Wednesday, April 15, 2026

this would appear to be the latest in a constantly growing amount of evidence that trump takes it in the ass.


i hope jesus used a condom.
i would also like to see the high school system offer more correspondence courses for at home learning, like are offered by distance university courses. i would imagine this would be relatively simple to implement, would increase grade scores and save money all at the same time.
this is good.

small businesses contribute to inflation and retard wage growth. they're horrible for the economy.

sometimes, small businesses are the only way to do things, and independence is particularly important in the creative sector. but, broadly speaking, the goal should be to scale as much production as possible and unionize as many workers as possible, and that means driving small businesses to bankruptcy is progress in the technological development of social productive capacity.

this is progress.

the science is actually clear that going to class does not improve student outcomes and, because it's such a proven poor means of retention, it may actually hinder students that have other obligations, like needing to go to work to support their parents.
don't be misled by teachers' unions or media propaganda on the topic.

the purpose of introducing participation marks into high school is to inflate the marks of under-performing students and push them through, so they aren't repeating years, or bringing down averages. it's not intended to improve student outcomes. it's meant to manipulate results.
the purpose of participation marks is to inflate grades and reward people for effort instead of for aptitude. the logic is that you shouldn't fail if you try real hard.

i had huge problems with this when i went to university, as i found myself consistently graded down by 10% or sometimes 20% because i didn't think sitting through somebody reading me a textbook was a valuable use of my time when i could read it myself with a substantively higher retention rate. i also had an undiagnosed severe social anxiety issue that i didn't fully understood until i was much older that prevented me from leaving the house, and still does, for weeks at a time. i'd get 95% on the tests and assignments, and end up with a B+ in the course because my attendance was low, or sometimes even non-existent. that happened something like 10 or 15 times. it severely soured me on the education system.

i had straight As in high school because there weren't participation marks to grade me down like there were in university.

people don't tend to learn very well in classroom settings. that's science. most people learn better when they read in quiet rooms by themselves, but some people with learning disabilities do better when they touch things with their hands. absolutely nobody learns things optimally or even at all by listening to teachers; you forget 80%, 85% of what the teacher tells you five minutes later, because your biology doesn't allow you to retain it. holding to the classroom model is working against biology and against science. the classroom setting is literally the absolute worst way to teach people things and should be being aggressively abandoned in favour of more scientifically demonstrated learning models, which include online learning. those online learning models were developed with decades of science. they aren't just holding to some debunked conservative prussian model of learning out of backwardsness and stubborness.

eventually, i just started dropping courses with participation grades and avoiding teachers that included them. the ubiquity of participation marks in university was ultimately a large factor in my abandonment of the university as a career option; it wasn't the only factor, but it was a big factor.

i would argue for the opposite approach - there should be a drive to completely abolish participation grades from the post-secondary system. students should be evaluated entirely on their aptitude, and not on how hard they work. some students will fail; some wealthy students will fail. it's good for society to identify them, so they don't end up as prime ministers.

the education minister should be consulting scientists on what the best way that children learn is, and not asking teachers, who have their financial self-interest as their primary goal, and of whom many have no discernible science credentials. but the latter description - no discernible credentials - also describes paul calandra, who is a legitimate grade A fucking idiot. you would have extreme difficulties finding a bigger dumbass than calandra if you made a strenuous effort to search for one. he's going to fuck up anything at all he's assigned to and certainly shouldn't be in cabinet.

ultimately, hegemons don't negotiate. 

negotiation is always weak. deal making is always flaccid.

hegemons order and control via manufactured consent and take via the maxim that might makes right and donald trump just completely failed the test of the hegemon.
we're all trapped in capitalism, we're all slaves to capital in varying degrees, with absolutely no way out. the more money you have, the more you're enslaved to it. we can try to minimize the amount of capitalism we're forced to consume, but escaping capitalism is virtually impossible. the best hope to escape capitalism today is via automation and artificial intelligence, but it's a long ways away.

for that reason, having some level of education about all of that boring capitalist bullshit is definitely in an individual's self-interest, but only to ensure they can interact with it as little as possible. a truly free person would essentially never interact with capitalism at all, but true freedom is an abstraction and an ideal and something nobody can achieve.

the goal of a free individual should be to minimize the amount of time they waste on capitalism and maximize the amount of time they spent creating and enjoying art, reading, learning, debating, engaging in politics and whatnot.

so, when the issue is regime change in iran, that interests me. when the interest is the environment, that interests me. but when the issue shifts to finances and economics, i'd rather read about something else.
but trump doesn't really care about the war. trump cares about the economy. trump cares about profit. boringsville.

1. bomb iran
2. make a deal.
3. ?????????
4. profit
there has not yet been a war with iran, but there will be. you can be sure of it, now.

the war is not ending.

the war hasn't started yet.
trump is continuing to tell media he's going to make a deal with iran any minute and that this is winding down, even though the reality is that it never started. fucking idiot.

so, i'm changing directions and altering my focus. this was a giant disappointment brought on by false expectations. i insist that regime change in iran would have already happened by now if the president wasn't working so hard to maintain the state in place, and what's happened just makes it more inevitable now than ever.

there is no alternative to regime change in iran.

but trump does not want regime change in iran, and in fact pretty clearly actively opposes regime change in iran. the situation is going to have to sit frozen, in place, for the next 2-3 years, until somebody else takes over and gets it done.

i'm not interested in what donald trump has planned for iran, which is some kind of business venture that allows him to profit off their depravity and oppression. whatever. boring.
trump seems to think that pakistan is an ally.

that's very strange, considering it's behaviour for the last several decades.

the pakistanis are most certainly not an american ally and are actually more closely aligned with and more likely to work in the interest of the iranians.
overnight summer convection storms in october, which we got last year, and april, whch we're experiencing tonight, are unusual here.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

this is absolutely horrible.

this picture would be much more badass if he had sunglasses.

somebody call the pope's publicist. he should be wearing terminator sunglasses. at all times.

"and then jesus said i'll be back"



the white house should mail the vatican a nice bag full of gold plated, trump-branded throwing stones.



i just do stand up for myself sometimes, and anybody that wants to eavesdrop.

i'm getting something to eat.
somebody should get the pope a pharisee mumu.

yes, pharisees wore mumus, just like mullahs do.

i saw it on a podcast.
trump's next jesus meme should be the seventh station of the cross, with the media and the pope - in his fucking pope hat - both standing behind him, throwing stones at him.
i have a thing for jesus renaissance paintings in my cover art, but it's a giant sacrilegious joke. it's intended as satire, and it's very heavy-handed. you could miss it if you're retarded, but you can't miss it if you're not.

that likely wasn't trump's intent, but i actually dig his meme, on that level.

i might use it for cover art if the right circumstance arises.
but look at all these christians crucifying trump.

what are youse guys, a bunch of jews?
technically speaking, renaissance paintings of jesus healing the sick are blasphemy and idolatry. even if they're kick ass, technically revolutionary paintings.

so, you're really just a vicious hypocrite if you're upset.

personally, i find the whole thing comical.
i think trump should ai himself into the buddy jesus, myself.

the buddy trump jesus should then be manufactured as an action figure and sold to children.

gotta get them when they're young.
i'm the rare ultra nerd total introvert that doesn't have any friends because i fucking hate everybody and would rather read a book than have a conversation, anyways. people tend to like me well enough, but i don't tend to like them very much.

the podcast format offers me very little.
i mean, that's why people like podcasts, right?

they're for very lonely losers that can't find any friends; it gives them an opportunity to participate in a conversation, which they normally lack. their popularity is a consequence of growing cultural and social alienation.

put the device down.

go get a beer and meet some people, instead.
if i want to listen to losers that don't know what they're talking about babbling about nothing of substance, i'll go down to the bar and get a beer. i would prefer to pick more substantive media options when i have the choice to, at home.

of the functionally infinite options i have available to me, i'm never going to choose the format. i could listen to an awesome record, i could watch a documentary, i could read a book, etc. podcasts are the absolute lowest brow form of entertainment possible. there's no excuse to waste your time with stupid bullshit like that when you could spend your time learning something, or enjoying art, instead.

podcasts are so low brow that they're neck hair.
i'd rather read an essay.

podcasts are for losers.
i've been asked by a few people what podcasts i listen to.

the answer is that i don't listen to podcasts because they're fucking boring. i would rather listen to music, and i'd rather watch the news, or watch lectures.

some loser talking about his opinions or feelings into a microphone is about the worst delivery format imaginable. borrrriiiiiing.

