Trump and Brigadoon

In the story of Brigadoon people are enchanted in a mythic village, a place of love outside of time and customary space. There are hundreds of variants to the story and of course there’s Lerner and Loewe. Heck there’s even a Star Trek version.

Donald Trump’s administration is a hateful brigadoon—a place where neo-nazis like Steven Miller and fascist wannabes like Mike Pompeo strut and mouth loud racist nonsense about all “those people” who struggle outside their bubble. You know, the majority of the world.

I spent about fifteen minutes this morning trying to imagine the right name for Trump’s “doon” and I’ve come up with “Bigotdoon” which seems about right.

Of course it’s more than a game. Steven Miller pushes the toxic idea that foreigners bring diseases to the United States and for proof he uses caged children (denied medical care) as his proof.

In Bigotdoon Trump’s insiders live in their bunkers, the rest of us will get to die in droves.

If I live long enough maybe I’ll get to see the Broadway version.

The New Dip Shittery

Over the past few months I’ve been using the term dip shit frequently. It’s never been a place holder in my vocabulary like “insensate” or (my favorite) “sub-Cartesian” (the latter so perfect it squeaks.) One chooses to not think and adopts the corresponding identity. It’s more than an insult, it’s a fact; a dessert mint, a breath mint…. But nowadays I’m hobbling with dip shit.

Americans are adept at self-inflicted insults and if you prowl for dip shit in the Urban Dictionary you’ll find in addition to meaning a contemptible or inept person it’s used to demean working class folks, the tortured souls who work at the Department of Motor Vehicles, receptionists, fellow motorists, etc.. If you pronounce everyone willfully vile you can be assured you’re the brightest bulb in the grimy marquee.

Kurt Vonnegut Jr. once said people in the United States are so downtrodden they’ll actually shout “here goes nothing” when jumping out of airplanes. Our brand of capitalism relies on crushing any hope of achieving self worth. So we walk about without health insurance, adequate social relief, access to good and affordable housing, education, public transportation—and we call the most oppressed dip shits.

I know the history of dip shittery.

What I’m now describing is the New Dip Shittery. It comes from a belief floated by the Tea Party and then the entire GOP that “the elites” are the principle problem in America. Why, so the thinking goes, if you can just rid the nation of professional politicians, experts, egg heads, smart women, and all pesky purveyors of nuance and scruple (tip of the hat to William Safire) why then we’ll be in business! The New Dip Shittery is self contempt not on steroids but on amphetamine—its a neurological highjacking—the new Dip Shitter doesn’t have time for the instructions, true journalism, a book, or for that matter to follow public health advice. The new dip shitter is the revenge of the old dip shitter. Poorly paid, unappreciated and exhausted people decided that the American political system wasn’t doing much for them. Of course Hilary Clinton would have done more for them than Trump but that’s a thought that takes too much time to reckon with.

Americans are proving they don’t have time to think about anything. Reality is too inconvenient. Trump is betting his re-election on this. His daily pressers are designed with the New Dipshittery in mind. Every expert is to be distrusted; every fact is too much to acknowledge; that woman reporter is a really nasty person. “Trust me,” says Trump, “I’ve never been elite.”

The New Dipshitters will vote for Trump though America leads the world in Coronavirus deaths.

Remedy This…..

What can you tell me about remedy? When you get right down to it the very word is the foundation of distrust. Snake oil salesmen and authoritarians in white coats—we don’t trust ‘em. The damn varmints! Herman Melville saw them. So did Voltaire. Jesus. BTW there’s no evidence in the dead sea scrolls that Jesus charged for medical interventions.

For profit medicine in the US isn’t built for remedy, it’s built for alleviation. This is why not everyone can have a medical test; not everyone gets the proper treatment. If you’re one of the not chosen you know all about it. You see, in a cruel system “remedy” has no ethics attached. We will “remedy” you of the poor, the elderly, the disabled, the weak.

The root of “remedy” is “to amend.”

Only 15 per cent of American medical offices are accessible to wheel chair users.
The deaf-blind can’t get treatment in the ER. Are the disabled to be amended unto death?
Alleviation isn’t for everybody. Just ask the African-American communities being hit hardest by the Covid-19 virus. Just ask indigenous people. No tests; no ethics; no hope; but you can have all the poisoned meat you like.

Rain in a Tin Dish

I’m writing because it’s early. No church bells. My neighbor who walks his imaginary dog is the only person on the street. Take advice or do not take it, your heart keeps pumping.

**

I’ve always loved Racine. “Thank the Gods! My misery exceeds all my hopes!”

It’s a game I play, “Thank the Gods”—thank the Gods my guitar still has a string!” Thwacka thwack.

