110 Stories

EDIT: better working link for the movie is below.

On the anniversary of September 11th, I would like to bring to your attention my multimedia adaptation of John M. Ford’s “110 Stories“.

You can view the Quicktime file (13 MB, just under 7 minutes) at http://110stories.malibulist.com/110Stories.mov, and you can read the original text at http://www.110stories.us/. If you happen to have the bandwidth to mirror this, please do, as I anticpate traffic– if you do, please email me with a link so I can post it properly.

And to all of you who helped contribute to the making of this project… thank you.

How I spent my Worldcon…

Samurai Jack and Aku
…scaring the heck out of short people.

Yes, that’s me, the shapeshifting master of darkness, Aku (Boogabooga!) facing off against Kim Kindya as Samurai Jack, who created all these costumes. I was just along for the height.

We entered the Worldcon Masquerade and took Best Workmanship, 2-D, Novice; and Best Presentation, Novice. Special thanks to Mary Eileen Buss.

Convention Stories

I’ll get to the Worldcon stories in a bit, but first I wanted to post this missive from Larry Aronson on living in NYC the past week:

Wow!

Am I glad that’s over. Today the city quickly returned to the normal quiet you’d see going into the Labor Day weekend. The police state is gone and we have our city back. Thankfully, Bush himself, was in the city less than half a day. His coronation was handled entirely by operatives and after his rapid departure, few GOP bigwigs hung around to do any business. I’m sure you have your own opinion but I found Bush’s acceptance speech boring. Most of the new proposals were rehashed Democratic programs that Congressional Republicans blocked in the Clinton administration. To follow a recitation of costly, new-new deal initiatives with an attack on the Free-spending Democrats was hypocrisy. The rest of Bush’s speech was occupied with the fashioning of flag motif, silk purses out of the Economy’s sow ears and pushing the RNC’s singular campaign strategy of sowing fear, uncertainty and doubt, regarding the opposition.

At least they were better behaved on Thursday. People I talked to, and the local email discussion groups I subscribe to, all carried the impression that the Republicans went overboard on Wednesday night, venting a lot of rage and acting like a bunch of drunken, rowdy, in-your-face, TV Texas cowboys. Those delegates from areas East of Appalachia were Mad as Hell and weren’t going to take it any longer. Mad at What?? Where did all this rage and, yes, outright hate come from? I’m mean, these are the folks that won! They control all three branches of the Federal government and the majority of state houses and governorships. As a social class, they have riches and power, relative to the rest of society, that’s unprecedented in my lifetime.

In personal psychological terms, the behaviors I and others witnessed Wednesday would be diagnosed as displacement, a transference of the frustrations of living in a state of vague fears and guilts by engaging in hostile actions against a perceived enemy. The republican party has been taken over by religious conservatives who are, by definition, believers in authority. The speakers Wednesday night, especially Cheney, a mythic hero among this group, not for any achievements of his own, but for being able to tell a Democratic senator to “go fuck yourself”, without fear of consequence, granted license for bad behavior that night. The same people that reacted in horror to Clinton’s oval office blowjob, Janet Jackson’s Superbowl breast and Howard Stern’s obscene truths, cheered ecstatically with each “Fuckin Liberal” in Kid Rock’s ad-lib lyrics. I swear, If he gave out guns at that moment he could have led a mob out of that club, into the streets of New York to kill them some liberal faggots.

Are the sub- and ex-urbanites that make up the masses of the GOP suffering from collective 9/11 guilt? Great Cities are part and parcel of great nations, yet the Republican party has abandoned the cities for the comfort of suburbia and the safety of the country ranch and disdains our culture. New York City took a terrible blow on 9/11, one that congressional and presidential commissions found the Bush administration had plenty of warning about but did nothing significant to prevent. We’ve been indoctrinated in the importance of 9/11; that it changed history; nothing would ever be the same again. Yet, for republicans, especially those in the upper income brackets whose wealth has been sustained by tax cuts, nothing at all has changed! It’s been a period of stasis in many of their lives, marked by increasing fear and unfocused uncertainty about the future. Here in NYC I live under an orange terrorist alert level, yet I’m clueless about what I should be doing differently than you in yellow alert America. Now that we’ve started (but have no idea how to end) two wars in the middle East, is the World really a safer place?

So, when people sense strongly that things are pretty screwed up and yet feel powerless to do anything but pretend life is perfect day after day, what do they do? They get bitchy, that’s what they do and they focus their anger at being put in such a position on the outsider, those that don’t share their values. If the different one is suddenly shown to be weaker then feared, they pounce. A massive advertising assault designed to cast fear, uncertainly and doubt, about John Kerry’s Vietnam War experience was timed to take advantage of the downside of Kerry’s post-convention bounce and manipulated into a media controversy that amplified its effect by endless repetition as a news story. It was a victory, albeit a tactical one, and it stopped George Bush’s decline in the polls just in time to take full advantage of his convention bounce. As a tactic, the whole maneuver was without honor and will only encourage people to stay home on Election Day, but a serious blow was dealt to the Democrat’s campaign, giving the RNC troops their first real taste of blood and they wanted more.

