judge said. “We won Big. I bet the same way you did. You gave me the numbers. You even predicted the Raiders would stomp Denver. Hell, it was obvious. The Raiders are unbeatable on Monday

night.”    

 

  Leach tensed, then he threw his head back and uttered a high-pitched quavering shriek. The Judge seized him. “Get a grip on yourself,” he

snapped. “What’s wrong?” “I went sideways on the bet,” Leach sobbed. “I went to that goddamn sports bar up in Jackpot with some of the guys from the shop. We were all drinking Mescal and screaming, and I lost my head.”    

 

  Leach was clearly a bad drinker and a junkie for mass hysteria. “I got drunk and bet on the Broncos,” he moaned, “then I doubled up. We lost everything.”

 

  A terrible silence fell on the room. Leach was weeping helplessly. The Judge seized him by the sash of his greasy leather robe and started jerking him around by the stomach.

 

  They ignored me and I tried to pretend it wasn’t happening….It was too ugly. There was and ashtray on the table in front of the couch. As I reached for it, I noticed a legal pad of what appeared to be Leach’s poems, scrawled with a red Magic Marker in some kind of primitive verse form. There was one that caught my eye. There was something particularly ugly about it. There was something repugnant in the harsh

slant of the handwriting. It was about pigs.

 

                I TOLD HIM

                IT WAS WRONG

                By F.X. Leach

                Omaha 1968

 

                A filthy young pig

                got tired of his gig

                and begged for a transfer

                to Texas.

                Police ran him down

                on the Outskirts of town

                and ripped off his Nuts

                with a coathanger.

                Everything after that was like

                coming home in a cage on the

                back of a train from

                New Orleans on a Saturday

                night

                with no money and cancer and

                a dead girlfriend.

                In the end it was no use

                He died on his knees in a barn

                Yard with all the others watching.

                Res Ipsa Loquitur

 

  “They’re going to kill me,” Leach said. “They’ll be here by midnight. I’m doomed.” He uttered another low cry and reached for the Wild Turkey bottle, which had fallen over and spilled.    

 

  “Hang on,” I said. “I’ll get more.”    

 

  On my way to the kitchen I was jolted by the sight of a naked woman slumped awkwardly in the corner with a desperate look on her face, as if she’d been shot. Her eyes bulged and her mouth was wide open and

she appeared to be reaching out for me.    

 

  I leapt back and heard laughter behind me. My first thought was that Leach, unhinged by his gambling disaster, had finally gone over the line with his wife-beating habit and shot her in the mouth just before we knocked. She appeared to be crying out for help, but there was no voice.

 

  I ran into the kitchen to look for a knife thinking, that if Leach had gone crazy enough to kill his wife, now he would have to kill me, too, since I was the only witness. Except the Judge, who locked himself in the bathroom.

 

  Leach appeared in the doorway holding the naked woman by the neck and hurled her across the room at me….

 

  Time stood still for an instant. The woman seemed to hover in the air, coming at me in the darkness like a body in slow motion. I went into a stance with the bread knife and braced for a fight to the

death.

 

  The thing hit me and bounced softly down to the floor. It was a rubber blow-up doll: one of those things with five orifices that young stockbrokers buy in adult bookstores after the singles bars close.

 

  “Meet Jennifer,” he said. “She’s my punching bag.” He picked it up by the hair and slammed it across the room.

 

  “Ho, ho,” he chuckled, “no more wife beating. I’m cured, thanks to Jennifer.” He smiled sheepishly . “It’s almost like a miracle. These dolls saved my marriage. They’re a lot smarter than you think.” He

nodded gravely. “Sometimes I have to beat two at once. But it always calms me down, you know what I mean?”

 

  Whoops, I thought. Welcome to the night train. “Oh, hell yes, I said quickly. “How do the neighbors handle it?”

 

  “No problem,” he said. “They love me.”

 

  Sure, I thought. I tried to imagine the horror of living in a muddy industrial slum full of tin-walled trailers and trying to protect your family against brain damage from knowing that every night when you

look out your kitchen window there will be a man in a leather bathrobe flogging two naked women around the room with a quart bottle of Wild Turkey. Sometimes for two or three hours…It was horrible.

 

  “Where is your wife?” I asked. “Is she still here?”

 

  “Oh, yes.” he said quickly. “She just went out for some cigarettes She’ll be back any minute.” He nodded eagerly. “Oh, yes, she’s very proud of me. We’re almost reconciled. She really loves these dolls.”    

 

  I smiled, but something about this story mad me nervous. “How many do you have?” I asked him.    

 

  “Don’t worry,” he said. “I have all we need.” He reached into a nearby broom closet and pulled out another one — a half-inflated Chinese-looking woman with rings in her nipples and two electric cords

attached to her head.” This is Ling-Ling,” he said. “She screams when I hit her.” He whacked the doll’s head and it squawked stupidly.

 

  Just then I heard car doors slamming outside the trailer, then loud knocking on the front door and a gruff voice shouting, “Open up!

Police!”

 

  Leach grabbed a .44 Magnum out of a shoulder holster inside his bathrobe and fired two shots through the front door. “You bitch,” he screamed. “I should have killed you a long time ago.”

 

  He fired two more shots, laughing calmly. Then he turned to face me and put the barrel of the gun in his mouth. He hesitated for a moment,

staring directly into my eyes. Then he pulled the trigger and blew off the back of his head.

 

  The dead man seemed to lunge at me, slumping headfirst against my legs as he fell to the floor — just as a volley of shotgun blasts came through the front door, followed by harsh shouts on a police bullhorn from outside. Then another volley of buckshot blasts that exploded the TV set and set the living room on fire, filling the trailer with dense brown smoke that I recognized instantly as the smell of Cyanide gas being released by the burning plastic couch.

 

  Voices were screaming through the smoke, “Surrender! HANDS UP behind your goddamn head! DEAD MEAT!” Then more shooting. Another deafening

fireball exploded out of the living room, I kicked the corpse off my feet and leapt for the back door, which I’d noticed earlier when I

scanned the trailer for “alternative exits,” as they say in the business — in case one might become necessary. I was halfway out the door when I remembered the Judge. He was still locked in the bathroom, maybe helpless in some kind of accidental drug coma, unable to get to his feet as flames roared through the trailer….

 

  Ye Fucking Gods! I thought. I can’t let him burn.

 

  Kick the door off its hinges. Yes. Whack! The door splintered and I saw him sitting calmly on the filthy aluminum toilet stool, pretending to read a newspaper and squinting vacantly at me as I crashed in and

grabbed him by one arm.

 

  ”Fool!” I screamed. “Get up! Run! They’ll murder us!”

 

  He followed me through the smoke and burning debris holding his pants up with one hand….The Chinese sex doll called Ling-Ling hovered crazily in front of the door, her body swollen from heat and

her hair on fire. I slapped her aside and bashed the door open, dragging the Judge outside with me. Another volley of shotgun blasts

and bullhorn yells erupted somewhere behind us. The Judge lost his footing and fell heavily into the mud behind the doomed Airstream.    

 

  “Oh, God!” he screamed. “who is it?”    

 

  “The Pigs,” I said. “They’ve gone crazy. Leach is dead! They’re trying to kill us. We have to get to the car!”

 

  He stood up quickly. “Pigs?” he said. “Pigs? Trying to kill me?”

 

  He seemed to stiffen, and the dumbness went out of his eyes. He raised both fists and screamed in the direction of the shooting. “You bastards! You scum! You will die for this. You stupid white-trash pigs!”

 

  “Are they nuts?” he muttered. He jerked out of my grasp and reached angrily into his left armpit, then down to his belt and around behind his back like a gunfighter trying to slap leather….But there was no leather there. Not even a sleeve holster.

 

  “Goddamnit!” he snarled. “Where’s my goddamn weapon? Oh, Jesus! I left it in the car!” He dropped into a running crouch and sprinted into the darkness, around the corner of the flaming Airstream. “Let’s

go!” he hissed. “I’ll kill these bastards! I’ll blow their fucking heads off!”

