Imagine my dismay at discovering that there is a northwest-by-north and a north-northwest, but no north-by-northwest. Oh well, it remains a damn fine movie...
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In my bag at the moment there are two books - Cities of Salt by one Abdelrahman Munif, and David Copperfield, by some English guy or another. I like 'em both, but, at this moment, prefer the Arab to the Englishman. It's tight, though, I'll tells ya.
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Helped with an engine tear-down on a Cessna 172. 'Helped' here signifies that I handed the guy tools and did some heavy lifting and removed some bolts - the guy could probably have done it faster without my constant yammering and helping...
It was a beautiful thing. Did you know there are folks who get paid to work such wonders?
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I forgot how much I hate literature seminars. Sure, the University is between terms, but this morning I sat in on a sort of informal bull-session with grad students and a couple of professors from a couple different departments [all of whom and which shall remain nameless in perpetuity on these here pages]. They chattered on about everything except the works in question. Theory, theory, everywhere theory - postcolonialisticalcumstructuralizinglacanism, or something like that - that's all these folks knew. I asked an apparently quite stupid question - 'Do any of y'all, you know, like this stuff?' I didn't get a straight answer.
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I don't think the fact that I like flying, taking engines apart, studying physics, and writing stuff, way way more than I like the academic study of littratoor, has any relevance whatsoever.
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I've a friend who thinks my desire to some day visit Mumbai is, well, insane. [By the bye, some few of the folks there still call it Bombay - Mumbai is an apparently overheated signifier.] He notes that the island city is overcrowded, wracked by corruption and violence, on the brink of another battle between Hindus and Muslims, and generally full of vice. He thinks this will change my mind. Oh, how little he knows me.
That city is the future in not-so-miniature. Best to understand it. Besides, no place is ever completely fallen until it's simply gone. Except for Dubai, that is, which will, one can pray, find itself consumed by the desert before too long.
I'll get to Bombay/Mumbai some time in the next decade for sure. I mean, there are other places to see first, like Montana. I've never seen Montana...
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Peter Theroux translated the novel by Munif. I had forgotten all about Theroux. Now I want to read his books again.
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At some point I would like to take up welding - I think it would be fun at parties...
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As you can hear, I've run out of things to say.
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It's all clear to me now...
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Peace out.
Okay, so I've been listening to this here bunch of weird Canadians since 1980. Do some quick math and you'll see that's a heck of a long time. Anyway, over their life as a band I'd say they've produced about five or six damn fine, nearly perfect albums, a couple two or three that come close, and a bundle that have a few good songs but not much otherwise to commend 'em. This ain't snarkiness - you try writing five nearly perfect albums. Well, their latest, Snakes and Arrows, came to me with a great big caveat emptor dude. You see, Peart, the drummer and lyricist, decided he'd take on all us rubes with our simple yet militant faith. He's a modrin man, don't you know, full of science and rational to the core. He's also, however, pretty smart, so I thought, what the hell, give 'im a chance.
Weeellll, there are thirteen songs on the t'ing, and from that I'd cull maybe five as just so damn fine. The rest are either vaguely good ['Far Cry', for instance], or whincingly bad. Take these lines from 'The Way the Wind Blows' as a ferinstance:
Now it's come to this
It's like we're back in the Dark Ages
From the Middle East to the Middle West
It's a world of superstition
Yes, indeed it is, and some of those superstitious types are actually scientists. Pay that no never mind, however, and consider the source of this bit of wisdom. He rode his motorcycle all over the US, and found abundant evidence of loopiness and superstition in the the church signs that festoon the countryside. Combine this with a lifelong animus against what he calls 'faith', as opposed to 'reason', and you get this revulsion at anything that looks too much like 'fundamentalism', whether it come out of Beirut, Tehran, or Goshen, Ohio.
Ho hum. It's easy to bash such silliness. Consider, though, that there are some nearly perfect songs in here, with a richer, more unified feel than ever before. Among the finest is 'The Larger Bowl', which is actually a pantoum put to music. It's among their most affecting and simple melodies, with a richly layered guitar and bass sharing those melodic duties, all with a spry rhythm. Lifeson also gives one of his best solos, well integrated into the whole and phrased so as to accentuate the sadness and anger. Without further ado, here are the lyrics.
If we're so much the same, like I always hear
why such different fortunes and fates?
some of us live in a cloud of fear
some live behind iron gates
why such different fortunes and fates?
some are blessed and some are cursed
some live behind iron gates
while others see only the worst
some are blessed and some are cursed
the golden one and the scarred from birth
while others only see the worst
such a lot of pain on the earth
the golden one or scarred from birth
some things can never be changed
such a lot of pain on this earth
it's somehow so badly arranged
some things can never be changed
some reasons will never come clear
it's somehow so badly arranged
if we're so much the same, like I always hear
Well, there you have at least half of the Bible in a nutshell, though with one crucial difference which will appear in a second. First, I assert that any Christian who doesn't look around and wonder this laps milk instead of masticating strong meat. Now, to that nuance - in Scripture, it's the Lord's faithfulness to his covenant, not some general 'problem of evil', that is at issue. This lyric comes close to that, don't you know - and if he only could see just why 'it's somehow so badly arranged', and just who is 'in agony 'till the end of the age' because there is indeed 'such a lot of pain on the earth'. Yes, note well, my only friends, that it's not inequality in and of itself that draws this cry from the heart, but pain, the unendurable, seemingly endless, meaningless and causeless pain that roils the earth. If you think there's a good reason for this pain, well, I'm sure there's a diagnosis for that in the DSMV or whatever it's called. What's more, it does indeed call the faithfulness of God into question, and I suggest that rather than jumping on these cries with our useless theodicies, we just shrug our shoulders, stare directly at the suffering and the pain, and pray. We might also try giving alms. Then, then, we might just get faith in the bargain, and folks skeptical and set in their ways would be without excuse.
As you can see, I don't care much about the scorn of the cultured despisers...
Again I say, if only they could see.