Monday, April 13, 2026

it's a very sad day for democracy in canada, but we will throw this bum out on his ass soon enough.
justin trudeau looks like a 12 year-old that went to a concert with his mom.

and that's probably about right, isn't it?
a staff member working as a chef was arrested after being found with a knife and may be charged with mischief.

that's some fine flutin', boys.

if this was a real war, that's what you would do - you would put the port under siege. you wouldn't keep feeding them as you try to defeat them. that's irrational.

trump actually campaigned on not doing this, and while i didn't endorse him or support him, i did agree with that part of his platform. if you're going to fight a war, you shouldn't do so half-assed and with one arm tied behind your back. war is war. you do it with your whole ass, or you don't fucking bother at all.

this has been america's problem for years: it starts wars, then restrains itself from fighting them.
trump has indicated that the blockade will allow food into iran and is intended to force iran to make a deal, indicating he's continuing to hold to the delusion that running a government is like running a business, and he can force iran into a business deal, and he can negotiate with a psychotic terrorist death cult.

that's not what i called for and not what i support.

the uprisings in iran have been about civil rights, which do not exist in iran, but they've also been about food shortages.

i was calling for a naval siege of iran. i called it a blockade, but i was suggesting a siege of the port of bandar abbas to ensure no food can get in, with the purpose of triggering an uprising. this would have to be done in conjunction with concrete support for opposition groups on the ground.

i don't expect that merely cutting off oil revenue is going to force iran to negotiate. they're not going to negotiate. they'd rather die because they neurotically think they'll go to heaven if you kill them. they're completely fucking insane.

that said, i don't exactly oppose an oil blockade, either. i just don't think it will work.

the haphazard use of carbon in asia is devastating to the environment and needs to stop. they use oil for cooking, for electricity and for practically everything. it's 2026. this is unacceptable, at this point. these countries in the indian cultural sphere, including most of southeast asia, need to upgrade their grids. if this "blockade" creates incentives for them to do that, it's a net positive. reducing carbon emissions should be the number one priority goal when it comes to any kind of carbon fuel policy, including this. it is countries in this area that are going to suffer the brunt of climate change and need to make the most extreme adjustments. they're long overdue, for their own sake.

and, as mentioned, increases in the price of carbon in the west should help to undo some of the effects of extremely damaging subsidies to the oil industry and help make better sources of energy more competitive, as they struggle to scale. it could be the final push that carbon transition needs to tip over. i will support any policy that increases the price of oil.

but iran is not going to sign a deal without regime change, and an oil "blockade" is not going to trigger that. a complete siege type blockade that prevents bandar abbas from engaging in all trade will, if enforced long enough, succeed in toppling the state, which should be the american (and canadian) government's stated purpose, not trying to negotiate. you can't negotiate with irrational actors.
the basic point is that if somebody uses language with the intent to be offensive or harmful, that is their decision, and if it works in offending somebody then that means that the person was successful in expressing themselves with their choice of language. that is entirely valid, and there's nothing wrong with that. it's healthy to seek to express yourself as clearly as possible.

there is something wrong with and something extremely unhealthy about censors, government agencies or self-appointed language police trying to prevent people from a full range of emotions, or from freely expressing themselves. that is reflective of a sick society and a sick culture that needs help learning how to express their emotions freely.

if somebody's angry or frustrated or just descriptive, they have a fundamental and basic right to express that and nobody has any right to try to stop them. if you take some offense and get angry or sad, that's your problem and not theirs, and you should react by venting, yourself.
i never stopped using words like retarded or nigger and when people told me to stop, i started using them more, and especially around the people that asked me to stop. they would generally give up.

the basic point is that it doesn't fucking matter if you're offended and, often times, that's actually the intent. i have a pretty big vocabulary. i get to decide what words are appropriate in how i express myself, not you. and you have a lot of fucking nerve thinking that your feelings are more important than my free will. you can go fuck yourself.

the word is best used to express a certain kind of extreme stupidity. stupidity exists in a hierarchy. something that is only a little bit stupid can be described using a term like dumb. then, there's something moronic, which is more stupid than something dumb. that which is utterly fucking completely retarded is at the very top of the stupid hierarchy.

it shouldn't be used haphazardly, admittedly. it should be reserved only to describe the most stupid of the stupid.

it really has nothing to do with having a genetic defect like autism or down's syndrome. people with genetic defects may act retarded sometimes, and sometimes they may not. generally, that description, to the extent that it may be accurate, would come without the contempt directed at somebody that does not have a genetic defect. you would generally not use the adjective retarded to describe somebody with a genetic defect, unless they are being retarded, which they might be.

but i'm not going to be prejudiced about my hierarchy of stupid or assume that somebody is a retard just because they have a genetic defect.

the term is used most appropriately and most accurately in english usage to describe behaviour that is at the top of the stupid hierarchy, by people that do not have genetic defects, and therefore should be expected not to behave that way, and can be fairly treated with derision and contempt for doing so.

the word's etymology is latin, likely french, and means slow, delay or late - initially, as in dim-witted, or unable to keep up. it was adopted for medical usage, but the use of the term in english long predates that. i could use the latin verb or translate it. there's no logic in yelling at me for using the latin, and thinking it's ok to translate it, but that seems to be the convention amongst the ingsoc newspeak language police.

people that have genetic defects shouldn't assume the word is targeted at them. it generally isn't, and the history connecting the use of the word to the specific context of genetic defect is rather recent. it's just a latin translation for "slow witted".

people that believe that language is something for individuals to decide on, and not something to be determined by centralized bodies, will rightfully push back on any entity trying to remove an adjective from the dictionary. to best express ourselves in the widest variety of contexts possible, we need as many adjectives as possible, and should always be expanding our individual vocabularies, never restricting them.

nobody cares about the fucking pope.

but i have to ask.

why doesn't he wear his stupid fucking hat? he's walking around in a yarmulke all of the time. is he confused as to what religion he represents, or what?

