[Washington, 7/2/09]
It’s just after 9AM. I had my cappuccino and rice with grilled pork. I took then uploaded some photos. With a chilled can of Cambodia next to my mouse, I’m ready to write, I think, so wish me luck.
Within a long touchdown of me is the Central Market, with its magnificent dome cum ziggurat. Its many concrete grilled windows allow happiness to shine in. I understand there are guys like Brunelleschi and Wren with their own ballyhooed domes, but listen, if we disregard minor factors like available technology and chronology, Phnom Penh’s dome kicks ass!
To kick ass is to excel, an American expression. I am American enough.
I just paid for nine more days at Zing. At $22 a night, I get a clean, airy room with a fridge and TV I don’t even use. My large window looks down onto a van depot, with its touts and passengers. Carrying plastic bags of bread, sticky rice and bottled water, vendors amble among them. Thirty yards away is a bank of four-story houses nearly a century old. On their frayed balconies are laundry racks and the idle, gazing down. To see other humans and the most ordinary human activities doesn’t just reassure but delight. Only psychos enjoy explosions, killing fields, car crashes or asskicking chainsaw murders.
At this price in the States, I’d be stuck in some Indian-owned motel two time zones away from the nearest 7-11. To my right would be an unemployed plumber or roofer who enjoys repetitive motion to loud internet porn. To my left would dwell a fired bartender with missing fingers and open sores, thanks to tranq dope. Before becoming a zombie, she was finessing an autobiographical novel. The best chapter is of her days as roller derby queen, with some tricking on the side, just for fun. You only live once.
Not content with heroin and fentanyl, Americans are now killing themselves with xylazine, a sedative meant for larger mammals, like horses. Not enough Americans fit into this category, unfortunately, so most just have their flesh and bones eaten away, after an unworldly if too brief high. Although this new trend’s ground zero is my old haunt, Philadelphia, the rest of the country is quickly catching up. Fun must be spread.
An infectious source of asskicking good times, the US is also rocking from coast to coast with “sideshows” or street takeovers. Long mesmerized by cars going in circles, Americans are transfixed by them doing donuts at intersections, with onlookers filming away, when they’re not being sideswiped or run over. Some point laser beams at these careening masses of steel.
Man doesn’t just wed himself to machines to extend his capabilities, but to feel cleaner and crisper, thus more perfect. Possessing neater contours, cars, cellphones, airplanes and tanks also don’t fart. Transhumanism, then, is the natural end to this wish.
As with their endless sport seasons, Americans love frantic monotony. Glazed eyed, they slouch in the ink dark to stare at beamed kinetic events.
It’s what their masters call war, by the way, but just about every English word has been corrupted, including man, woman, democracy and freedom, but what do us canceled zeros know about language? Bound and bogged by reactionary books, we ain’t got no entry into the latest poetry!
Tyga lyrics as sung by Lil Wayne, “Today was a good day, I ain’t had to kill nobody.” If only Uncle Sam could say the same. Although Tyga is half-Vietnamese, his culture is all-American. A new national anthem should be commissioned from this lit freak.
What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, except Marines, Marines will definitely kill you! Kill ‘em all, let God sort ‘em out! Kick ass then go home! In case you think other societies have similar sayings, they don’t.
War does introduce the alley bound to alien cuisines. During the Vietnam War, Võ Phiến pointed out that Hue beef soup had made it to Saigon, and of course, now you can get decent phở and bánh mì even in small town Idaho. In Saigon, there’s Beirut Mediterranean Kitchen and a Syrian joint, Al Sham. Soon enough, perhaps Chicago hot dogs will show up in Phnom Penh.
With a child-groping zombie as figurehead, the US is a sinking ship, but not according to Jill Biden, “Look at all that Joe has done, has accomplished. I mean, he brought us out of the chaos. He did that! He was elected because people wanted steady leadership. I think they saw that in Joe. They saw his character, they saw his integrity and he came into office.”
Let that sink in, and here’s irony-free Secretary of State Antony Blinken, “I think viscerally most Americans don’t like to see a big country bullying another, and they just feel it’s wrong and want to do something about it.”