 

  Right, I thought, as we took off in a kind of low-speed desperate crawl through the mud and the noise and the gunfire, terrified neighbors screaming frantically to each other in the darkness. The red

convertible was parked in the shadows, near the front of the trailer right next to the State Police car, with its chase lights blinking crazily and voices burping out of its radio.

 

  The Pigs were nowhere to be seen. They had apparently rushed the place, guns blazing — hoping to kill Leach before he got away. I jumped into the car and started the engine. The Judge came through the passenger door and reached for the loaded .454 Magnum….I watched in horror as he jerked it out of its holster and ran around to the front of the cop car and fired two shots into the grille.

 

  “Fuck you!” he screamed. “Take this, you Scum! Eat shit and die!” He jumped back as the radiator exploded in a blast of steam and scalding water. Then he fired three more times through the windshield and into the squawking radio, which also exploded.

 

  ”Hot damn!” he said as he slid back into the front seat. “Now we have them trapped!” I jammed the car into reverse and lost control in the mud, hitting a structure of some kind and careening sideways at

top speed until I got a grip on the thing and aimed it up the ramp to the highway….The Judge was trying desperately to reload the .454, yelling at me to slow down, so he could finish the bastards off! His

eyes were wild and his voice was unnaturally savage.    

 

  I swerved hard left to Elko and hurled him sideways, but he quickly recovered his balance and somehow got off five more thundering shots

in the general direction of the burning trailer behind us.    

 

  “Good work, Judge,” I said. “They’ll never catch us now.” He smiled and drank deeply from our Whiskey Jug, which he had somehow picked up as we fled…. Then he passed it over to me, and I too drank deeply as I whipped the big V-8 into passing gear, and we went from forty-five to ninety in four seconds and left the ugliness far behind us in the rain.

 

  I glanced over at the Judge as he loaded five huge bullets into the Magnum. He was very calm and focused, showing no signs of the drug coma that had crippled him just moments before….I was impressed. The man was clearly a Warrior. I slapped him on the back and grinned.

“Calm down, Judge,” I said. “We’re almost home.”

 

  I knew better, of course. I was 1000 miles from home, and we were almost certainly doomed. There was no hope of escaping the dragnet that would be out for us, once those poor fools discovered Leach in a

puddle of burning blood with the top of his head blown off. The squad car was destroyed — thanks to the shrewd instincts of the Judge –

but I knew it would not take them long to send out an all-points alarm. Soon there would be angry police road-blocks at every exit between Reno and Salt Lake City….

 

  So what? I thought. There were many side roads, and we had a very fast car. All I had to do was get the Judge out of his killing frenzy and find a truck stop where we could buy a few cans of Flat Black

spray paint. Then we could slither out of the state before dawn and find a place to hide.

 

  But it would not be an easy run. In the quick space of four hours we had destroyed two automobiles and somehow participated in at least one

killing — in addition to all the other random, standard-brand crimes like speeding and arson and fraud and attempted murder of State Police

officers while fleeing the scene of a homicide….

 

  No. We had a Serious problem on our hands. We were trapped in the middle of Nevada like crazy rats, and the cops would shoot to Kill when they saw us. No doubt about that. We were Criminally Insane….I

laughed and shifted up into Drive. The car stabilized at 115 or so….

 

  The Judge was eager to get back to his women. He was still fiddling with the Magnum, spinning the cylinder nervously and looking at his watch. “Can’t you go any faster?” he muttered. “How far is Elko?”

 

  Too far, I thought, which was true. Elko was fifty miles away and there would be roadblocks. Impossible. They would trap us and probably butcher us.

 

  Elko was out, but I was loath to break this news to the Judge. He had no stomach for bad news. He had a tendency to flip out and flog anything in sight when things weren’t going his way.

 

  It was wiser, I thought, to humor him. Soon he would go to sleep.

 

  I slowed down and considered. Our options were limited. There would be roadblocks on every paved road out of Wells. It was a main crossroads, a gigantic full-on truck stop where you could get anything you wanted twenty-four hours a day, within reason of course. And what we needed was not in that category. We needed to disappear. That was one option.    

 

  We could go south on 93 to Ely, but that was about it. That would be like driving into a steel net. A flock of pigs would be waiting for us, and after that it would be Nevada State Prison. To the north on 93

was Jackpot, but we would never make that either. Running east into Utah was hopeless. We were trapped. They would run us down like dogs. There were other options, but not all of them were mutual. The Judge had his priorities, but they were not mine. I understood that me and the Judge were coming up on a parting of the ways. This made me nervous. There were other options, of course, but they were all High Risk. I pulled over and studied the map again. the Judge appeared to be sleeping, but I couldn’t be sure. He still had the Magnum in his lap.

 

  The Judge was getting to be a problem. There was no way to get him out of the car without violence. He would not go willingly into the dark and stormy night. The only other way was to kill him, but that

was out of the question as long as he had the gun. He was very quick in emergencies. I couldn’t get the gun away from him, and I was not about to get into an argument with him about who should have the

weapon. If I lost, he would shoot me in the spine and leave me in the road.

 

  I was getting too nervous to continue without chemical assistance. I reached under the seat for my kit bag, which contained five or six Spansules of Black Acid. Wonderful, I thought. This is just what I

need. I ate one and went back to pondering the map. There was a place called Death, just ahead, where a faintly marked side road appeared to wander uphill through the mountains and down along a jagged ridge into Jackpot from behind. Good, I thought, this is it. We could sneak into Jackpot by dawn.

 

  Just then I felt a blow on the side of my head as the Judge came awake with a screech, flailing his arms around him like he was coming out of nightmare. “What’s happening, goddamn it?” he said. “Where are

we? They’re after us.” He was jabbering in a foreign language that quickly lapsed into English as he tried to aim the gun. “Oh, God,” he screamed, “They’re right on top of us. Get moving, goddamnit. I’ll

kill every bastard I see.”

 

  He was coming out of a nightmare. I grabbed him by the neck and put him in a headlock until he went limp. I pulled him back up in the seat and handed him a Spansule of acid. “Here, Judge, take this,” I said.

“It’ll calm you down.”    

 

  He swallowed the pill and said nothing as I turned onto the highway and stood heavily on theaccelerator. We were up to 115 when a green exit sign that said DEETH NO SERVICES loomed suddenly out of the rain just in front of us. I swerved hard to the right and tried to hang on. But it was no use. I remember the sound of the Judge screaming as we lost control and went into a full 360-degree curl and then backwards at seventy-five or eighty through a fence and into a pasture.    

 

  For some reason the near-fatal accident had a calming effect on the Judge. Or maybe it was the acid. I didn’t care one way or the other after I took the gun from his hand. He gave it up without a fight. He seemed to be more interested in reading the road signs and listening to the radio. I knew that if we could slip into jackpot the back way, I could get the car painted any color I wanted in thirty-three minutes and put the Judge on a plane. I knew a small private airstrip there, where nobody asks too many questions and they’ll take a personal check.

 

  At dawn we drove across the tarmac and pulled up to a seedy-looking office marked AIR JACKPOT EXPRESS CHARTER COMPANY. “This is it Judge,” I said and slapped him on the back. “This is where you get off.” He seemed resigned to his fate until the woman behind the front desk told him there wouldn’t be a flight to Elko until lunchtime.

 

  “Where is the pilot?” he demanded.

 

  “I am the pilot,” the woman said, “but I can’t leave until Debby gets her to relieve me.”

 

  “Fuck this!” the Judge shouted. “Fuck lunch time. I have to leave now, you bitch.”

 

  The woman seemed truly frightened by his mood swing, and when the Judge leaned in and gave her a taste of the long knuckle, she collapsed and began weeping uncontrollably. “There’s more where that

came from,” he told her. “Get up! I have to get out of here now.”

 

  He jerked her out from behind the desk and was dragging her toward the plane when I slipped out the back door. It was daylight now. The car was nearly out of gas, but that wasn’t my primary concern. The police would be here in minutes, I thought. I’m doomed. But then, as I pulled onto the highway, I saw a sign that said, WE PAINT ALL NIGHT.

 

  As I pulled into the parking lot, the Jackpot Express plane passed overhead. So long, Judge, I thought to myself. You’re a brutal hustler

and a Warrior and a great copilot, but you know how to get your way. You will go far in the world.