Sunday, April 12, 2026

eliminating oil subsidies would also be helpful in using government to forcibly mandate a return to recycling.

right now, government subsidies for oil make it extremely difficult for recyclers to compete. high oil prices, consumer carbon taxes and the abolition of oil subsidies would be a boon for the recycling industry.

the reality is that housing prices - i mean mortgages - never really come down much in canada because there's a purposeful government policy to keep them high. the government goes way out of it's way to stop prices from falling by buying up mortgages. that's the actual reason that we had interest rate hikes in the pandemic, as the fear was that old people dying would lead to their kids selling their house at below market prices.

for that reason, we can actually have falling rents and increasing property values at the same time, by cutting immigration and buying up canada housing bonds. and, frankly, that's fine with me.
when i talk about housing costs, i'm concerned about my class interests, which means i'm talking about rent. a sufficient supply of new housing is required to keep rents and mortgages down, but i really otherwise don't give the slightest fuck what the cost of buying a house is. from a renter's perspective, i want to minimize the amount of competition i have in the market, meaning i want to keep the population low, in general - i want low birth rates and low levels of immigration at the bottom of the market, so that the supply of housing outstrips demand for it. i am in direct class conflict with property owners on this point, who want to increase the number of renters to increase competition, increase demand and increase prices.

nonetheless, this is the reason why property values in canada, which are not the same thing as rents, are unlikely to crash:

and i don't really give a fuck about that. i just want low rent.
an extended period of extremely high oil prices is exactly what the renewable energy and circular material economies need to get kick started into carbon replacement, rather than merely as supplement.

i'm in strong support and favour of hiking the price of gas through the roof, and in bringing back consumer carbon taxes to give the shift that extra kick.
do you know what will bring down inflation in a renewable energy economy?

recycling. remember that?

when oil is very expensive, recycling will become a competitive source of new plastic, which is far better. it will create an economic, not just an environmental, case for a truly circular economy. further, you can actually convert plastic into fertilizer, we just don't.

we need to stop burning it, first. that's stupid. it's valuable.
listen.

if you're a status quo liberal or a "progressive democrat" or a christian republican, i understand why you're upset about this. you're not getting what you voted for, and this is probably not in your short term self-interest.

but i'm not one of you.

i didn't vote for this, either. i can't even vote in the united states at all. but, this is unfolding like a fever dream for an eco-anarchist, evangelical atheist, revolutionary socialist.

we've tried everything to get you fucking idiots to consume less oil and you won't fucking listen.

let's try hiking the prices. maybe that'll work.

and let's see how long the iranian regime lasts for when it's people begin suffering from bread and meat shortages. we know the regime will tell it's people to eat cake. good. it's in the people's self-interest to rise up and fight.

i didn't expect any of this, but i couldn't imagine or ask for something better than this. the americans just need to follow through on it, now. i certainly hope that they do.

the rest of the world should be reacting by rapidly shifting to renewables, including to electric vehicles.

however, i want to discourage bombing desalination facilities. iran does not rely on desalination, but the gulf states do. that's not a good idea.

meanwhile, there needs to be concrete support for opposition groups on the ground.
well, i guess we'll all just have to learn to use less oil then, huh?

i prefer to attend events in smaller venues with less people and better music.
coachella lineup looks like losersville if you ask me. but that's been the case for years, hasn't it?

they make lots of money.

that's what's important.
i think people are quickly going to find that the new prime minister of hungary isn't that different than the old one, and might even be a little worse.
there's two pqs in quebec, but that's been the case for a while.

so, if you don't like the pq, you can vote for the pq. and if you still don't like the pq, you can vote for the pq.

they just need to make sure they don't split the vote.

there are some situations where you want peace, and there are some situations where you need war.

a smart person should be able to comprehend that war in iran is necessary - perhaps not immediately or imminently, but soon and eventually. now is as good a time as any time. it will be less costly and less deadly if it's done sooner than later.

regime change in saudi arabia and egypt, as well as democratic renewal in turkey, are also on the near horizon. these things are necessary and must occur. they may occur peacefully, but iran cannot be dealt with peacefully.

you can align with appeasement if you insist, but history will not be kind to you.

this is necessary. if you didn't see that 6 weeks ago, you should surely see it now, or you're blind and can't be helped. they have to be defeated and vanquished.
oops.

eh?
you wanna block the fucking strait?

fine.

let's block the fucking strait.

let's block it real fucking good.
iran's decision to try to control the strait of hormuz was actually incredibly stupid, for the reason that it invited a catastrophic blockade on itself. i immediately realized that and called for the americans to force them to eat their own shit. the americans seem to have been slow to process it, but they figured it out.

meanwhile, the media's been framing it as a stroke of genius and it's not. it's a noose around their own necks. it was a foolish mistake that amounts to them digging their own grave.
the western media has been focusing on how important the strait is for everybody else and has missed the obvious: iran relies on the strait both for imports and for exports, and they import almost all of their food.

an american blockade of the strait will lead to starving iranians very very fast. but they walked into it, it's their fault, and they can fix it by fucking off.

hungry people are also more likely to attack their government than well fed people.

the delicious irony is why i liked this approach and immediately jumped to it. i'm not sure why it took them so long to get to it, but better late than never.

this will work. but i can't predict exactly how. be patient.

this is the poetically correct response.

it's what the iranians get for shitting in their own bed.
i suggested that the united states should immediately blockade the strait on march 12.
iran walked right into this.

they can hardly complain that it isn't fair, when essential goods are prevented from getting to iran, or their own oil exports are prevented from getting to asia.

the world needs some patience, here. you're going to have to make some short term sacrifices while this gets resolved. the plan tehran was trying to implement is a non-starter.
i've been saying for weeks that the united states should blockade the strait of hormuz in order to create a siege to carry out regime change.

it's not clear if they're coming with me on this, but it's clearly the correct strategy to force concessions.
what was winter like this year in southern ontario, according to the data?

it was cyclothymic. we've had a early and warm spring that is about to break out into full summer today, in the second week of april.

november was actually pretty warm. there were 0 subzero days here in november, and 22 days with above normal highs. there were some cold mornings, but it was pretty warm, overall.

december was colder than average, but it was also split in half. a cold front came in over the last few days of november, but then there was a warm front for the last two weeks. the last four days and the first 16 days of december were below average, for an almost three week cold snap, but then there were 13 days in a row above normal, then two more below it. overall, that's 13 days above normal, all in a row, and 18 days below normal.

january was also colder than average and also had 13 days above average, mostly consecutive, and 18 days below average. there were some very cold overnights, as a result of the solar activity breaking up the polar vortex.

but, february and march were actually warmer than average. 

february had 15 days above average and 13 days below average. march had 19 days above average, including 7 above 20, which canadians consider to be summer, and only 12 below average.

so far, we've had 6 above average days, including 3 above 20, and 6 below average days in april, but the forecast has a solid 7 days of 20+ degree weather, so april is looking to come out as warmer than average as well.

you will note that the weather network's forecast was wrong, but they always seem to forecast that it's going to be cold. i don't think it's a serious forecast anymore, but is being manipulated for clicks and ratings.

but i'm not quite sure what the media is talking about when it complains about a cold spring that won't warm up. it's been above average here, which can sometimes be misleading, but we've also had several summer days here in february and march, which is not even spring, it's winter. it's legitimately been a warm spring in southern ontario, and it's tripping over into summer very early.
there's been some concern that iran didn't map where it put the mines, which is going to make it hard to find them. that's probably not true; they're probably just refusing to divulge the information. it might also be why they were shooting at people to stay out.

while this may have been a hard problem not too long ago, i don't imagine it would be so hard now. the americans have incredible satellite technology at their disposal. they should be able to write a simple program to find the mines in the satellite data. i don't know why they would send ships out, unless those ships were getting gps co-ordinates from the satellites.

it might be a novel problem.

it shouldn't be a hard one.
for supposed critics of capitalism, the fake left nowadays seems unusually interested in fashion over substance.

listen.

smart children understand that knowledge is more important than popularity. you cast your nets out and you get what you're fishing for. don't say nobody told you to think it through.

i don't think that leftist politics is getting anywhere by adhering to fashion trends.
they had to find a guy named goebbels as media analyst.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

i would call on the crown in ottawa to publish a letter indicating that ms ghamari was within her rights and for the ottawa police to publicly apologize on behalf of their officer.