**

Of course the gods don’t care what we do with our miseries. Their guitars have all the strings.

**

Rain in a tin dish.

Notebook, Today I Think

I’ve been a keeper of notebooks since my undergraduate days at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. In graduate school at the Iowa Writer’s Workshop the habit became a practice. I didn’t like graduate school very much but I could joke to my friend and classmate Ken Weisner that Iowa City was a good place to drink tea and write on scraps of paper. Ken grew up to be a wonderful poet and teacher and I’m still largely a jotter of notes. Once upon a time I co-edited a volume called “The Poet’s Notebook” which is still abailable from W.W. Norton. Poets are all collectors of scraps.

Notebook, notebook, who’s the fairest of them all? Forget it. Paul Valery said: Love is being stupid together. Oh notebook I love you! You don’t mind that I think Karl Marx was only right about history or that I genuinely hate the fashion industry. You admit my fidelity to provincial cultures.

**

For a notebook to be any good at all it must glint like the scissors I dropped in the grass.

**

Merz.

**

Merz is a nonsense word invented by the German dada artist Kurt Schwitters to describe his collage and assemblage works based on scavenged scrap materials.

https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/m/merz

**

Does the notebook stink, like old Kurt Schwitters who gladly stuffed his overcoat with objects from the gutter? Yes. The notebook is pungent and sweet like the dead thing in your wall.

**

Of course you copy things you like. I like the phrase: “the vital motions of Venus’ hair.”

**

What’s the difference between the notebook and rhetoric? The latter must be organized. The notebook is an unmade bed. Aristotle didn’t know about eiderdown.

**

My grandmother used to sing to a stuffed bird.

**

Lady Macbeth is part Hecate, part Medea. Hecate is her nicer part. In love with moonbeams.

**

I like the word “snaffling” as its about domestic thievery. I shall snaffle some of Norbert’s cherries.

**

There was the month in Iowa City when I played the same record by Odetta, over and over and read nothing but Catullus. Sweet and sour, laugh and cry. Spring rain at the windows.

**

I’ll take Shakespeare even on a bad day:

“O comfort-killing Night! Image of hell!
Dim register and notary of shame!
Black stage for tragedies and murders fell!
Vast sin-concealing chaos! Nurse of blame!
Blind, muffled bawd! Dark harbour for defame!
Grim cave of death! Whisp’ring conspirator
With close-tongued treason and the ravisher!”

Excerpt From: Jonathan Bate. “How the Classics Made Shakespeare.” Apple Books.

**

Since poetry says so, I bring my father back from the dead and then my mother with her broken laugh. My brother, gone since infancy, he comes along, though not in human form, he’s like the northern lights. “There’s nothing to be astonished about,” I tell them. “Let’s leave off where we were.” So we fall together like leaves in wind and sweep across the velvet ditch of fictive life—you know, the one we imagined we’d live and live.

Facing, Free Thinking, Facing Free Thinking

George Orwell had a higher speed of mental respiration—mentation—he’d develop immunity to ideologies of the left and right more quickly than the common western intellectual. This is called “facing” and in his masterful book “Why Orwell Matters” Christopher Hitchens describes it this way:

“I knew,’ said Orwell in 1946 about his early youth, ‘that I had a facility with words and a power of facing unpleasant facts.’ Not the ability to face them, you notice, but ‘a power of facing’. It’s oddly well put. A commissar who realizes that his five-year plan is off-target and that the people detest him or laugh at him may be said, in a base manner, to be confronting an unpleasant fact. So, for that matter, may a priest with ‘doubts’. The reaction of such people to unpleasant facts is rarely self-critical; they do not have the ‘power of facing’. Their confrontation with the fact takes the form of an evasion; the reaction to the unpleasant discovery is a redoubling of efforts to overcome the obvious. The ‘unpleasant facts’ that Orwell faced were usually the ones that put his own position or preference to the test.”

It’s the self critical faculty that matters—the growth of consciousness is unpleasant but beating the obvious has its up sides—one may say its virtues—for leaving a clotted meeting of self appointed utopians of any stripe is always a relief. Not long ago I attended a memorial event honoring a poet whose life had been devoted to the study and practice of Buddhism. The people who came were among the most covetous and egotistical souls imaginable. It was enough for them to say they were selfless and then quite literally strip the paintings from the dead man’s walls. I saw I didn’t like them; moreover I didn’t have to.

One dislikes supernatural propaganda when confident. Overcoming the obvious is how you build that confidence.
Resisting evasion is everything. Example: the Frankfurt School imagined late stage capitalism drifting toward nihilism and exhaustion. But the obvious drift of history disproves this—one can scarcely argue with the Cato Institute’s response that culture has grown more sophisticated and diverse as a consequence of free markets and the availability of niche cultural texts for niche audiences. Do you understand this is not a rah rah for capitalism per se—at least on my part—but a resistance to not putting one’s preference as a free thinker to the test.