 

 

[Part IV]  Epilogue: Christmas Dreams and Cruel Memories…Nation of

Jailers…Stand Back! The Judge Will See You Now

 

 

  That’s about it for now, Jann. This story is too depressing to have to confront professionally in these morbid weeks before Christmas…. I have only vague memories of what it’s like there in New York, but sometimes I have flashbacks about how it was to glide in perfect speedy silence around the ice rink in front of NBC while junkies and federal informants in white beards and sleazy red jumpsuits worked the crowd mercilessly for nickels and dollars and dimes covered with Crack residue.    

 

  I remember one Christmas morning in Manhattan when we got into the Empire State Building and went up to the Executive Suite of some famous underwear company and shoved a 600-pound red, tufted-leather

Imperial English couch out of a corner window on something like the eighty-fifth floor….The wind caught it, as I recall, and it sort of drifted around the corner onto Thirty-fourth Street, picking up speed on its way down, and hit the striped awning of a Korean market, you know, the kind that sells everything from kimchi to Christmas trees.

The impact blasted watermelons and oranges and tomatoes all over the sidewalk. We could barely see the impact from where we were, but I remember a lot of activity on the street when we came out of the elevator…. It looked like a war zone. A few gawkers were standing around in a blizzard, muttering to each other and looking dazed. They thought it was an underground explosion — maybe a subway or a gas main.

 

  Just as we arrived on the scene, a speeding cab skidded on some watermelons and slammed into a Fifth Avenue bus and burst into flames. There was a lot of screaming and wailing of police sirens. Two cops

began fighting with  a gang of looters who had emerged like ghosts out of the snow and were running off with hams and turkeys and big jars of

caviar….Nobody seemed to think it was strange. What the hell? Shit happens. Welcome to the Big Apple. Keep alert. Never ride in open cars or walk to too close to a tall building when it snows….There were

Christmas trees scattered all over the street and cars were stopping to grab them and speeding away. We stole one and took it to Missy’s place on the Bowery, because we knew she didn’t have one. But she

wasn’t home, so we put the tree out on the fire escape and set it on

fire with kerosene.

 

  That’s how I remember New York, Jann. It was always a time of angst and failure and turmoil. Nobody ever seemed to have any money on Christmas. Even rich people were broke and jabbering frantically on

their telephones about Santa Claus and suicide or joining a church with no rules….The snow was clean and pretty for the first twenty or thirty minutes around dawn, but after that it was churned into filthy mush by drunken cabbies and garbage compactors and shitting dogs.

 

  Anybody who acted happy on Christmas was lying — even the ones were getting paid $500 an hour….The Jews were especially sulky, and who could blame them? The birthday of Baby Jesus is always a nervous time

for people who know that ninety days later they will be accused of murdering him.

 

  So what? We have our own problems, eh? Jesus! I don’t know how you can ride all those motorcycles around in the snow, Jann. Shit, we can all handle the back wheel coming loose in a skid. But the front wheel is something else — and that’s what happens when it snows. WHACKO. One minute you feel as light and safe as a snowflake, and the next minute you’re sliding sideways under the wheels of a Bekins van….Nasty traffic jams, horns honking, white limos full of naked Jesus freaks going up on the sidewalk in low gear to get around you and the mess you made on the street…Goddamn this scum. They are more and more in the way. And why aren’t they home with their families on Xmas? Why do they need to come out here and die on the street like iron hamburgers?

    

  I hate these bastards, Jann. And I suspect you feel the same….They might call us bigots, but at least we are Universal bigots. Right? Shit on those people. Everybody you see these days might have the power to get you locked up….Who knows why? They will have reasons straight out of some horrible Kafka story, but in the end it won’t matter any more than a full moon behind clouds. Fuck them.    

 

  Christmas hasn’t changed much in twenty-two years, Jann — not even 2000 miles west and 8000 feet up in the Rockies. It is still a day that only amateurs can love. It is all well and good for children and

acid freaks to still believe in Santa Claus — but it is still a profoundly morbid day for us working professionals. It is unsettling to know that one out of every twenty people you meet on Xmas will be dead this time next year….Some people can accept this, and some can’t. That is why God made whiskey, and also why Wild Turkey comes in $300 shaped canisters during most of the Christmas season, and also why criminal shitheads all over New York City will hit you up for $100 tips or they’ll twist your windshield wipers into spaghetti and urinate on your door handles.

 

  People all around me are going to pieces, Jann. My whole support system has crumbled like wet sugar cubes. That is why I try never to employ anyone over the age of twenty. Every Xmas after that is like

another notch down on the ratchet, or maybe a few more teeth off the flywheel….I remember on Xmas in New York when I was trying to sell a Mark VII Jaguar with so many teeth off the flywheel that the whole

drivetrain would lock up and whine every time I tried to start the engine for a buyer….I had to hire gangs of street children to muscle the car back and forth until the throw-out gear on the starter was lined up very precisely to engage the few remaining teeth on the flywheel. On some days I would leave the car idling in a fireplug zone for three or four hours at a time and pay the greedy little bastards a

dollar an hour to keep it running and wet-shined with fireplug water until a buyer came along.

 

  We got to know each other pretty well after nine or ten weeks, and they were finally able to unload it on a rich artist who drove as far as the toll plaza at the far end of the George Washington Bridge, where the engine seized up and exploded like a steam bomb. “They had to tow it away with a firetruck,” he said. “Even the leather seats were on fire. They laughed at me.”

 

  There is more and more Predatory bullshit in the air these days. Yesterday I got a call from somebody who said I owed money to Harris Wofford, my old friend from the Peace Corps. We were in Sierra Leone

together.

 

  He came out of nowhere like a heat-seeking missile and destroyed the U.S. Attorney General in Pennsylvania. It was Wonderful. Harris is a

Senator now, and the White House creature is not. Thornburgh blew a forty-four point lead in three weeks, like Humpty Dumpty….WHOOPS! Off the wall like a big Lizard egg. The White House had seen no need for a safety net.     

 

  It was a major disaster for the Bush brain trust and every GOP political pro in America, from the White House all the way down to City Hall in places like Denver and Tupelo. The whole Republican party

was left stunned and shuddering like a hound dog passing a peach pit….At least that’s what they said in Tupelo, where one of the local GOP chairmen flipped out and ran off to Biloxi with a fat young

boy from one of the rich local families….then he tried to blame it on Harris Wofford when they arrested him in Mobile for aggravated Sodomy and kidnapping. He was ruined, and his Bail was only $5000, but one of his friends would sign for it. They were mainly professional Republicans and bankers who had once been in the Savings and Loan business, along with Neil Bush the manqu‚ son of the President.

 

  Neil had just walked on a serious Fraud bust in Colorado. But only by the skin of his teeth, after his father said he would have to abandon him to a terrible fate in the Federal Prison System if his son

was really a crook. The evidence was overwhelming, but Neil had a giddy kind of talent negotiating — like Colonel North and the Admiral, who also walked….It was shameless and many people bitched.

But what the fuck do they expect from a Party of high-riding Darwinian rich boys who’ve been running around in the White House for twelve straight years? They can do whatever they want, and why not. “These are Good Boys,” John Sununu once said of this staff. “They only shit in the pressroom.”

 

  Well…Sununu is gone now, and so is Dick Thornburgh, who is currently seeking night work in the bank business somewhere on the outskirts of Pittsburgh. It is an ugly story. He decided to go out on his own  — like Lucifer, who plunged into Hell — and he got beaten like a redheaded stepchild by my old Peace Corps buddy Harris Wofford, who caught him from behind like a bull wolverine so fast that Thornburgh couldn’t even get out of the way….He was mangled and humiliated. It was the worst public disaster since Watergate.    

 

  The GOP was plunged into national fear. How could it happen? Dick Thornburgh had sat on the right hand of God. As AG, he had stepped out like some arrogant Knight form the Round Table and declared that his boys — 4000 or so Justice Department prosecutors — were no longer subject to the rules of the Federal Court System.