in fact, i would suggest to ms ghamari that if that officer contact her again, she should attempt to have them charged with harassment.
canadians need to stand up for their rights against creeping islamic fascism in this country, or they're going to lose them.

i sincerely hope it doesn't get messy.

i fear it will.
i fully agree that the mosques in iran should be bombed as a part of a regime change process. i have repeatedly called for the complete elimination of the entire class of clerics, the entire judiciary and all of the police, along with all of the ruling infrastructure. i don't believe i explicitly called for the bombing of mosques, but it would have been due to brevity, in not wanting to list all of the desired targets.

i would like to explicitly state that the mosques in iran should be bombed, in response to the takedown request.

i will not be deleting my post. i will not be intimidated. i will not abandon my rights.

if the police want to charge me, i will fight them in court and have the law amended or revoked, or the case law otherwise clarified.

i'm fucking sick of this bullshit.
commentary on foreign affairs, of any type, is not within the scope of the law being cited, which is restricted to direct foreseeable harm within canada. 

the purpose of the law is to prevent attacks on minorities in canada. like, in real life - actual real attacks. it was used here to attack free speech by a minority about events in a foreign country.

this is the problem with these kinds of laws and why liberals are supposed to be opposed to them - they are rarely used the way they are supposed to be, and give too much power to authority with too high a likelihood of it being abused by the depraved and the ignorant.

canadians are constitutionally free to comment on foreign wars in any way that they choose.

she should file an oiprd report and have the officer disciplined for being a terrorist thug.
this is outrageous.

she would not be convicted in a trial. this is not the purpose of this law. this is protected speech.

but it demonstrates the thuggishness of canadian police, who are completely out of control in this country.

this is an interesting question without a clear answer.

i would assume that, upon any expression of albertan sovereignty, they would be expected to assume the role of the crown. it would not be fundamentally different than patriation, which would be the precedent. however, it's worth noting that some indigenous groups have never accepted patriation and consider their agreement to strictly be with the british crown, and not with ottawa.

this would have no effect in quebec, because quebec was not added to canada by treaty but by conquest. there are no underlying treaties for quebec, except with the inuit in the very far north, in the parts of quebec that were in the hudson's bay company (rupert's land) at the time of conquest.

i don't have any kids, but i can tell you that, if i did, i would be getting them online and encouraging them to use computers as much as possible at a much younger age than 16.

the state has no business regulating this behaviour, and i don't accept their authority to do so.

Story oF BYRON THE BULB 


Byron was to’ve been manufactured by Tungsram in 
Budapest. He would probably have been grabbed up by 
the ace salesman Géza Roézsavélgyi’s father Sandor, who 
covered all the Transylvanian territory and had begun to 
go native enough to where the home office felt vaguely 
paranoid about him throwing some horrible spell on the 
whole operation if they didn’t give him what he wanted. 
Actually he was a salesman who wanted his son to be a 
doctor, and that came true. But it may have been the bad 
witch-leery auras around Budapest that got the birth of 
Byron reassigned at the last minute to Osram, in Berlin. 
Reassigned, yes. There is a Bulb Baby Heaven, amiably 
satirized as if it was the movies or something, well Big 
Business, ha, hal But don’t let Them fool you, this is a 
bureaucracy first, and a Bulb Baby Heaven only as a sort 
of sideline. All overhead—yes, out of its own pocket the 
Company is springing for square leagues of organdy, hogs- 
heads of IG Farben pink and blue Baby Dye, hundred- 
weights of clever Siemens Electric Baby Bulb Pacifiers, 
giving the suckling Bulb the shape of a 110-volt current 
without the least trickle of power. One way or another, 
these Bulb folks are in the business of providing the 
appearance of power, power against the night, without the 
reality. bi 

Actually, B.B.H. is rather shabby. The brown rafters 
drip cobwebs. Now and then a roach shows up on the 
floor, and all the Babies try to roll over to look (being 
Bulbs they seem perfectly symmetrical, Skippy, but don’t © 
forget the contact at the top of the thread), going uh-guhl 
uhhhh-guhl, glowing feebly at the bewildered roach sitting 
paralyzed and squashable out on the bare boards, rushing, 
reliving the terror of some sudden blast of| current out of 
nowhere and high overhead the lambent, all-seeing Bulb. 
In their innocence, the Baby Bulbs don’t know what to 
anake of this roach’s abreaction—they feel his fright, but
don’t know what it is. They just want to be his friend. He’s 
interesting and has good moves. Everybody's excited ex- 
cept for Byron, who considers the other Bulb Babies a 
bunch of saps. It is a constant struggle to turn their 
thoughts on anything meaningful. Hi there Babies, I'm 
' Byron-the-Bulb! Here to sing a little song to you, that 
goes— 


Light-up, and-shine, you—in-cande-scent Bulb Ba-bies! 
Looks-like ya got ra-bies 
Just lay there foamin’ and a-screamin’ like a buncha 
little demons, 
I’m delivin’ unto you a king-dom of roa-ches, 
And no-thin’ ap-proaches 
That joyful feelin’ when-you’re up-on the ceilin’ 
Lookin’ down—night and day—on the king-dom you 
sur-vey, 
They'll come out *n’ love ya till the break of dawn, 
But they run like hell when that light comes on! 
So shine on, Baby Bulbs, you're the wave of the fu-ture, 
And I’m here to recruit ya, 
._ In mi great crusade, 
Just sing along Babies—come-on-and-join-the-big- 
pa-radel 


Trouble with Byron’s he’s an old, old soul, trapped in- 
side the glass prison of a Baby Bulb. He hates this place, 
lying on his back waiting to get manufactured, nothing to 
listen to on the speakers but Charleston music, now and 
then an address to the Nation, what kind of a setup’s that? 
Byron wants to get out of here and into it, needless to say 
he’s been developing all kinds of nervous ailments, Baby 
Bulb. Diaper Rash, which is a sort of corrosion on his 
screw threads, Bulb Baby Colic, a tight spasm of high re- 
‘sistance someplace among the deep loops of tungsten 
wire, Bulb Baby Hyperventilation, where it actually feels 
“oe his vacuum’s been broken though there is no organic 
asis. ..\. § 

‘When M-Day finally does roll around, you can bet 
_Byron’s elated. He has passed the time hatching some 
really insane grandiose plans—he’s gonna organize all the 
Bulbs, see, get him a power base in Berlin, he’s already 
hep to the Strobing Tactic, all you do is develop the knack 
(Yogic, almost) of shutting off and on at a rate close to 
the human brain’s alpha rhythm, and you can actually 
trigger an epileptic fit! True. Byron has had a vision against 
the rafters of his ward, of 20 million Bulbs, all over 
Europe, at a given sychronizing pulse arranged by one of 
his many agents in the Grid, all these Bulbs beginning to 
strobe together, humans thrashing around the 20 million 
rooms like fish on the beaches of Perfect Energy— Atten- 
tion, humans, this has been a warning to you. Next time, 
a few of us will explode. Ha-ha. Yes we'll unleash our 
Kamikaze squads! You’ve heard of the Kirghiz Light? well 
that’s the ass end of a firefly compared to what we're 
gonna—oh, you haven’t heard of the—oh, well, too bad. 
Cause a few Bulbs, say a million, a mere 5% of our num- 
ber, are more than willing to flame out in one grand burst 
instead of patiently waiting out their design hours.... So 
Byron dreams of his Guerrilla Strike Force, gonna get 
Herbert Hoover, Stanley Baldwin, all of them, right in the 
face with one coordinated blast... . 