And I’m in mind of this tonight now that Donald J. Trump has told the American people that they might cure themselves of the coronavirus by injecting bleach into their veins. This is Trump’s method for confronting an unpleasant fact minus courage.

C’mon! What Donchya Like?

I stepped in it yesterday, boy oh boy. I insulted the dear sensibilities of Rolling Stones fans. Now here’s the thing: I didn’t say the Stones were terrible, I merely said I don’t like them much and their contribution to the global pandemic song fest was, how shall we say, consternating? Ill advised? Who sings “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” during a plague? It’s an injudicious move to say the least.

I made matters worse of course because I said they are insufficiently good at love songs. Look. Nothing makes my skin crawl more than hearing Mick Jagger sing “Angie” which I consider to be far worse than anything ever cooked up by Paul McCartney. It’s nails on a chalkboard.

But of course a smart person wrote to say “Wild Horses” is a terrific love song. I reckon that’s true.

Now like anyone I’ve a long list of entertainment acts I flat out don’t like. I don’t like Eric Dolphy. Come and get me for that! Can’t stand Jim Carrey, Tom Cruise, the glib homophobia of Dave Chapelle, Rosie O’Donnell, Kanye, Snoop, Jerry Lewis….the odious Grateful Dead.

C’mon! Put ‘em up! Or better, tell me what you can’t stand. I’ll respect you and you’ll feel better.

The Complicated Evolution of Hope’s Feathers

Disability is to poetry as feathers are to birds. The imagination is incomplete, restless, vulnerable, hungry, often defenseless—the life of the mind is a capacious struggle—moreover the creative mind has a focused super ego. It knows it’s lost something and like a person who experiences a phantom limb the imagination feels its lost arm. Are all poets disabled? In this way the answer is yes. The question that concerns poets with disabilities—real ones as opposed to the metaphorical—is how do we evolve the feathers?

Gertrude Stein: “A feather is trimmed, it is trimmed by the light and the bug and the post, it is trimmed by little leaning and by all sorts of mounted reserves and loud volumes. It is surely cohesive.” This is the feather as a thing acted upon; the feather as reception. And Stein is not wrong. The imagination is trimmed by the quotidian, the fence post, the shelf of importunate books. I like “mounted reserves” quite a lot. One pictures the mounties of disapprobation riding their steeds, chasing W.C. Williams’ white chickens. (I wish someone would chase those chickens, I do.)

Hope is the thing with feathers—Dickinson means the poetry thing though being Emily she tells it slant. If you say “hope is the poem with feathers” you sound itinerant like a lace maker. Why are hope and the poem not the same word? That is of course the question. Why are they the thing? That one we know.

It’s the disability feather poem thing we’re interested in. It’s the feather of disambiguation, the creative mind is not only incomplete it must complete itself. Grow new feathers, the colorful ones, yes the hope. Again, disability is to poetry as feathers are to birds.

And yet disability as a matter of imagination is not an overcoming. Nor is the imagination accommodational. Nature is not so. As it’s part of nature, part of us, the striving for hope is never what we think it is. The poet Larry Eigner whose cerebral palsy engaged his poetics wrote of the sustaining air which is the best term I know for what I’m after:

fresh air

There is the clarity of a shore
And shadow,   mostly,   brilliance

summer
the billows of August

When, wandering, I look from my page
I say nothing

      when asked

I am, finally, an incompetent, after all

Eigner’s wandering is wheelchair travel “outside” the poem but within the poem it’s the life of the mind just as Emerson would have it but clarity (another word for “hope”?) will be indescribable, will require silence, a separation from others, and a recognition of not having quite succeeded in making a feather. The incompetent is telling us the truth. We may contain multitudes but we’ll never describe nature as it truly is.

**

Disability imagination is folded, curly, perceptive and inapparent on the street. That is how it is. That deaf woman, that wheelchair man, the blind walker—all are cunning and imaginative. Those of us in disability studies talk about disabilities as ways of knowing precisely because as rhetorician Jay Dolmage notes, we understand “imperfect, extraordinary, non-normative bodies as the origin and epistemological homes of all meaning-making.” Imperfect and extraordinary are not “of” or “pertaining” to custom in Western thought, though as Dolmage demonstrates in his wonderful book Disability Rhetoric one may peel back the layers of storying and find examples of disability as a generative principle. Or, as Kurt Vonnegut once said, (and here I’m paraphrasing) “a story is interesting if a nun has broken dental floss trapped between her teeth…) Vague or overt discomfort generates all stories. But disability is less of plot and more of mentation when we admit difficulty. Precisely because it isn’t easy, disablement is metaphorically evocative. Precisely because it isn’t easy, disablement is contentious to the body politic which always hopes to ignore or sidestep disability perspectives in favor of limiting narratives—whether we’re talking about a bad novel with a forlorn disabled character or an IEP for a student. Making disability “easy” is to not admit it into either a theoretical or practical arena. Who among us disabled hasn’t been pressured in many a circumstance to say disability is easy? “Oh, it’s nothing,” we say, because the literal, daily experience of disability both inconveniences normal thinking, and because we feel always the implicit demand to project overcoming, which in terms of narrative, is always easy—you kiss the prince, pull the brass ring, you go home richer.