 

  But he was wrong, And now Wofford is using Thornburghs’s corpse as a landing pad for a run on the White House and hiring experts to collect

bogus debts from old buddies like me. Hell, I like the idea of Harris being President. He always seemed honest and I knew he was smart, but I am leery of giving him money.    

 

  That is politics in the 1990s. Democratic presidential  candidates have not been a satisfying investment recently. Camelot was thirty

years ago, and we still don’t know who killed Jack Kennedy. That lone bullet on the stretcher in Dallas sure as hell didn’t pass through two

human bodies, but it was the one that pierced the heart of the American Dream in our century, maybe forever.

 

  Camelot is on Court TV now, limping into Rehab clinics and forced to deny low-rent Rape accusations in the same sweaty West Palm Beach courthouse where Roxanne Pulitzer went on trial for fucking a trumpet

and lost.

 

  It has been a long way down — not just for the Kennedys and the Democrats, but for all the rest of us. Even the rich and the powerful, who are coming to understand that change can be quick in the Nineties and one of these days it will be them in the dock on TV, fighting desperately to stay out of prison. 

 

  Take my word for it. I have been there, and it gave me an eerie feeling…. Indeed. There are many cells in the mansion, and more are being added every day. We are becoming a nation of jailers.

 

  And that’s about it for now, Jann. Christmas is on us and it’s all downhill from here on….At least until Groundhog Day, which is soon….So, until then, at least, take my advice as your family doctor, and don’t do anything that might cause either one of us to have to appear before the Supreme Court of the United States. If you know what I’m saying….

 

  Yes. He is Up There, Jann. The Judge. And he will be there for a long time, waiting to gnaw on our skulls….Right. put that in your leather pocket the next time you feel like jumping on your new

motorcycle and screwing it all the way over thru traffic and passing cop cars at 140.

 

  Remember F.X. Leach. He crossed the Judge, and he paid a terrible price….And so will you, if you don’t slow down and quit harassing those girls in your office. The Judge is in charge now, and He won’t

tolerate it. Beware.

 

                          -To Be Continued-

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Inside Teheran – 03

Guest post by a friend via Monica Narula and the Sarai Reader list, with thanks.