Is Byron in for a rude awakening! There is already an 
organization, a human one, known as “Phoebus,” the in- 
ternational light-bulb cartel, headquartered in Switzerland. 
Run pretty much by International GE, Osram, and Asso- 
ciated Electrical Industries of Britain, which are in turn 
owned 100%, 29% and 46%, respectively, by the General 
Electric Company in America. Phoebus fixes the prices 
and determines the operational lives of all the bulbs in the 
world, from Brazil to Japan to Holland (although Philips 
in Holland is the mad dog of the cartel, apt at any time 
to cut loose and sow disaster throughout the great Com- 
bination). Given this state of general repression, there 
seems noplace for a newborn Baby Bubb to start but at the 
bottom. 

But Phoebus doesn’t know yet that Byron is immortal. 
He starts out his career at an all-girl opium den in Charlot- 
tenburg, almost within sight of the statue. of Wernher 
Siemens, burning up in a sconce, one among many bulbs 
witnessing the more languorous forms of [Republican dec- 
adence. He gets to know all the bulbs in the place, Benito 
the Bulb over in the next sconce who’s always planning an 
escape, Bernie down the: hall in the toilet, who has all 
kinds of urolagnia jokes to tell, his mother Brenda in the 
kitchen who talks of hashish hush puppies, dildos rigged 
to pump floods of paregoric orgasm to the capillaries of 
the womb, prayers to Astarte and Lilith, queen of the 
night, reaches into the true Night of the Other, cold and 
naked on linoleum floors after days without sleep, the 
dreams and tears become a natural state.... 

One by one, over the months, the other bulbs burn out, 
and are gone. The first few of these hit Byron hard. He’s 
‘still a new arrival, still hasn’t accepted his immortality. 
But on through the burning hours he starts to learn about 
the transience of .others: learns that loving them while 
theyre here becomes easier, and also more intense—to 
love as if each design-hour will be the last. Byron soon 
enough becomes a Permanent Old-Timer. Others can 
recognize his immortality on sight, but it’s never discussed 
except in a general way, when folklore comes flickering in 
from other parts of the Grid, tales of the Immortals, one in 
a kabbalist’s study in Lyons who’s supposed to know 
magic, another in Norway outside a warehouse facing 
arctic whiteness with a stoicism more southerly bulbs be- 
gin strobing faintly just at the thought of. If other Im- 
mortals are out there, they remain silent. But it is a silence 
with much, perhaps, everything, in it. 

After Love, then, Byron’s next lesson is Silence. 

As his burning lengthens toward 600 hours, the monitors 
in Switzerland begin to keep more of an eye on Byron. 
The Phoebus Surveillance Room is located under a little- 
known Alp, a chilly room crammed full of German electro 
hardware, glass, brass, ebonite, and silver, massive terminal 
blocks shaggy with copper clips and screws, and a cadre 
of super-clean white-robed watchers who wander meter to 
meter, light as snowdevils, making sure that nothing’s 
going wrong, that through no bulb shall the mean operat- 
ing life be extended. You can imagine what it would do 
to the market if that started happening. 

Byron passes Surveillance’s red-line at 600 hours, and 
immediately, as a matter of routine, he is checked out for 
filament resistance, burning temperature, vacuum, power 
consumption. Everything’s normal. Now Byron is to be 
checked out every 50 hours hereafter. A soft chime will 
go off in the monitoring station whenever it’s time. 

At 800 hours—another routine precaution—a Berlin 
agent is sent out to the opium den to transfer Byron. She 
is wearing asbestos-lined kid gloves and seven-inch spike 
heels, no not so she can fit in with the crowd, but so that 
she can reach that sconce to unscrew Byron. The other 
bulbs watch, in barely subdued terror. The word goes out 
along the Grid. At something close to the speed of light, 
every bulb, Azos looking down the empty black Bakelite 
streets, Nitralampen and Wotan Gs at night soccer 
matches, Just-Wolframs, Monowatts and Siriuses, every 
bulb in Europe knows what’s happened. They are silent 
with impotence, with surrender in the face of struggles 
they thought were all myth. We can’t help, this common 
thought humming through pastures of sleeping sheep, 
down Autobahns and to the bitter ends of coaling piers in 
the North, there’s never been anything we could do.... 
Anyone shows us the meanest hope of transcending and 
the Committee on Incandescent Anomalies comes in and 
takes him away. Some do protest, maybe, here and there, 
but it’s only information, glow-modulated, harmless, noth- 
ing close to the explosions in the faces of the powerful 
that Byron once envisioned, back there in his Baby ward, 
in his innocence. 

He is taken to Neukdélln, to a basement room, the home 
of a glassblower who is afraid of the night and who will 
keep Byron glowing and on watch over all the flint bowls, 
the griffins and flower-ships, ibexes in mid-leap, green 
spider-webs, somber ice-deities. This is one of many so- 
called “control points,” where suspicious bulbs can be 
monitored easily. 

In less than a fortnight, a gong sounds along the ice 
and stone corridors of the Phoebus headquarters, and faces 
swivel over briefly from their meters. Not too many gongs 
around here. Gongs are special. Byron has passed 1000 
hours, and the procedure now is standard: the Committee 
on Incandescent Anomalies sends a hit man to Berlin. 

But here something odd happens. Yes, damned odd. The 
plan is to smash up Byron and send him back right there 
in the shop to cullet and batch—salvage the tungsten, of 
course—and let him be reincarnated in the glassblower’s 
next project (a balloon setting out on a journey from the 
top of a white skyscraper). This wouldn't be too bad a 
deal for Byron—he knows as well as Phoebus does how 
many hours he has on him. Here in the shop he’s watched 
enough glass being melted back into the structureless pool 
from which all glass forms spring and re-spring, and 
wouldn’t mind going through it himself. But he is trapped 
on the Karmic wheel. The glowing orange batch is a taunt, 
a cruelty. There’s no escape for Byron, he’s doomed to an 
infinite regress of sockets and bulbsnatchers. In zips young 
Hansel Geschwindig, a Weimar street urchin—twirls 
Byron out of the ceiling into a careful pocket and Ge- 
sssschhhhwindig! out the door again. Darkness invades the 
dreams of the glassblower. Of all the unpleasantries his 
dreams grab in out of the night air, an extinguished light 
is the worst. Light, in his dreams, was always hope: the 
basic, mortal hope. As the contacts break helically away, 
hope turns to darkness, and the glassblower wakes sharply 
tonight crying, “Who? Who?” 

Phoebus isn’t exactly thrown into a frenzy. It’s hap- 
pened before. There is still a procedure to follow. It 
means more overtime for some employees, so there’s that 
vague, full-boweled pleasure at the windfall, along with an 
equally vague excitement at the break in routine. You 
want high emotion, forget Phoebus. Their stonefaced 
search parties move out into the streets. They know more 
or less where in the city to look. They are assuming that 
no one among their consumers knows of Byron’s immortal- 
ity. So the data for Non-immortal Bulbsnatchings ought to 
apply also to Byron. And the data happen to hump up in 
poor sections, Jewish sections, drug, homosexual, prostitute, 
and magic sections of the capital. Here are the most logi- 
cal bulbsnatchers, in terms of what the crime is. Look at 
all the propaganda, It’s a moral crime. Phoebus discov- 
ered—one of the great undiscovered discoveries of our 
time—that consumers need to feel a sense of sin. That 
guilt, in proper invisible hands, is a most powerful 
weapon. In America, Lyle Bland and his psychologists had 
figures, expert testimony and money (money in the Puri- 
tan sense—an outward and visible O.K. on their inten- 
tions) enough to tip the Discovery of Guilt at the cusp 
between scientific theory and fact. Growth rates in later 
years were to bear Bland out (actually what bore Bland 
out was an honorary pallbearer sextet of all the senior 
members of Salitieri, Poore, Nash, De Brutus and Short, 
plus Lyle, Jr., who was sneezing. Buddy at the last min- 
ute decided to go see Dracula. He was better off). Of all 
the legacies Bland left around, the Bulbsnatching Heresy 
was perhaps his grandest. It doesn’t just mean that some- 
body isn’t buying a bulb. It also means that same some- 
body is not putting any power in that socket! It is a sin 
both against Phoebus and against the Grid. Neither one is 
about to let that get out of hand. 