Am I being too harsh here? Too alarmist? At the 1968 Chicago Democratic convention I witnessed the police as they degenerated from an orderly formation for clearing the park into a riot. It happened when a protestor slipped on the grass before the police line and fell. A cop broke formation and began clubbing the protestor on the ground. Next thing I knew, all the cops had broken ranks, each chasing down his own hippie to hit and hit and hit. I saw the same thing happen two and a half years later at the University of Illinois when the campus police, augmented by the Illinois National Guard, tried to clear quadrangle of people protesting the Kent State killings by lying down and playing dead. This is what comes from political campaigns that divide the country; pitting red states against blue; playing on people fears and insecurities for political gain, and that’s what I saw the Republicans doing here in my city the past few days.

Adding to it: whatever it was last week, it wasn’t New York. I was going through the town and the streets were empty during the day, the stores were vacant, and people felt half anxious and jittery, half dead inside. Not like the post 9/11 feeling of, let’s roll up our sleeves, there’s work to be done and we’ll pull together– this felt more like being under siege.

And speaking of psy-ops

New York City – Ground Zero

Miami — Small toys showing an airplane flying into the World Trade Center were packed inside more than 14,000 bags of candy and sent to small groceries around the country before being recalled.

Lisy Corp., the wholesaler that distributed the candy, said Friday that the toys were purchased in bulk from a Miami-based import company.

The toys came in an assortment purchased sight unseen from L&M Import in Miami and included the toys depicting the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the twin towers, whistles and other small toys, said Luis Pedron, Lisy’s national sales manager. The invoice said the toy was a plastic swing set.

“I hate to blame the importer. He probably did not know what he was getting. He brings them in 40-foot containers. But whoever made it knew exactly what they were making,” Pedron said.

Pedron said Lisy did not notice the small plastic figurines until two people complained, but there is no mistaking what the toys represent: At the bottom of each is the product number 9011.

You get the feeling people slaving away in factories overseas for pennies a day might be the teeniest bit resentful?

Speaking of media bias…

On this page on the RNC website G O P.com :: Kerry Supporters Begin Protest Pilgrimage, we have this blurb, which I reproduce here:

And Speaking of Media Bias�
You know the drill � drop by Google News and enter �Ed Gillespie,� then count the articles headlining DNC boss Terry McAuliffe. The liberal bias is sooooo glaring it�s almost embarrassing.

Shall we talk about bias, then? Okay. Mouse over that headlining link. You’ll note that the link doesn’t search on Ed Gillespie, it searches on http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&ie=UTF-8&q=McAuliffe:+Democrats+Not+Aiding+Protesters&filter=0

And we get a link to 20 copies of the same AP story in 20 different newspapers. If that’s bias, I’m a mongoose.

They really do think we’re dumb, don’t they?

Just for grins and giggles, I actually ran the real search on Ed Gillespie. Here’s what I got: Continue reading Speaking of media bias…

And so the lockdown begins

NYC is beginning to freeze around Madison Square Garden. I was living in Manhattan during the Democratic convention in ’92, and worked six blocks south of the garden– and I don’t remember it being anywhere near this bad.

On the one hand, it’s the post 9/11 world. On the other, I wonder if it’s not another ploy to make the Republican visitors feel like a persecuted minority, surrounded by these big bad mean liberals who hate us, so as to get them riled up and give their all for the Party.

To quote one of the most persecuted minorities in history– oy.

And here’s #11

New York Post Online Edition: news

August 25, 2004 — WASHINGTON

House Speaker Dennis Hastert is charging in a new book that New York lawmakers’ attempts to win financial aid after the 9/11 attacks amounted to an “unseemly scramble” for money.

Just days before the GOP convention is set to begin in the city � and three years after the catastrophe from which many city businesses have yet to recover � the Illinois Republican’s ugly slap at the Big Apple infuriated New York legislators.

“The only thing unseemly is the three years it has taken us trying to get the president and Congress to fulfill their promise,” said Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.).

“What’s unseemly is that the $20 billion became the ceiling, not the floor, in help to New York, when so many needs remains,” she added.

The headline on the Post that accompanies this is “Speaker Of The Louse”.

Folks, if you thought Republicans were going to get a hostile reaction before this story came out, you ain’t seen nothing yet.

Unseemly? Hastert may not realize that this little attack wiped entire Zip Codes off the map. Acres of real estate. Major transportation hubs. Hundreds of businesses. Hundreds of thousands of lives affected.

Hastert should be out as House Speaker for this crack. And luckily, you can help do that, even if you don’t live in his district– all you have to do is vote against the Republican candidate for your local US Representative seat.

Looking for a source

Andrew Tobias writes: Why We’re Gonna Win

In October of 2000, voters were asked whether they were �unusually excited� about the upcoming election. And now, in 2004, they’ve been asked again: Are they unusually excited about THIS upcoming election?

Among Republicans, the number is up � 51% are �unusually excited� versus 48% last time.

Among Democrats, the number is up from 36% to 68%.

That is not a typo.

Yes, but it’s also not sourced. Does anybody know where he got this from?