June 15th/16th, 2009

I accidentally broke two glasses and a bowl. Yesterday, I was visiting a good friend of mine, K., who lives in the City Center, around the corner from Tehran University, between  Enghelab and Azadi Square. I was in the midst of kicking my legs up to stretch out onto the couch and my clumsy foot hit the edge of the small table nearby, knocking two glasses and a bowl onto the tile floor. My head was turned away when the accident happened, so the sound of so much glass breaking really took me and N., who had also come with me, by surprise.
I remember reading something by Jalal Toufic about tripping, stumbling, falling. This was in the context of vampire movies, I believe, specifically, when the protagonist finds himself tripping before he enters the house where the vampire sleeps during the day. Trips and
stumbles belong to the category of the clumsy foot, including not only things that
fall but also accidental kicks and knocks. I suspect Toufic utilizes the aid of hallucinogenic narcotics, or, his use of them in the past has permanently affected his perception when watching and thinking about films, given his surrealistic analysis conversing without looking at each other and yet do not bump into each other, trip, for no apparent reason on smooth pl aces, indeed such a person, not the one to trip on stairs or to bump into bodies in motion (in fact, I am quite choreographed in crowds), but sometimes I find myself performing the clumsiest act in the moment when I expect it the least.
precaution (in states of altered
consciousness the same is the case with: disposed and predisposed,
occupied
and preoccupied, monition and premonition; probably one becomes a sage
only
when one no longer needs presages), in the sense that one must
forewarn by
guessing where the false threshold is and warning about it and about
being
, pp. 16)
a long walk from Valiasr Street, past
Enghelab Square and Tehran University, joining the million-man silent
march
that took place yesterday starting at 4 PM. The march had been
organized by
Opposition supporters, those aligned towards Moussavi and Karroubi,
through
word-of-mouth and Facebook the night before. No official permission
had been
granted for the demonstrators to gather, but the sheer number of people,
young and old, in conservative Islamic clothes and in the tightest,
shiniest
new fashions, students and civil servants, families and groups of
singles,
what appeared as the entire spectrum of Iranian society proved to be
such a
force of numbers that the police stood to the side and observed, looking
relaxed, even bored.
having officially met with Moussavi, who voiced his concerns to him
yesterday, announced on state TV and radio that the Council of
Guardians will
set up an investigation into the allegations of fraud and tampering of
the
votes in this election. As the New York Times and BBC wrote last night,
perhaps this is a way for the regime to buy time (the investigation
period is
10-days), hoping that the promise of an investigation will settle
people back
down and pacify them, but in any case it is clear that the persistence
of the
Opposition and its supporters have caused the government, whether out
of fear
or cleverness, to mediate a deal. The absolute lack of police force
against
the demonstration yesterday (keeping in mind that without an official
permission, the march was technically illegal) proved that the orders
from
above had changed their course. In a very smart manner, Moussavi had
issued
an order to his supporters gathering that the march should be
conducted in
absolute silence. With no access to text-messaging, most websites such
as
Facebook or web blogs shut down as well as satellite TV signals
scrambled and
march through a human network of friends-telling-friends, notes being
passed,
and signs being held up. At times, an unknowing, overenthusiastic
individual
or group would begin chanting
and the rest of the crowd would quickly hush
them, telling them that this was a silent march. Instead of angry
shouts, the
-sign for victory (or, in an
American context, peace). Some held up pictures of Moussavi or
Karroubi in
their other hand; some held up their mobile phone, video recording or
taking
demonstr The crowds kept on coming, walking into the distant horizon
was hidden from view either due to distance or the heavy smog that
settles
during warm summer days upon Tehran.
Rumor had it that the march extended all the way to the other side of
town,
to Imam Hossein Square, adding an additional symbolic element to the
march
th
century massacre of Imam Hossein – the
on – and his followers by the Ummayad Caliph
martyrdom at Karbala was a driving force in the 1979 Revolution,
transformed
-political
model for resistance outside of the Western philosophical tradition of
Hegelian dialectics and Marxist class struggle. According to Shariati,
himself a French-educated i
unique to Islam, one who combined ethics with faith and who sacrificed
himself for justice to be served, therefore a role model for every
individual
seeking reform. The Revolutionaries related to Hossein on many different
levels: as a devout man, as a political and religious leader, as a
community
organizer or as a criticizer of injustice, using the example of his
martyrdom
for their own cause: every time the police would shoot and kill
demonstrators, the ceremony of mourning began around their martyrdom,
more demonstrators would be shot and killed and so continuing the cycle.
still used today by the revolutionary ideology to stress
the honor of self-
of death, in order to secure freedom for future generations.
N. and I found it uncanny that the police  doing anything yesterday.
After two days of mass clashes between protestors and the government,
the
police had laid down their guard. We walked past the headquarters for
Road &
Traffic police and saw numerous parked police vans and motorcycles in
the
courtyard. A range of uniforms occupied the courtyard, gathered in
groups
spread all over the compound. Many of the young men (indeed, most of the
police and military are ruddy-faced, sun-soaked, bearded young men, some
exhibiting such diamond-in-the-rough physical beauty, their eyes almond
shaped, their noses substantial, with rosy cheeks, dark skin, and 3-day
stubble, it feels almost sinful to think of them in such a manner) were
leaning against the iron bars that circled the courtyard, peeping out
from
between, looking at the crowds passing by. I made eye contact with
many of
them, not sure what I could read in their eyes, which looked to me
completely
poker-faced. Why were they just standing there, I thought? Seeing so
many of
them, knowing that more were in the building, not being able to judge
their
strategy for the day
by the police gathered in the cou
they
were so big, so shiny, but almost toy- e that inside
were bullets and how easy it can be to die. If I had tripped,
something else
may have happened, they would have noticed me. Imagine if I had broken
glass
in front of them  surely that would have been a sign of attack!
Premonitions
and precautions  the ability to feel that something is going to happen
and
making sure to avoid being stuck in a slippery spot when it does. So
what
could have lead me, in an altered state of consciousness (surely,
since all
of the past days  events, as with last w
like some oceanic dream), to not pay attention to my foot and its
relation
with its surroundings, causing me to break so much glass? I was
preoccupied
with thinking about writing while the streets were occupied by
millions; it
is not even an option to dispose of one system for another, although I
would
say that the people are predisposed to flights of fancy, therefore it
cannot
be sure if in the ten days they will tire of what they demand so
fervently
at monition means, but my premonition is electric.
Swollen by subconscious processes linking my immediate circumstances to
other, supernatural forces at hand, the lack of articulation I have been
feeling (the articulation of this feeling has, itself, needed days to
grow)
manifests itself in a bodily gesture that precautions caution: broken
glass.
Square. Later, reports that one person had been killed and many shot
when a
crowd of demonstrators foolishly decided to attach the compound of the
Basiji
volunteer militia. And it is not to be taken for granted, the rumor
that new
additions to the Basiji forces have been flown in from Lebanon  why?
Because
of their supposed detachment from the situation, guaranteeing that the
beauty
ploughshares, to abandon ship and escape to the islands of alienation
that
have been beckoning them. Why did the crowd break the silence and
attack,
endangering the other millions who had, for hours, tried to channel
their
energies to a different level? Did the attack occur at the moment of
broken
glass? I can only guess where the threshold is (that door, opening to
the way
of no-return), but I do not believe the direction of attack and
confrontation
lair and seeing that you have arrived too late, the last rays of the
sun are
disappearing, it is too much of a risk to remove t
to stab the sleeping undead with a wooden stake. He is about to awaken!
Indeed, violence has only been erupting Tehran in the pre-dusk hours,
when
the clouds cover the sun and it slowly begins to give way to crepuscular
shades of purple and orange.
I remembered another slip, trip, fall yesterday, happening well before
the
which can be debated as to whether that would make it a cognitive or a
psychological error, or even, a spiritual one. In any case, my language
failed, on separate occasions, temporarily  each time it did so, it
left me
blank, silent not out of a will to be silent, but out of powerlessness.
However, in one case, the failure of language became a slip of the
tongue, a
mis-articulation paired with an inability-to-articulate. It happened
when N.
walked
from Enghelab Square, through the silent demonstration, asking people
where
-minutes worth of useful information,
in the sense that the directions they gave were only valid for 5-
minutes of
walking in the direction they specified, afterwards we would be forced
to ask
again where we were and where we should be going. Having realized that
we had
walk two blocks back up and to make a left, continue two blocks, and
then
us, walking at a slow pace. Each time N. and I tried to hurry past
them, they
seemed to unconsciously step in our way  their bodies filled the
breadth of
the sidewalk, not physically, but in the manner of their movements,
how they
swayed unpredictably from side to side, taking a step in front of your
step-
whose-goal-was-to-step-ahead. I uncontrollably uttered an
indistinguishable
grunt or roar out of frustration; a younger man walking with the ladies
someone was behind them, moving aside to let N. and I. march forward. N.
laughed, saying they were moving like cows. I asked her if she had
heard my
-in-in-volun-vorun-vollll-
tary-rary-
my feet, grunted again in frustration (more like a growl), and started
to
Farsi nor English nor German, nothing comes out write, I have no more
so I opted for
managing to get my full sentence out to N., who stood there laughing in
had ever yelled at me. My heart immediately sank, my head grew dizzy,
I felt
the same feeling I felt when I had lost a present my mother had given
me as a
small child, a feeling of absolute having-disappointed. I laughed
nervously,
faint smile on her lips  the meaning I received from what she said
contradicted her expression. She crossed the street and walked faster
ahead
myself  what had I said that was so offensive? What could have
possibly put
My sentence came back to me. I had experienced a state of utter
without thinking about it.
be un
a frustrated N. She wa
with me
happening? Language, for me, is a very important thing, my only tool and
talent
find myself only with a particular affinity for language, in its
spoken and
present myself. In retrospect, all of this was a preface to the
breaking of
the glass (note – pre-face, before the showing of the face, as opposed
to the
removing of the face; yesterday at the University of Tehran, student
demonstrators had gathered behind the closed gates of the campus,
covering
their faces with surgical masks, sunglasses and headscarves to avoid
being
recognized. They held up signs carrying numerous political messages
and a
number of them stood near, telling passers-by to refrain from taking
photographs:
visible and active, then we should also be aware of cuts in language,
strange
accidents and contingencies, as in the way the English language brings
together as montage the face and sacrilege under the rubric defacement
). The breaking was an indirect and physical
confirmation of what was happening all along: loosing language, the
ability
to articulate; loosing balance, the ability to navigate and feel out a
space.
r and my slippages were a sign that his
spell was easy to fall under, his seduction great.
The false threshold is that of resistance, the door that opens onto
the site
of the undead. The true threshold, what has yet to be crossed, is the
threshold of subjectivity: the door that leads to a room of mirrors in
which
an individual sees his own reflection repeated unto infinity. Another
moment
of precaution, or, premonition: N. and I had a conversation on the
corner of
Valiasr Street and Enghelab, as crowds of people shoved past our bodies,
turning the corner towards the unseen and unknown, joining the march
(these
crowds, just arriving, were not aware of the law of silence in place
for the
day, and so, for us, their chants expressed a far more acute will-to-
violence
than what we later saw was actually the case). The story of how we had
made
demonstration is important: for some days, N. and I had
been planning on visiting K. The day before, given the clashes
occurring up
and down Valiasr, we decided it would not be a good idea. Yesterday,
with the
promise of the march, we decided it would be a perfect opportunity to
visit
K., since he lives so close to Enghelab and from his rooftop we could
view
the events passing by with relative security, in case they turned
violent.
great spot. When I arrived at the house from buying a pack of
cigarettes and
a peach-flavored soda, I saw R. in a manic frenzy, telling us that we
need to
leave now, that a friend is coming with a car, that we should hurry
up. I had
just received a phone call from my sister, who, with my mom, has been
visiting our extended family in the city of Hamedan (6 hours west of
Tehran)
since last week. The entire time that R. was rushing us to leave, I
attempted
to multitask speaking with my sister, scarfing down leftovers for
lunch, pack
my bag and try a
the house, the entire time my sister telling me an incredible story
about how
she had been terribly sick the past few days, plagued by migraine
headaches,
wrenching stomach pains and nosebleeds, and how women from our family
had
decided to come save her, placing her in bed and each taking on
different
healing roles: one praying above her head, another feeding her salty
yoghurt
healing energies, another casting incense over her, one crying, one
pressing
was beginning to grow
impatient. I was running after R. and B., N. at my side, to the car, my
mobile, testifying to her near-death
experience and complete recovery without the aid of medicine or a
doctor,
only the tenderness of the women in our family. I told my sister I
love her
and that I have to go now, as the car began moving, turning off our
street
and onto the highway, speeding through traffic to get towards Valiasr
Square
as fast as possible. R. was receiving numerous phone calls,
instructing him
to arrive soon, informing him that the crowds were amazing and the
march was
going on as planned. B. was filming from the car window. R. had his
hand out
in a victory-sign. Yet, N. and I sat in silence. It was not that there
was
nothing to say; there was just no way of speaking, I felt. What had
happened,
why were we here in this car, where were we going? I was confused, I
thought
towards this demonstration, which at that moment felt like a death
trap. And
know if I should resist or why I felt the need to resist.
When we parked the car close to Valiasr Street, R. and B. ran out
ahead of
us. R. turned around and told us to memorize where the car was parked
so that
when necessary, we could reconvene and go back home together. N. had
stopped
up ahead, turning corners with them and eventually ending up on Valiasr
Street. At this point, N. told me that it would probably be a good
idea to
if the demo got bad. I started writing while speed walking and
realized I
so I stopped to the side and began quickly
copying the address onto a second sheet of paper. N. complained that
it was
not going to work like this, that we had already lost R. and B., who
were
much further up ahead and swarmed in a crowd of people also speeding
towards
Enghelab. I responded that there is no other way for me to write the
address
began running. It was difficult, as there were so many people on the
street.
sewer, running what felt to be a concrete tightrope. Looking back, I
saw N.
nt to lose her in all of this. After a
distance, double-checked to make sure it was really her. She was about
to
disappear around the corner of Enghelab  the point of no return, I
thought
what could be happening around there? I had to catch her before she
took the
few extra steps necessary, otherwise, it would be over, no hope of
contact,
and our mobiles had no reception anymore. I yelled her name, she turned
around, and I managed to quickly get up to her and pass her the note
with the
address written on it. She thanked me and then took one step forward,
turned
follow, I waited and looked back to see where N. was, I saw her from
afar and
waved my arms, holding up victory signs with both hands. Both of us were
completely dehydrated. We bought two warm waters and stood there on the
corner, in silence.
N. started speaking to me in Farsi. We normally speak English when we
are
alone together, with B. and R. we speak Farsi and other Farsi-occasions
include when in shops, restaurants or taxis (the taxi drivers try and
rip us
off if they hear us speaking a foreign language). It came to me as a
surprise
that N. was speaking in Farsi, even more so because she was trying to
express
something quite complicated. The language was challenging her ease of
expression. I tried to follow along and felt that I understood the
sense of
what she was saying, connecting it to other thoughts I had. N. was
speaking
about a sense of powerlessness she had begun to feel. I had noticed
that ever
since a certain point the previous night, N. had put up an invisible
wall,
turning silent, her face and gestures hard to read. I felt her distant
to me
and this troubled me. Once again, another surreal moment: standing,
wedged in
the corner of the entrance to a pharmacy, with swarms of peo2ple
shoving past
us, moving towards some greater force attracting them, N. and I stood
unsure
of what to do, speaking about powerlessness, standing at a threshold
and not
up: it was when the Basiji had arrived on our street the other night
and R.
already written, from that point on, R. changed, his anxiety was
channeled
into panic, he began attempting to control what little of the immediate
situation he could: he told me to begin writing, dictating to me what
to say;
he told N. to call her friends abroad, putting the exact words in her
mouth;
he asked frantically if we had a poster of Ahmadinejad we could hang
in the
house, in case anyone came to search; he told us that from now one we
have to
be extra careful, we have to hide our tapes, cameras and computers, we
cannot
let anyone into the house that we do not know; he told us that
sometimes the
secret service pretends to be the postal delivery man, that we should
not be
so easily fooled; and ominously, he told us that we should keep
separate, for
if one of us were to be caught it would be bound time for the others
to be
arrested, but at least some of us could escape with proper notice. For
what?
How had we come to this situation? R. was the one who had yelled at the
Basiji, it was his own decision, none of us would have supported him
if he
had consulted us beforehand. The situation was dangerous in general,
but now
it had become particularly dangerous for us, not because we all acted
out,
but because R. acted out. And his response? To tell us what we have to
do,
how we have to think, what we have to say and write and how we have to
act. A
system of values, clearly distinguishing between right (us) and wrong
(them)
was put into place at this moment. A force of power, weak and self-
conscious,
dragged us with it, subjecting us to its authority, telling us to make
up for
As N. described this
feeling, I began to see the reason for my silence in the car. I
thought of
the last report I had written and began feeling sick at parts of it,
the tone
it had, as if someone else were speaking through my words, as if I were
possessed by a greater being.
. She asked me: why are you writing? I asked her:
Previously, I may have responded differently, in fact, I think I ended
my
last report with an implicit motivation for writing: to let the world
know
what we are going through. But how did I manage to let my subjectivity
slip
past me, transforming into a collective voice? When was the moment in
which
. What is there to know? To know what not to know, as Michael
public
secret, as is the case with most important social knowledge, knowing
what not
to know? Then what happens to the inspired act of defacement? Does it
destroy
the secret, or further empower it? For are not shared secrets the
basis of
our social institutions, the workplace, the family and the state? Is
not such
public secrecy the most interesting, the most powerful, the most
mischievous
pp. 2)
be easily articulated, certainly not on the ground, face-to-
Taussig, pp. 6)
that we were standing at the real threshold, the threshold over whom
one step
forward would lead to the loss of subjectivity. Subjectivity is at
stake here
develop a new language; I thought to myself, that when I write I want to
write outside of the given categories of fiction, non-fiction,
journalism,
criticism, etc. There is something complicated going on and it is
important
to stress that there is nothing right or wrong in this situation:
images of
the police and military violence against the Iranian people have been
spreading like wildfire in the past days; writers, whether journalists
or
bloggers or individuals like myself who are looking for a channel to
clarify
their experiences have described what they have seen and indeed, this
has
necessitated descriptions of the violence against the people. Although
all
these experiences are true, they really happened and it is important
to make
clear how real everything is here through such documentation, a
question of
representation arises and which is, in my mind, what complicates the
entire
violence without transforming into violent language? To extend the
argument,
properties of spreading, word for word, into every nook and corner of
reality, multiplying endlessly. On the one hand, a tidal wave occurs,
the
representation of violence overwhelms and moves one to action; on the
other
it is a viral dissemination by language, violent as it is, that joins
in the
individual to a collective will of ethical retribution. This
retribution may
take the way of revenge, or of a demonstration, but it may also take a
much
more sinister, unconscious manifestation, that of a will to power, to
react
instead of act, creating those who, so moved by representing reality,
chose
to force others to react with them, creating a force that replicates the