So, out go the Phoebus flatfoots, looking for the snatched 
Byron. But the urchin has already left town, gone to Ham- 
burg, traded Byron to a Reeperbahn prostitute so he can 
shoot up some morphine—the young woman’s customer to- 
night is a cost-accountant who likes to have light bulbs 
screwed into his asshole, and this john has also brought a 
little hashish to smoke, so by the time he leaves he’s for- 
gotten about Byron still there in his asshole—doesn’t ever, 
in fact, find out, because when he finally gets around to 
sitting down (having stood up in trolleys all the way 
home) it’s on his own home toilet and plop! there goes 
Byron in the water and flusssshhhh! away down ‘the waste 
lines to the Elbe estuary. He is just round enough to get 
through smoothly all the way. For days he floats over the 
North Sea, till he reaches Helgoland, that red-and-white 
Napoleon pastry tipped in the sea. He stays there for a 
while at a hotel between the Hengst and the Ménch, till 
being brought back one day to the mainland by a very old 
priest who’s been put hep to Byron’s immortality in the 
course of a routine dream about the taste of a certain 
1911 Hochheimer ...suddenly -here’s the great Berlin 
Eispalast, a booming, dim iron-trussed cavern, the smell of 
women in the blue shadows—perfumes, leathers, fur skat- 
ing-costumes, ice-dust in the air, flashing legs, jutting 
haunches, desire in grippelike flashes, helplessness at the 
end of a crack-the-whip, rocketing through beams of sun- 
light choked with the powdered ice, and a voice in the 
blurred mirror underfoot saying, “Find the one who has 
performed this miracle. He is a saint. Expose him. Expedite 
his canonization. ...” The name is on a list the old man 
presently draws up of about a thousand) tourists who’ve 
been in and out of Helgoland since Byron was found on 
the beach. The priest begins a search tol tain, footpath, 
and Hispano-Suiza, checking out each of the tourists on 
his list. But he gets no farther than Niimberg, where his 
valise, with Byron wrapped inside in an alb, is ripped off — 
by a transsectite, a Lutheran named Mausmacher who 
likes to dress up in Roman regalia. This Mausmacher, not 
content with standing in front of his own mirror making 
papal crosses, thinks it will be a really bizarre kick to go 
out to the Zeppelin field to a Nazi torchlight rally in full 
drag, and walk around blessing people at random. Green 
torches flaring, red swastikas, twinkling brasses and Father 
Mausmacher, checking out tits ’n’ asses, waistlines ’n’ 
baskets, humming a clerical little tune, some Bach riff, 
smiling as he moves through the Sieg Heils and choruses 
of “Die Fahne Hoch.” Unknown to him, Byron slides out 
of the stolen vestments onto the ground. He is then walked 
past by several hundred thousand boots and shoes, and 
not one so much as brushes him, natch. He is scavenged 
next day (the field now deathempty, columned, pale, 
streaked with long mudpuddles, morning clouds length- 
ening behind the gilded swastika and wreath) by a 
poor Jewish ragpicker, and taken on, on into another 15 
years of preservation against chance and against Phoebus. 
He will be screwed into mother (Mutter) after mother, as 
the female threads of German light-bulb sockets are 
known, for some reason that escapes everybody. 

The cartel have already gone over to Contingency Plan 
B, which assumes a seven-year statute of limitations, after 
which Byron will be considered legally burned out. Mean- 
while, the personnel taken off of Byron’s case are busy 
tracking a long-lived bulb that once occupied a socket on 
the porch of an army outpost in the Amazon jungle, 
Beatriz the Bulb, who has just been stolen, mysteriously, 
by an Indian raiding party. 

Through his years of survival, all these various rescues 
of Byron happen as if by accident. Whenever he can, he 
tries to instruct any bulbs nearby in the evil nature of 
Phoebus, and in the need for solidarity against the cartel. - 
He has come to see how Bulb must move beyond its role 
as conveyor of light-energy alone. Phoebus has restricted 
Bulb to this one identity. “But there are other frequencies, 
above and below the visible band. Bulb can give heat. 
Bulb can provide energy for plants to grow, illegal plants, 
inside closets, for example. Bulb can penetrate the sleeping 
eye, and operate among the dreams of men.” Some bulbs 
listened attentively—others thought of ways to fink to 
Phoebus. Some of the older anti-Byronists were able to 
fool with their parameters in systematic ways that would 
show up on the ebonite meters under the Swiss mountain: 
there were even a few self-immolations, hoping to draw 
the hit men down. 

Any talk of Bulb’s transcendence, of course, was clear 
subversion. Phoebus based everything on bulb efficiency— 
the ratio of the usable power coming out, to the power put 
in. The Grid demanded that this ratio stay as small as 
possible. That way they got to sell more juice. On the 
other hand, low efficiency meant longer burning hours, and 
that cut into bulb sales for Phoebus. In the beginning 
Phoebus tried increasing filament resistance, reducing the 
hours of life on the sly and gradually—till the Grid noticed 
a fall-off in revenues, and started screaming. The two 
parties by and by reached an accord on a compromise 
bulb-life figure that would bring in enough money for 
both of them, and to go fifty-fifty on the costs of the anti- 
bulbsnatching campaign. Along with a more subtle attack 
against those criminal souls who forswear bulbs entirely 
and use candles. Phoebus’s long-standing arrangement with 
the Meat Cartel was to restrict the amount of tallow in 
circulation by keeping more fat in meat to be sold regard- 
less of cardiac problems that might arise, and redirecting 
most of what was trimmed off into soap production. Soap 
in those days was a booming concern. Among the con- 
sumers, the Bland Institute had discovered deep feelings 
about shit. Even at that, meat and soap were minor inter- 
locks of Phoebus. More important were items like tungsten. 
Another reason why Phoebus couldn’t cut down bulb life 
too far. Too many tungsten filaments would eat into avail- 
able stockpiles of the metal—China being the major world 
source, this also brought in very delicate questions of 
Eastern policy—and disturb the arrangement between 
General Electric and Krupp about how much tungsten 
carbide would be produced, where and when and what the 
prices would be. The guidelines settled on were $37—$90 a 
pound in Germany, $200-$400 a pound in the U.S. This 
directly governed the production of machine tools, and 
thus all areas of light and heavy industry. When the War 
came, some people thought it unpatriotic of GE to have 
given Germany an edge like that. But nobody with any 
power. Don’t worry. 

Byron, as he burns on, sees more and more of this pat- 
tern. He learns how to make contact with other kinds of 
electric appliances, in homes, in factories and out in the 
streets. Each has something to tell him. The pattern gath- 
ers in his soul (Seele, as the core of the earlier carbon fila- 
ment was known in Germany), and the grander and 
clearer it grows, the more desperate Byron gets. Someday 
he will know everything, and still be as impotent as be- 
fore. His youthful dreams of organizing all the bulbs in 
the world seem impossible now—the Grid is wide open, 
all messages can be overheard, and there are more than 
enough traitors out on the line. Prophets traditionally don’t 
last long—they are either killed outright, or given an 
accident serious enough to make them stop and think, and 
most often they do pull back. But on Byron has been 
visited an even better fate. He is condemned to go on 
forever, knowing the truth and powerless to change any- 
thing. No longer will he seek to get off the wheel. His 
anger and frustration will grow without limit, and he will 
find himself, poor perverse bulb, enjoying it.... 