It (disability imagination) ain’t easy street as normalizing practices in speech tend toward the elimination of complexity and what is disability after all but convolution? Larry Eigner knew it and decided to meditate on the matter—normalizing practices frame silence as incompetence. Poetry is incompetence. Disabled poetry ruffles even more feathers.

Confronted with hardened rhetorical choices…that’s the effect of “easy” for the compulsion to say disability is nothing is immense especially in employment where difficulty of any kind is considered inadmissible. The disabled assume a spoiled identity (Goffman) when highlighting failures of access. If they do it frequently they’ll likely be cemented into the overshoes of the “bad cripple” (to borrow the wonderful name of the late William Peace’s blog.)

Hope is the poem resistant to normalizing architectures, drab feathers, and the use of incompetent when describing a decision “not to” speak I prefer the poem after long silence, prefer the non speaking writer’s poem, prefer the poem that validates the complicated evolution of hope’s fathers.

Andrew Cuomo’s Ten Gallon Hat

The racist rhetorics of government leaders around the globe are wearisome since they reflect all the mistakes of the past. A cynic might say human kind hasn’t learned a thing from medical history. An optimist might say we’ve learned a hell of a lot but demagogues are still too numerous to count and accordingly science still gets stepped on.

Fact: it doesn’t matter where a virus originates and we may never know. Fact: the “Spanish Flu” probably originated in Kansas. Fact: international modes of transportation spread illness and always have. We should call all airborne diseases “transportation illness” and call it a day.

But the demagogues say, “where’s the fun in that?” It’s fun blaming foreigners for a calamity while doing next to nothing about it. Donald Trump is having fun. Inciting hatred is his game. Leading the nation requires providing badly needed coordinated governance to fight a pandemic. Not so fun. Not as fun as tweeting.

Trump believes everyone who becomes ill is insufficiently American. If you’re not healthy you’re not a good cowboy. In his book “The Year of the Century” Dee Brown wrote of the yellow fever that swept across the United States in 1876:

“The American pioneer was a healthy individual, or he did not survive. He spent little time in crowds and had few opportu­nities to contract infectious diseases. With the concentration of population in cities, however, epidemics became more common. “Crowd-sickness,” was the diagnosis of physicians who often did not recognize the disease or combination of diseases with which they were confronted.”

He continues:

“Most dreaded of all were epidemics which struck without warning—yellow fever, malaria, sometimes cholera. Many peo­ple believed them to be God’s punishment for the sins of the wicked and resisted them only with prayers and repentance. Physicians faced these pestilences with courage and a sense of de­feat.”

Why does Trump not want to help the governors of populous states? Is it because they’re generally cosmopolitan places and they vote blue? Or is it because they’re not pull yourself up by your bootstraps cowboys? You pick.

Maybe Andrew Cuomo would get more help for New York if he wore a ten gallon hat and spurs?

America, an Adolescent Dream

In dreams things do and do not happen and they are the same. Recently I dreamt that a high school friend murdered a boy at a party—a high school party where everyone was stoned and drunk. The killing happened right in front of us. The dream shifted: the murder happened in secrecy and no one saw it. The dream made it clear the circumstances were equal. The body was disposed of but the dream didn’t show it. Then the dream played out a variant of “Crime and Punishment” for somehow though the partiers were blameless we were coerced into covering for the murderer whose alibi rested on rococo rhetorical vagaries which the cops couldn’t disprove. And the dream went on, the partiers grew up. All of us were stained with guilt by association for something we either saw or didn’t see. It was an American dream. It was about our nation’s complete disregard for human rights and how we look away while simultaneously knowing and repressing the knowledge that our souls are damaged.

Gandhi wrote: “There is a higher court than courts of justice, and that is the court of conscience. It supersedes all other courts.” America has yet to develop an economy of conscience. Ours is an economy all too often built from deferral. We didn’t see the murder. Or we did but we pretended we didn’t.

The talk of sacrificing groups of people to the virus for the sake of the economy is the talk of damaged souls.