To articulate a narration that examines violence and justice, not only
as a
concept but as a practice  or a narration that acts with violence (even
unconsciously, as it may have been doing so far) and its concomitant
justice
(who will reply to my voice?)  requires a voice-over that is never
present
as such. Much like the angel of death, this narrative is a story that,
through its telling, prolongs the
perish during the course of events that the story provides. By life, I
mean
to say that through writing, I can remember that I lived through this,
which
be alive, alone, myself, even when in
a demonstration of millions.
I received a moving e-mail from a friend yesterday, who prefaced it by
saying
that she knows it may sound all too strange, but that she envies me
being
here. For me, this had a different meaning, as if she we
like to live, f Now, after
all this, I finally wish to learn to live! But without a comma? Does the
meaning then depend on an infinitive construction  to live finally? Is
this
a complete verb? What would it mean? To live  And am I
able to show, describe, write about, in any way practice how to live?
Do I
live more because I have passed one threshold (come to this country),
yet
another (participate in the events here through observation) and await
one
step before a final threshold from which I cannot return (losing my
subjectivity  either through physical death or through relinquishing my
agency to authority)?
Today, there was a similar march, significant in numbers although less
than
yesterday, along Valiasr Street, from Valiasr Square to Tajrish
Square. The
march was also silent and its purpose was to convene onto the
headquarters of
TV/Radio, near where I am staying. There, in front of the state-run
broadcasting center, heavily fortified by military, police and plain-
clothes
personnel for the past few days, a wave of hundreds of thousands,
stretching
up and down Valiasr as far as I could see standing on my tip-toes, sat
themselves down onto the pavement, waved green flags, held up signs with
images and text on them, and observed the law of silence. There was
something
s demonstration. I had seen signs announcing the
demo for today, although I thought that everyone would meet at Valiasr
Square
and march further south towards the main cemetery and the railway
station,
but N. called me earlier this afternoon to tell me that the
demonstration had
been canceled due to security concerns. Apparently, last night the
police/Basiji had raided hundreds of homes and arrested many people,
jumping
the death toll from one killed during the demonstration itself
yesterday at
Azadi Square to seven in total, when counting those killed in their
own homes
last night. This crackdown was a serious matter, a perfect complement
to the
feigned generosity of the police standing by, watching in boredom
during the
march yesterday. Of course, one should not expect anything more: no
violence
during the day only presupposes even greater violence, stealthier,
crueler,
at night. Perhaps the helicopters flying by yesterday were zooming in
and
taking photographs of the crowd, and perhaps the security forces later
scanned faces and picked ones at random to target for the evening. Who
knows?
Regardless, today seemed like a calm day. N. dropped by in the afternoon
after class. I was no longer staying with B. and R. and instead I had
gone
back to my own, single apartment. The previous days I needed a sense of
community and company to make sense of the situation, I needed to feel
d so I had been living unofficially with B. and R.,
where N. also lived, absorbing a particular rhythm that no longer had
the
were developing between and around us.
When N. came over, I saw that I had run out of cigarettes so I ran
downstairs
to pick up some smokes as well as a few things for an afternoon snack.
As I
walked to the supermarket, I saw cars backed up on my street, turning
around
the corner and lining up all the way to Valiasr Street down the hill.
Many
people were walking down towards the main street. I thought to myself
that I
guess the demonstration was taking place after all. In the store, I
browsed
for a few snacks, bought a couple of phone cards and paid. The clerk
leaned
he pulled back his head and shot a greeting to a few older, bearded
men who
came in the shop. His secrecy was strange. This was a relatively
affluent
neighborhood, there was no reason to fear, then again, maybe he has
found
unexpected pressure on him and his shop from someone. I resisted the
temptation to walk down to see the demonstration, especially since I had
accidentally locked N. in my apartment. I went back up and told her
that the
demo had taken place anyway and she confirmed that R. had called her
and told
her about it and asked if she had taken the camera by mistake, as he
wanted
to document it. I realized that in my confusion and browsing (I take
ages to
by groceries, I deliberate too much), I had forgotten to buy what I had
originally gone downstairs for: cigarettes. I went back downstairs
again,
decided to go down the hill to Valiasr Street and take a look. When I
got
down, I saw that the streets were full. I tried to eavesdrop on the
conversations, my usual way of assembling information (I particularly
enjoy
the exaggerations and contradictions in what people say to one
another). I
asked an older man for a light and asked him about the demonstration:
had
people gathered at Valiasr Square and walked up, because it seemed that
arriving, but walking down from Tajrish Square further up north? He
said that
, but the
crowds extend down to Valiasr Square, except that from Vanak on
Ahmadinejad
supporters are gathered. They had been brought by the busload, emptied
onto
the streets and told to show their support for the President. I asked if
there had been clashes between the two groups and he said, yes, and
that the
Basiji had also driven through the crowd a few times in the past hour. I
looked down onto TV/Radio Headquarters, known as Jaam-e-Jam, and saw
police
snipers hiding behind trees and bushes, observing the crowd closely. I
saw a
group of Basijis gathered in the driveway of Jaam-e-Jam, talking to one
another. All of a sudden, the crowd began chanting. Many started
hissing, an
the government and the President with cheap slogans. Many of the older
women
observe simple silence. I found myself fuming  I was so angry that a
select
few were willing to selfishly spoil the situation for everyone
involved, just
because they felt the need to violently proclaim what they thought to be
silence was; today felt tense, broken up, individuated into smaller
groups,
people seemed to be watching and waiting for something, rather than
bathing
in the confidence and satisfaction of the leveling power of silence. I
walked
towards a group of older women and began complaining to them
need to be quiet! It is so important to be silent, especially now in
this
unleash the Basiji, who are just waiting for an excuse to arrest,
beat, stab,
shoot, whatever, to inflict punishment onto the crowd. Soon those who
were
chanting stopped, but the mood remained very uncomfortable. I saw R.,
he came
and tapped me on the shoulder. He was furiously smoking, sucking on his

