Monday, February 25, 2013

THE STORY SO FAR: PART 177

MY SISTER LUCY—SHE OF THE KEEN VISUAL EYE & SENSE OF WHAT TOUCHES A NERVE—HAS DONE IT AGAIN

I wrote yesterday—with some passion—about the travails of writing, and the need to keep going regardless. Hard to overstress the importance of sheer, unadulterated perseverance. That made me think about other outsiders who have questioned the status quo, been proven right again and again, yet have been rejected by “the system.”

Several are my friends and stem from both the arcane world of counter-terrorism, and from the military. All have risked their lives in the National Interest, and done outstanding work in their respective fields.

Their offense has been to refuse to conform intellectually (they have followed the rules of their particular organizations)—so the system has rejected them. Being right is not considered an adequate excuse. Having achieved significant results in defense of National Security is also no justification. The strength of the system lies not in its effectiveness and integrity, but in its ability to benefit those who go along to get long. Typically, it protects an elite, and those who want to be part of that elite.

“The system,” a mindset rather than a monolith, is nonetheless something which pervades the American Way of Life. Given the authoritarian nature of this money driven corporate/government world we have created, and now seem to accept in place of democracy, we should probably not be surprised. It is underpinned by a careerist mentality which puts self-interest before the mission, self-advancement ahead of the public good. It is almost entirely lacking in social concern. Though it is clear that many are unhappy with it—perhaps even a majority—it remains dominant in our society. Why not, indeed, it controls the levers of power.

Have the rejected turned into “beautiful people” as explained in Elizabeth Kubler Ros’s memorable observation (see above). Not quite, based upon my experience—unless one takes a very charitable view of beautiful people—but I have to say her general principle is not only true, but beautifully expressed. Adversity does, in many cases, breed understanding and compassion. Unfortunately, it can also breed bitterness.

Do beautiful people really exist? Yes, they do, but they are also flawed and human. That is part of their charm.

 

 

 

Saturday, February 23, 2013

THE STORY SO FAR: PART 175

HOW LIGHT CAN A WRITER TRAVEL?

I’m completing my packing, and moving shortly, so my daily blogs are likely to be shorter than normal—and there maybe some gaps. But, I’ll fill them in later. I’m dedicated to achieving a blog a day until I have completed a year. Then, I’ll take a fresh look at the situation.

I have made a lot of progress at moving with less stuff, but am far from the ideal as yet.

Theoretically, all a writer needs this days are a few clothes and a computer—but the reality tends to be different—at least in my case.

I’m working in it.

 

Orso Clip Art

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

THE STORY SO FAR: PART 173

NOT YOUR AVERAGE COW!

QUITE SO! AFRICA IS DIFFERENT—AND THIS IS A BLUE WILDEBEEST (which, of course, you knew)

Blue Wildebeest

I receive a great deal of fan mail—all of it welcome, by the way—which I try to answer individually. That may be unwise, because it takes a great deal of time to deal with correspondence (which, arguably, I could be putting to better use by writing new books) but I am deeply grateful to those who take the trouble, not only to support me, but to write—and somehow feel they deserve a personal response. As you will appreciate, that is not a rational decision—it comes from the heart—but it has been deeply rewarded by my making some some very good friends, and by feeling that I have been doing the right thing, albeit not the sensible thing.

The trouble with replying personally is that a thoughtful reply tends to generate further correspondence—and, before you know it, you are swamped. Still, some readers stand out—and one of them was (and remains) Pieter Stofberg. He likes my books and I’m fascinated by what he does. Big game hunting harks back to many books of high adventure I read when younger—and to Hemingway.

Pieter StofbergPieter runs a big game hunting operation in Namibia, Africa—and by all accounts does a magnificent job. His clients rave about him and he is aided by the fact that Namibia is absolutely spectacular.

In short, going on safari there is not like going down to Cancun, Mexico, for two weeks in the sun. It is the experience of lifetime.

Going on safari doesn’t mean you have to hunt with a gun—that’s a personal choice. You can also use a camera, or just revel in a completely different way of life. Or you can fish. Namibia offers a range of choices. The important thing is the experience—which is so different from the current Western way of life as to change your way of thinking—for the better.

I haven’t yet set a Fitzduane novel in Africa—though certain episodes from his past are set in the Congo. But that may change.

Pieter’s company is called African Days and his e-mail is pieterhunt@yahoo.com

Thursday, February 14, 2013

THE STORY SO FAR: PART 167

THE FRENCH IN MALI ARE BACK TO USING SOME OF THE SAME HIGH MOBILITY TACTICS THEY USED IN ALGERIA ALL OF SIXTY YEARS AGO

THEY ARE AS EFFECTIVE AS EVER

17e RGB paradrop over Timbuktu

It is common in the U.S. to disparage the French—and I really don’t understand why. Nonetheless, the sentence, “We saved their butts in two world wars,” is one I have had repeated to me on numerous occasions. We tend to forget that we had an interest in the outcomes of both wars, which had nothing to do with saving the French

We also tend to forget that without the French there might not have been a United States of America in the first place.