Laszlo Jamf walks away down the canal, where dogs 
are swimming now, dogs in packs, dogs heads bobbing 
down the scummy canals... dogs’ heads, chess knights, 
also may be found invisible in the air over secret airbases, 
in the thickest fogs, conditions of temperature, pressure 
and humidity form Springer-shapes the tuned flyer can 
feel, the radars can see, the helpless passengers can al- 
most glimpse, now and then, out the little window, as 
through sheets of vapor... it is the kind Dog, the Dog no 
man ever conditioned, who is there for us at beginnings 
and ends, and journeys we have to take, helpless, but not 
quite unwilling. ... The pleats in Jamf's suit go weaving | 
away like iris leaves in a backyard wind. The colonel is 
left alone in Happyville. The steel city waits him, the even 
cloud-light raising a white streak down each great build- 
ing, all of them set up as modulations on the perfect grid 
of the streets, each tower cut off at a different height— 
and where is the Comb that will move through this and 
restore the old perfect Cartesian harmony? where are the 
great Shears from the sky that will readjust Happyville? 

There is no need to bring in blood or violence here, But 
the colonel does have his head tilted back now in what 
may truly be surrender: his throat is open to the pain- 
radiance of the Bulb. Paddy McGonigle is the only other 
witness, and he, a one-man power system with dreams of 
his own, wants the colonel out of the way as much as 
anyone. Eddie Pensiero, with the blues flooding his shak- 
ing muscles, the down, mortal blues, is holding his scissors 
in a way barbers aren’t supposed to. The points, shudder- 
ing in the electric cone, are aiming downward. Eddie 
Pensiero’s fist tightens around the steel loops his fingers 
have slid out of, The colonel, with a last tilt of his head, 
exposes his jugular, clearly impatient with the— 

These pine limbs, crackling so blue and watery, don’t seem 

to put out any heat at all, Confiscated weapons and ammo 

lie around half-crated or piled loose inside the C-Company 

perimeter. For days the U.S. Army has been out sweeping 

Thuringia, busting into houses in the middle of the night. 

A certain lycanthropophobia fear of Werewolves occupies 

minds at higher levels. Winter is coming. Soon there won't 

be enough food or coal in Germany. Potato crops toward 

the end of the War, for example, all went to make alcohol 

for the rockets. But there are still small-arms aplenty, and 

ammunition to fit them. Where you cannot feed, you take 

away weapons. Weapons and food have been firmly linked 

in the governmental mind for as long as either has been 

around. . 


On the mountainsides, patches will flash up now and 

then, bright as dittany in July at the Zippo’s ceremonial 

touch. Pfc. Eddie Pensiero, a replacement here in the 

89th Division, also an amphetamine enthusiast, sits hud- 

dling nearly on top of the fite, shivering and watching the 

divisional patch on his arm, which ordinarily resembles a 

cluster of rocket-noses seen out of a dilating asshole, all 

in black and olive-drab, but which now looks like some- 

thing even stranger than that, which Eddie will think of 

in a minute. . 


Shivering is one of Eddie Pensiero’s favorite pastimes. 

Not the kind of shiver normal people get, the goose-on- 

the-grave passover and gone, but shivering that doesn’t 

stop. Very hard to get used to at first. Eddie is a con- 

noisseur of shivers. He is even able, in some strange way, 

to read them, like Siure Bummer reads reefers, like Miklos 

Thanatz reads whip-scars, But the gift isn’t limited just 

to Eddie’s own shivers, oh no, they’rd other people’s 

_ shivers, too! Yeah they come in one by one, they come in 

all together in groups (lately he’s been growing in his 

brain a kind of discriminator circuit, learning how to sep- 

arate them out), Least interesting of these shivers are the 

ones with a perfectly steady frequency, no variation to 

them at all. The next-to-least interesting are the freqency- 

modulated kind, now faster now slower depending on in- 

formation put in at the other end, wherever that might be. 

Then you have the irregular waveforms that change both 

in frequency and in amplitude. They have to be Fourier- 

analyzed into their harmonics, which is a little tougher. 

There is often coding involved, certain subfrequencies, cer- 

tain power-levels—you have to be pretty good to get the 

hang of these. 


“Hey Pensiero.” It is Eddie’s Sergeant, Howard (“Slow”) 

Lerner. “Getcher ass offa dat fire.” 


“Aww, Sarge,” chatters Eddie, “c’mon. I wuz just tryin’ 

ta get wawm.” 


“No ick-skew-siz, Pensiero! One o’ th’ koinels wants his 

hair cut, right now, an’ yer it!” 


“Ahh, youse guys,” mutters Pensiero, crawling over to 

his sleeping bag and looking through his pack for comb 

and scissors. He is the company barber. His haircuts, 

which take hours and often days, are immediately recog- 

nizable throughout the Zone, revealing as they do the 

hhair-by-hair singlemindedness of the “benny” habitué. 


The colonel is sitting, waiting, under an electric bulb. 

The bulb is receiving its power from another enlisted man, 

who sits back in the shadows hand-pedaling the twin 

generator cranks. It is Eddie’s friend Private Paddy 

(“Electro”) McGonigle, an Irish lad from New Jersey, one 

of those million virtuous and adjusted city poor you know 

from the movies—you’ve seen them dancing, singing, 

hanging out the washing on the lines, getting drunk at 

wakes, worrying about their children going bad, I just 

don’t know any more Faather, he’s a good. b’y but he’s 

runnin’ with a crool crowd, on through every wretched 

Hollywood lie down to and including this year’s big hit, 

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. With his crank here young 

Paddy is practicing another form of Eddie’s gift, though 

he’s transmitting not receiving. The bulb appears to burn 

steadily, but this is really a succession of electric peaks 

and valleys, passing by at a speed that depends on how 

fast Paddy is cranking. It’s only that the wire inside the 

bulb unbrightens slow enough before the next peak shows 

up that fools us into seeing a steady light. It’s really a 

train of imperceptible light and dark. Usually impercepti- 

ble. The message is never conscious on Paddy’s part. It is 

sent by muscles and skeleton, by that circuit of his body 

which has learned to work as a source of electrical power. 


Right now Eddie Pensiero is shivering and not paying 

much attention to that light bulb. His own message is 

interesting enough. Somebody close by, out in the night, 

is playing a blues on a mouth harp. “Whut’s dat?” Eddie 

wants to know, standing under the white light behind the 

silent colonel in his dress uniform, “hey, McGonigle—you 

hear sump’nP” 


“Yeah,” jeers Paddy from behind the generator, “I hear 

yer dischodge, flyin’ away, wit’ big wings comin’ outa th’ 

ass end, Dat’s whut I hear! Yuk, yuk!” 


“Aw, it’s th’ bunk!” replies Eddie Pensiero, “Y-you don’t 

hear no dischodge, ya big dumbheaded Mick.” 


“Hey, Pensiero, ya know whut a Eye-talian submarine 

sounds like, on dat new sonar? Huh?” 


“Uh... whut?” 


“Pinnnggguinea- -guinea-guinea wopwopwop! Dat’s whet! 

Yuk, yuk, yu KI” 


“Fuck youse,” sez Eddie, and commences combing ths 

colonel’s silver-black hair. 