exclaimed how beautiful the turn out today had been. He shuffled back
and
forth nervously and then, when I turned my head, walked away and
disappeared.
After R. left, I saw a man walking towards me, he was wearing a
baseball cap,
sunglasses and a surgical mask to avoid being recognized. He walked in
silence through the crowd, holding up in one hand a sheet of paper
upon which
Underneath the text, there was a collection of eight images, taken
from the
international media, of individuals who had been wounded or killed
during the
demonstrations in the past days. These images were the same ones
circulating
through AP and Reuters, reproduced in the New York Times and the BBC.
One
showed a woman being beaten by a group of Basiji and police. Another
showed a
dead body in the back of a pick-up truck. The most disturbing was the
image
of a middle-aged man, fallen onto the pavement, his head had, for lack
of a
better word, exploded from a close-range, point-blank gunshot. In the
same
hand that the man used to hold up this sheet of paper, he held a single,
long-stemmed, white gladiola flower. He walked in absolute silence,
valiantly
displaying the images. A crowd of people huddled around him and
followed him
looking up at the images. All of them scrambled to get closer, hands
shooting
up into the air with mobile phones taking pictures of the picture, or
of the
sure. The group of people surrounding him naturally increased
and decreased, people came and went, but everyone seemed to be
attracted to a
single point of view, fixating their motions and gaze onto the raised
arm
holding the sheet of paper and the flower, confirming their experience
of
this event with the necessary mobile phone photograph. I thought to
myself
how beautiful this image was, of people taking images of an image, and
how
I
thought about the power of the silence, in the demonstration as a
whole and
at this one moment, in which more than mourning was occurring,
mourning that
precipitates silence out of honor, but which also, typically, demands
wails
and screams. No wails and screams here, just wet, wide-open eyes and the
shutter click of camera phones. What I am seeing, the observation of
silence,
the awareness of representation in the gestures that people are
taking, the
words. Unlike words,
silence, however, leaves much open room. Its power comes from the
range of
interpretations possible, as well as the possibility for silence,
since it is
demanded, but it remains as it is, pervading the space of those who
experience it, saying, silently, to pay attention more acutely, to think
individually, to try and figure out what is going on and why there is
silence
to begin with.
The silence of the man and his images, of those gathered around him,
of those
-
to learn to live, finally, the most I can show is that one must not
privilege
disaster as authentic experience, nor must one valorize struggle as
deep in
meaning. Finally, I come to where all these thoughts stem from: how to
develop a new language to articulate what is going on here, to which I
must
add, a language that articulates not being able to articulate, knows
what not
to know? While writing this report, a paper I had written a few years
ago
comes to my mind, and I think parts of it are suitable to lead the
process
forward: Seven years before writing On the Concept of History,  Walter
Benjamin outlined his theory of mimesis in On the Mimetic Faculty,
which
would serve as a basis for his greater project to read non-texts. The
natural
which man creates analogies and similarities to the natural stimuli he
encounters. Benjamin focuses his argument on language as mimesis:
language is
far from a system of signs; instead, it is the bearer of a nonsensuous
similarity that guarantees wholeness in the experience of the world. The
perception of meaning occurs at brief moments, flashes of gnosis, which
simulates the entire world through language. Language has its roots in
the
inexpressible: to read what was never written, such reading is the most
ancient  reading before all languages, from the entrails, the stars, or
dances.  What is the most crucial, for me, at this moment is to try and
operate in an in-between state, especially in regards to language. In my
earlier slippages, I encountered the power of a language removed from
access
to subjectivity and individual, sensuous perception. In realizing this
alienation from my own self, I now feel that there are other things
that can
be read beyond what I immediate see and perceive, a defacing that faces,
revealing and hiding, back and forth, contradicting itself like the
blind
prophet who augurs. The in-between-state, what this entire experience
has
actually (also as in currently) been/is, feels hallucinogenic, yet in
this
altered state of consciousness I feel myself much more only when I force
myself to open my eyes in the water. At night, the honking of
invisible cars
endless circularity; in the silent demonstrations, each sound bears more
weight, a human voice feels offensive and needs to be quickly hushed;
the hum
of the TV, the velocity of the news reported, in combination with
shuffling
through online versions of newspapers, creates a wall of information
that
here. What is written is not to be read: the language I am searching for
exists in my nonsensuous similarity to the environment, the
possibility of
changing into air or rocks or trees, the circularity of chants and
silences
open to any and every and no meaning all at the same time, an image of
an

When we were at  yesterday, we turned on Iranian state-run TV to
see whether they were reporting about the demonstration that day. On one
channel we saw a wildlife documentary about turtles. Another channel was
airing some after-school program about mathematics. The news station was
reiterating the county-by-county tally of the election results,
showing how
the votes were broken down between the four candidates in every
municipal
exclaimed N. Millions of people
gathered outside for the past three hours and all they show on
national TV is
turtles. Nothing is happening at all, the world is permanently the way
it has
always been, time circling in loops. Coming from outside and then to
watch
Toufic, p
the cause of a return-to-
of the whack on the brain (the first vote counts came in within 1 hour
of the
-run TV has managed to masterfully enact.
feeling that what united the people was a certain impatience and
desire for a
leader, for someone to tell them what to do. In my opinion, the
importance of
such demonstrations goes beyond demanding one authority over another. In
fact, for me Moussavi has become completely unimportant  I, among
others,
was realistic before the elections and after that Moussavi, or any
politician, is a savior who will come to change everything wrong with
this
country. His position is most likely decided, I doubt the vote will be
revoked and even if it is and he becomes President, it is less of
importance
to me than what the circumstances of the situation have produced and
how they
came into existence in the first place. Rather than following, being
pulled,
pushed, forced into silence or acceptance, it is important to feel and
experience, to be unsure, to speak when it is necessary to speak, to
participate when it is desired to participate, allowing for the
structures of
authority that are in place and that can easily replicate themselves to
become malleable in the face of a strong will, at the hands of each
have come to