Personally, I love France. Its politics are no screwier than those of most other nations, and it has long had an admirable quality of life. That apart, its culture is extraordinarily rich and the country, itself, is beautiful. As for the French people, they have endured much, and achieved much, and the world would be a vastly poorer place without them.

The French lost their war in Indo-China much as we would go on to do in Vietnam. Nonetheless, some of their military units learned a great deal from the experience, and went on to apply this knowledge and expertise against the FLN in the Algerian War in the Fifties and early Sixties. In particular, the French paras made something of an art out of high mobility warfare, particularly when tracking down bands of FLN infiltrators. Either by parachute or helicopter, they would insert blocking forces and then destroy the rebels by way of bombing or close quarters infantry combat. In short, the French were pioneers of helicopter warfare and were also the first people to use TOW missiles from rotary aircraft.

Observing their operations in Mali reminds me of all this—together with the weeks I spent researching the French Foreign Legion in Corsica in 1964. These were scarily tough soldiers.

What will happen in Mali, I do not know. The French are trying to accomplish a prodigious amount with a very small force. Mali is huge. Nonetheless, a great deal can be accomplished through high-speed maneuver warfare – and the French have plenty of experience at it.

 

Orso Clip Art

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

THE STORY SO FAR: PART 164

SOMETHING EVIL IN MY CUPBOARD!

COULD IT BE WE ARE BOTH POISONING OURSELVES—UNWITTINGLY IN MANY CASES—AND BEING POISONED (perhaps not so unwittingly)?

YES!

INGREDIENTS:
ENRICHED UNBLEACHED WHEAT FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, MALTED BARLEY FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMIN MONONITRATE [VIT. B1], RIBOFLAVIN [VIT.B2], FOLIC ACID [VIT. B9]), WATER, RAISINS, YEAST, CORN MEAL, CONTAINS 2% OR LESS OF EACH OF THE FOLLOWING: SALT, DISTILLED VINEGAR, VEGETABLE OIL (CANOLA AND/OR SOY), VITAL WHEAT GLUTEN, CINNAMON, NUTMEG, YEAST NUTRIENT (AMMONIUM SULPHATE), DOUGH CONDITIONERS (PROTEASE, ASCORBIC ACID, AZODICARBONAMIDE), CALCIUM PROPIONATE AND POTASSIUM SORBATE (MOLD INHIBITORS), NONFAT DRY MILK.

From time to time, I like what are called in the U.S. “English Muffins”—particularly the kind with Double Raisin & Cinnamon. I don’t eat them every week, but more when the mood strikes.

Over four months ago, I bought a pack of Franz English muffins, but didn’t finish it—and then forgot where I had put it. The kitchen in this apartment is small, so I don’t have a traditional bread bin. I store stuff in an overhead cupboard. Because the top shelf is high, sometimes I cannot see what is there already so have a tendency to put packages or cans in front—thus obscuring what is there already. Normally it doesn’t matter because the goods are either canned or dry.

What can I say! I’m an absent-minded author! 

Today I found those four month old muffins—I was clearing out the cupboards prior to moving—and was appalled to find that they still looked and felt highly edible. After more than a third of a year, that just isn’t natural.

Franz proudly boast that their muffins are free of High Fructose Corn Syrup and Trans Fat, but it is clear that other evils are afoot. Food should behave like food—and when it doesn’t, it is creepy. Is the food being irradiated? There is no mention of that on the packet. Either way, something is clearly wrong, and I junked the things. I doubt very much I will ever eat one again. When food is that unnatural, a sentient human being has reason to be frightened of it—because food can, and does, kill.

The comedian and talk show host, Bill Maher, states bluntly and often that we are poisoning ourselves by eating what is increasingly being called “Industrial Food.” Minimal research would indicate that he is almost certainly right—and that the combination of the industrial processes which we still quaintly call “farming” is producing food which, all too often, is downright hazardous to our health.

What  do I mean by “industrial processes” when it comes to food? I mean factory farming, excessive antibiotics fed to animals, the triumph of genetically modified raw materials, massive overuse of insecticides, monoculture, the extensive use of dubious ingredients by food processors—and much more besides including padding-out processed food with cheap fillers (such as GM soy). Fillers are used to pad out the nutritional content. It is vastly cheaper to use cheap soy than more expensive meat but the protein content may look the same on the label.

Obesity and our general lack of fitness apart, the consequences of our poor diet are showing up in the fact that we tend to be significantly sicker than is the pattern in other developed nations, and we are dying younger than they do. Beyond that, our children are increasingly developing various conditions at a rate that is alarming. As the military comment regularly—because they have to reject so many candidates for physical reasons--we are not a healthy nation to the point here it has become a National Security issue.

Is our food the reason? I have no doubt at all but that it plays a major role in our current health plight. Next in line I would put lifestyle, and thirdly it is worth noting that we live in a massively polluted environment. Our air, land, and water is contaminated.