Au contraire, Tony, most Americans have become addicted to endless bullying, so they cheer whenever their bombs rain on another country. It’s a visceral excitement they can’t go too long without. So sadistic, they think this Jewish composed line hilarious, “I love the smell of Napalm in the morning.”
At least 11 million gallons of Agent Orange were sprayed by the US in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, and those toxins still cause birth defects. Before being dumped on Southeast Asia, it was tested in Panama, without its government’s knowledge. Though depleted uranium was used in Serbia, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, the US insists there are no adverse effects, just as there’s nothing to worry about in East Palestine, Ohio. Jewjabs, too, are perfectly safe and effective, so booster away!
Ioseb Jughashvili changed his last name to Stalin, meaning “man of steel.” After visiting Kiev, Biden declared that Ukrainian comic cum dick pianist cum TV prez cum real president cum Time person of the year Zelensky was a man “whose courage [is] forged with fire and steel,” so like Stalin, Zelensky is a man of steel.
Even more profoundly, Biden’s ventriloquist also stated, “Autocrats only understand one word, ‘No, no, no!”
In the realm of the most toxic terroir, to swerve from bullshit is to lose all your privileges, whether niggardly or phat, so Americans will continue to swoon, “Yes, yes, yes!”
From this vilest vintage they’ll drink.
[Philadelphia, 9/25/13]
[Philadelphia, 9/3/16]
[Washington, 11/30/11]
[Phnom Penh, 2/22/23]
Fun! Yes, I have been using that word a lot lately. Whenever I am out, usually working, I use it to describe the people all around me. They are having fun. I am not but then, I am not like them and I really feel I have no kinship with them. I work as Event Staff, many different venues and I hear that term all the time. "Wasn't that fun?" I don't see any fun in it, though I am entertained by the masses of morons spending ungodly amounts of money on this bullshit. Bird brains I call them, they all act in unison, no matter what, all without an ounce of intelligence. Very scary if you give it some deep thought.
The gushing "patriotism" is disturbing, knowing what is really going on. They will all stand and cheer for the anthem, rigid and proud and then go back to watching the spectacle of ball or noise they call song or whatever is going on. I rarely watch the events, like I said, I get my entertainment from watching the people. Mindless, ignorant and woefully stupid. I would find it sad but then, I have no kinship with them and so I retreat into my own zen meditations. Oh, so peaceful.
I learned a lot today! First, I'm barely caught up on fentanyl, and had not yet heard of zylazine. Second, I happened to read a brief news piece this morning about some arrests at a “sideshow” in the Tractor Supply parking lot in Fresno, and didn't know what a “sideshow” was supposed to be. So thanks for that, although you must admit that it’s pretty sorry that a guy writing a blog from Cambodia knows more about this stuff than someone (me) living in the US where it is actually happening. I need to get out more. :-)
Of the many English words that have been corrupted recently, I nominate “hate” as one that has truly been hijacked. Most of us know which of our feelings is best described by this word, and I charitably submit that most don’t feel it often. But to hear the way it is tossed around these days, hate is all-pervasive and constant. Someone, somewhere is always trying to "hate" the “good guys”. I myself think it has been relegated to a mere synonym of the word “disagreement”. For example, "The Center for Countering Digital Hate" (which you may have heard of) is really countering "disagreement". With what, you say? Why, with “the narrative” of course. (Oh, and BTW, it’s not really a “center” but just one guy and a keyboard.)
As I commonly find myself doing nowadays when I think of such stuff, I grew a bit nauseous toward the end of your piece, not from your writing, but from the sad truth of what you are describing. I can’t tell any more if most Americans feel the way you describe about the bullying, or realize that these guys seem unaware that the nation they're most accurately describing is their own.
I’m certainly no fan of Bill Clinton, but I remember something he said not too long after the collapse of the USSR. He was asked what he thought the US should do with the “peace dividend” we supposedly were going to get from the end of the Cold War, and he said that we should use it to try to build the kind of world we want to be living in when we are no longer top dog on the block. I feel that we in the US are getting very close to finding out how well that worked out.
This morning I just renewed. Thanks for what you do, and keep on keeping on!