After a few rounds of call and response, one of the neighbors shouted
from
y related to the current
st
cause and they returned back indoors. The nerve! Why should I ruin the
which is so intelligent in how it reveals and hides, in how it perfectly
embodies the most powerful form of social knowledge  knowing what not to
know  for a direct, cheesy and (dare I say) trite invocation for
someone, an
old man who may look friendly but who was Prime Minister in this
country from
1981-89 and who also, in his time, imprisoned and killed many students,
effectively enacting this regime  implicit
approval? What need do I have for a leader, someone to replace the
form but
whose content is still basically the same?
er completely novel, and no act can ever be quite
appearance of meaning that must be transmitted among subjects through
replications, which teeter between a known pattern and its innovation,
or,
recreation. The variation is usually minor, but significant in that
the event
cannot be experienced in a present-present, but as a past-present
representation, in which the past action is bound to an authoritative
present
interpretation. The revolution is a representation, assuming the
temporary
satisfaction of internal, spiritual flows, yet rewriting the same form,
different in immediate content alone, onto the body. The subject is
unknowingly recreated  into the same creation. The power of this
moment is
the ability to have a reform movement that needs no leader to save the
people: the people save themselves, subtle and clever, indirect and
playful,
through using the structures that keep the system in place against
itself, as
a mirror reflection that shatters when the vampire throws his glance.
How play fits into this becomes an issue of the bodies involved, and
play
creates relations between bodies that are primarily individual to
individual,
channeling and connecting subjective energies. For me, one of the
interesting
-conscious
guilt towards the
describing  whether out in the street, amongst demonstrators, at home
writing,
more subtle way, a way that views situations as more than just physical
surfaces, rather as sensuous environments. The repression and guilt is
especially strong when I sense the sexual aro
appearance brings forth, but that is more the result of an immediate,
fetishistic connection between sex and death which is a direction I do
not
pressing subjectivity, similar to the trips and falls of language and
feet,
exacerbated by the altered states of consciousness that turtles,
mathematics
and public secrets provoke through amnesiac lapses. It is almost as if
the
militancy of the moment, in its will-to-authority (control and be
controlled)
as such. But when it comes up, I am realizing, it offers an
opportunity to
play with the immediate situation, a play-dough situation in which one
can
explore the many sensations that a language-other-than-words provides
in its
openness.
On my way home last night, a car drove around the corner,
flashed its lights at me, honked and then screeched to a halt next to
me. The
window rolled down: two girls, neither wearing headscarves, dressed to
go
out, the smell of perfume oozing from out of the car window. One of
them, the
driver, a dark haired, red-lipsticked, charcoal eyed young woman asked
me in
-sign, smiled and
asked me where I was coming from. I told them I had been at the silent
march
on Enghelab earlier and was now coming home. They were immediately
excited,
asking me all the details: what was it like, what happened, how many
people
were there, was it true that 15 people were shot? I asked them if they
had
been there and they said no, they were too afraid to go. In return, I
scolded
them for their mistake, declaring that it had been a truly inspiring and
beautiful day, stressing how important the silence was. They giggled
and I
heard the girl in the passenger seat, who had tiny features, pale skin
and
light brown curly hair say that she found my way of describing the
situation
demonstration the next day, to take place at Valiasr Square at 5 PM. The
driv
girls burst out in excitement, switching to English and asking me to
come
with them to a party. I declined the offer and the driver held out her
hand
I gave her a high five and then she wished me much luck and blew me a
kiss. I
I had never in my life had two girls try and pick me up and now it
happened,
years.
Earlier that day, N. and I took a break from the silent march and
found a
very small and well-
toilet and I lay down on the grass and smoked a cigarette. I noticed
many
young men in the park, gathered in groups, which is in no way unusual
in a
society traditionally used to self-segregation between the sexes,
except for
the fact that all the young men were quite handsome, quite athletic,
quite
well dressed, and quite physical with one another. They exchanged
furtive
glances between groups and many loitered around the entrance to the
public
toilets. Some were sitting on benches, their legs spread open, their
arms
behind their heads, tapping, as if they were waiting for something to
come
by, showing off their figures and their packages in anticipation. This
was
only a small section of the park, coincidentally around where I had
decided
to lie down and wait for N. to return from the bathroom. When N. came
back, I
attracted to the combination of tan skin, youthful arrogance, big eyes
and
perma-stubble on exhibition at the park. As we got up to leave, I saw
that
the rest of the park was filled with elderly men playing backgammon,
completely oblivious to the well-hidden cruising going on a few meters
away.
I wondered to myself if this was a product of the day s energy, in which
everything had been turned into an incomprehensible chaos, or if these
young
men were park regulars, and if, on normal evenings, the tone is much
more
amplified than it was at that moment  the street-fest atmosphere of the
demonstration and the mixing of Tehranis from all over made it hard to
feel
the situation out. In both of these examples, these instances express
for me
an impossibility of denying the body, or even, of material in favor of
ideology. The Gnostic urge to purge the earthly for the greater,
cosmic spark
is not an emotion that subjects, speaking from my own I , feel
naturally. In
fact, the power of ideology s seduction makes it even more necessary, I
believe, to let subjective, fleshly attractions pervade and enrich the
greater events occurring too-fast-too-powerful to be truly understood:
sexuality is a play whose rules are easy to understand and in which
trial,
error and experimentation are the only ways of learning, offering the
opportunity to slip, trip and fall. The necessity to feel one s body
even
more exists in such moments, when the body is at the brink of letting
itself
go for something it does not and cannot know, something which, with a
step
past the false threshold, will be too late to articulate.

Nicocig Ruyan Jazz Disposable Electronic Cigarette from Health and Care

imageThe Nicocig Ruyan Jazz has just been launched in the UK, and Healthandcare.co.uk are the first UK stockists of this brand new disposable electronic cigarette. The Nicocig Ruyan Jazz is a disposable electronic cigarette, and is ready to use straight out of its box. There is no need to wait for the Nicocig Ruyan Jazz electronic cigarette to charge up – simply take it out of its box, tear the film and away you go.

The Nicocig Jazz contains no tar, no tobacco and delivers real smoking satisfaction. A built in vaporiser and battery create nicotine water vapour which delivers a nicotine hit and looks just like real smoke. You can even blow smoke rings with the Nicocig Ruyan Jazz.  

The Nicocig Jazz is not covered by the smoking ban as nothing is being burned inside the electronic cigarette. Instead, nicotine steam is created which means that this disposable e-cig can be used in pubs, clubs and even on planes. Make sure you ask permission before “lighting up” as the Nicocig Jazz looks so realistic. The tip even glows when you inhale, just like a real cigarette.

The new Nicocig Ruyan Jazz is a disposable electronic cigarette, and lasts for the equivalent of up to 80 traditional cigarettes. It offers great convenience at a very good price, working out much cheaper than smoking traditional cigarettes without many of the dangers associated with tar and tobacco. Health and Care are retailing the disposable electronic cigarette at £16.95 including free postage and packing. As the Nicocig Ruyan Jazz lasts for the equivalent of up to 80 traditional cigarettes, £16.95 is much cheaper than the equivalent 4 packets of cigarettes, saving you cash as well as offering a healthier smoking alternative.

Review of Menthol e-liquid in 24mg from Rocky Mountain Vapor @ rockymountainvapor.com

This is a review of the Menthol flavored liquid in 24mg strength from Rocky Mountain Vapor available @ rockymountainvapor.com. Brought to you by kc0cmp from the ECF forum.

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