Are we doing much about it? Well, there is an organic movement, and many manufacturers are dropping High Fructose Corn Syrup—but, essentially, we are doing very little. The quality of our food has not yet become a major political issue. It needs to.

By the way, the reason French food is so much better lies in the ingredients. It is hard to over-emphasize this. This is not to decry French cooking—which is generally much superior to ours—but to make the point that the ingredients (the raw materials of a meal) are as fundamental to good healthy food as a solid foundation is to a house.

Perhaps the most worrying thing about ingredients is that all too often the difference is not detectable. It is comparatively easy to detect the difference between a factory farmed chicken and a genuine organic chicken, or between feedlot beef and natural grass-fed; but it is much harder where other foodstuffs are concerned. For instance, modern fruit tends to look absolutely gorgeous when it is racked up in all its visual physical perfection in a modern supermarket, even while the nutritional value of those same fruits can be shown to be but a fraction of their organic ancestors—and that is before we consider the very real threat from residual insecticides.

What you see is an illusion of perfection. What you get is, all too often, a mere nutritional facsimile of the real thing—and contaminated by chemicals into the bargain. And so we and our children get sicker sooner than we should—and we die years sooner. Surely this must be a cause for major concern? But, as of now, it is not.

A closing story: As most people know, bread is fundamental to the French way of life and it has to be bought daily because otherwise it goes stale. Well, I once visited friends in France who had a hole in the wall of their kitchen—as in a letter-box—for their daily bread delivery. It was a centuries old house. I have never seen that before or since (though it may be common for all I know) but I was charmed.

Perhaps the United States Post Office is in the wrong business—but should be in the food delivery business. After all, you cannot e-mail a baguette, but it does require to be either picked up or delivered daily. Five days a week would be a good start.

 

 

 

 

Saturday, February 2, 2013

TN #1. A NEW BLOG FOCUSED ON THE U.S. ECONOMY--AND WHY IT IS NOT WORKING AS WELL AS IT SHOULD AND NEEDS TO

English: American Way of life
English: American Way of life (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Generally speaking, when I write my main blog VICTOR O'REILLY - LETTERS FROM AN AUTHOR, I like to keep a fairly light tone; and to steer clear of politics and economics as much as possible. I haven't been entirely successful in that regard--I do write about such serious issues every so often--but they tend to be more the exceptions than the rule.

I now think, in the interests of avoiding confusion, that the time has come to give politics and economics its own blog--so here it is at titanicnation.blogspot.com 

It is called after my book, TITANIC NATION: How To Avoid Icebergs which covers most of the threats to the American Way of Life which we face today--and proposes solutions as well.

Solutions! Good grief! What a novel idea!

Truly difficult problems certainly do exist in life--some call them "Wicked problems"--a description I rather like--but most of our economic problems don't come into that category. In fact, in many cases, not only have they been solved already, but the solutions have been put into practice and are well proven to be working.

Unfortunately, it is not the American way to look abroad for solutions. The notion that the American way has to be the best is an integral part of the national psyche, and evidence in profusion does not seem to affect that situation.

Beyond that, our political system is currently near paralyzed by ideology--once again regardless of the evidence.

As a consequence, although the solutions are out there--both in this country and overseas--we seem remarkably reluctant to seek them out.

This blog has no party affiliation. I am only interested in what works. I just think it is a great pity that a marvelous country like this should be doing so badly under a wide variety of headings. True, the stock market is currently doing well--it can crash, as we know--but that primarily benefits the rich and is of scant advantage to the majority of the U.S. population.

The following are some of the principle areas of concern:

  • GROWTH RATE
  • EMPLOYMENT
  • LOW & FALLING PAY
  • INADEQUATE INVESTMENT IN INFRASTRUCTURE
  • LOW SAVINGS
  • AN ECONOMIC SYSTEM BIASED HEAVILY TOWARDS THE RICH
  • A POLITICAL SYSTEM DOMINATED BY THE RICH
  • AN INADEQUATE MANUFACTURING BASE
  • A GROSSLY INEQUITABLE TAX SYSTEM
  • AN INADEQUATE K-12 EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM
  • AN UNEVEN THIRD  LEVEL EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM
  • AN UNSUSTAINABLE LEVEL OF STUDENT DEBT
  • A COLLAPSING PENSION STRUCTURE
  • RISING POVERTY
  • AN EXCESSIVELY COSTLY AND WASTEFUL HEALTHCARE SYSTEM
  • A SUSPECT FOOD CHAIN BASED UPON MONOCULTURE, FACTORY FARMING & INDUSTRIAL FOOD
  • A SERIOUSLY POLLUTED ENVIRONMENT WHICH IS HAVING NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON OUR HEALTH
  • A SERIOUS BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROBLEM
  • A FEDERAL BUDGET PROBLEM
  • A NATIONAL DEBT PROBLEM

To borrow the title of a recent book: The way we are working isn't working. 

In my view, the time has come to re-build this mighty nation and to do away with a long list of statistics of which every American should be ashamed.




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