The moment the comb contacts his head, the colonel 

begins to speak. “Ordinarily, we'd spend no more than 24 

hours on a house-to-house sweep. Sundown to sundown, 

house to house. There’s a quality of black and gold to 

either end of it, that way, silhouettes, shaken skies pure as 

a cyclorama. But these sunsets, out here, I don’t know. 

Do you suppose something has exploded somewhere? 

Really—somewhere in the East? Another Krakatoa? An- 

other name at least that exotic... the colors are so differ- 

ent now. Volcanic ash, or any finely-divided substance, 

- suspended in the atmosphere, can diffract the colors 

strangely. Did you know that, sonP Hard to believe, isn’t 

it? Rather a long taper if you don’t mind, and just short 

of combable on top. Yes, Private, the colo change, and 

how! The question is, are they chan according to 

something? Is the sun’s everyday spectrum being modu- 

lated? Not at random, but ae by this unknown 

debris in the prevailing winds? Is there information for 

us? Deep questions, and disturbing ones. 


“Where are you from, son? I’m from Kenosha, Wiscon- 

sin. My folks have a little farm back there. Snowfields and 

fenceposts all the way to Chicago. The snow covers the 

old cars up on blocks in the yards .. . big white bundles... 

it looks like Graves Registration back there in Wisconsin.” 


“Heh, heh... .” 


“Hey Pensiero,” calls Paddy McGonigle, “ya still hearin’ . 

dat sound?” 


“Yeah uh I tink it’s a mouth-organ,” Pensiero busily 

combing up single hairs, cutting each one a slightly differ- 

ent length, going back again and again to touch up here 

and there...God is who knows their. number. Atropos 

is who severs them to different lengths. So, God under the 

aspect of Atropos, she who cannot be turned, is in posses- 

sion of Eddie Pensiero tonight. 


“I got your mouth organ,” jeers Paddy, “right herel 

Look! A wop clarinet!” 


Each long haircut is a passage. Hair is yet another kind 

of modulated frequency. Assume a state of grace in which 

all hairs were once distributed perfectly even, a time of 

innocence when they fell perfectly straight, all over the 

colonel’s head. Winds of the day, gestures of distraction, 

sweat, itchings, sudden surprises, three-foot falls to the edge 

of sleep, watched skies, remembered shames, all have since 

written on that perfect grating. Passing through it tonight, 

restructuring it, Eddie Pensiero is an agent of History. 

Along with the reworking of the colonel’s head runs the 

shiver-bome blues—long runs in number 2 and 3 hole 

correspond, tonight anyway, to passages in the deep 

reaches of hair, birch trunks in a very humid summer night, 

approaches to a stone house in a wooded park, stags 

paralyzed beside the high flagged walks. ... 


Blues is a matter of lower sidebands—you suck a clear 

note, on pitch, and then bend it lower with the muscles of 

your face. Muscles of your face have been laughing, tight 

with pain, often trying not to betray any emotion, all your 

life. Where you send the pure note is partly a function of 

that. There’s that secular basis for blues, if the spiritual 

angle bothers you.... : 


“I didn’t know where I was,” relates the colonel. “I kept 

climbing downward, along these big sheared chunks of 

concrete. Black reinforcing rod poking out... black rust. 

There were touches of royal purple in the air, not bright 

enough to blur out over their edges, or change the sub- 

stance of the night. They dribbled down, lengthening out, 

one by one—ever seen a chicken fetus, just beginning? oh 

of course not, you're a city boy. There’s a lot to learn, out 

on the farm. Teaches you what a chicken fetus looks like, 

so that if you happen to be climbing around a concrete 

mountain in the dark, and see one, or several, up in the 

sky reproduced in purple, youll know what they look 

like—that’s a heap better than the city, son, there you 

just move from crisis to crisis, each one brand-new, noth- 

ing to couple it back onto. ...” 


Well, there he is, cautiously edging along the enormous 

ruin, his hair at the moment looking very odd—brushed 

forward from one occipital spot, forward and up in great 

long points, forming a black sunflower or sunbonnet 

around his face, in which the prominent feature is the 

colonel’s long, crawling magenta lips. Things grab up for 

him out of crevices among the debris, sort of fast happy 

lunge out and back in, thin pincer arms, nothing personal, 

just thought I'd grab a little night air, ha, hal When they 

miss the colonel—as they always.seem to do—why they 

just zip back in with a gambler’s ho-hum, well, maybe 

next time.... 


Dammit, cut off from my regiment here, gonna be cap- 

tured and cremated by dacoits! Oh Jesus there they are 

now, unthinkable Animals running low in the light from 

the G-5 version of the city, red and yellow turbans, 

scarred dope-fiend faces, faired as the front end of a *37 

Ford, same undirected eyes, same exemption from the 

Karmic Hammer— / 


A ’37 Ford, exempt from the K.H.? C’mon quit fooling, 

They'll all end up in junkyards same as th’ rest! 


Oh, will they, Skippy? Why are there so many on the 

roads, then? ai hy 


W-well gee, uh, Mister Information, th-th’ War, I mean 

there’s no new cars being built right now so we all have to 

keep our Old Reliable in tiptop shape cause there’s not too 

many mechanics left here on the home front, a-and we 

shouldn’t hoard gas, and we should keep that A-sticker 

prominently displayed in the lower right— 


Skippy, you little fool, you are off on another of your 

senseless and retrograde journeys. Come back, here, to the 

points. Here is where the paths divided. See the man back 

there. He is wearing a white hood. His shoes are brown. 

He has a nice smile, but nobody sees it. Nobody sees it 

because his face is always in the dark. But he is a nice 

man. He is the pointsman. He is called that because he 

throws the lever that changes the points. And we go to 

Happyville, instead of to Pain City. Or “Der Leid-Stadt,” 

that’s what the Germans call it. There is a mean poem 

about the Leid-Stadt, by a German man named Mr. Rilke. © 

But we will not read it, because we are going to Happy- 

ville. The pointsman has made sure we'll go there, He 

hardly has to work at all. The lever is very smooth, and 

easy to push. Even you could push it, Skippy. If you 

knew where it was. But look what a lot of work he has 

done, with just one little push. He has sent us all the way 

to Happyville, instead of to Pain City, That is because he 

knows just where the points and the lever are. He is the 

only kind of man who puts in very little work and makes 

big things happen, all over the world. He could have sent 

you on the right trip back. there, Skippy. You can have 

your fantasy if you want, you probably don’t deserve any- 

thing better, but Mister Information tonight is in a kind 

mood. He will show you Happyville. He will begin by 

reminding you of the 1937 Ford. Why is that dacoit-faced 

auto still on the roads? You said “the War,” just as you 

rattled over the points onto the wrong track. The War was 

the set of points. Eh? Yesyes, Skippy, the truth is that the 

War is keeping things alive. Things. The Ford is only 

one of them. The Germans-and-Japs story was only one, 

rather surrealistic version of the real War. The real War is 

always there. The dying tapers off now and then, but the 

War is still killing lots and lots of people. Only right now 

it is killing them in more subtle ways. Often in ways that 

are too complicated, even for us, at this level, to trace. 

But the right people are dying, just as they do when 

armies fight. The ones who stand up, in Basic, in the 

middle of the machine-gun pattem. The ones who do not 

have faith in their Sergeants. The ones who slip and show 

a moment’s weakness to the Enemy. These are the ones 

the War cannot use, and so they die. The right ones sur- 

vive. The others, it’s said, even know they have a short 

life expectancy. But they persist in acting the way they 

do. Nobody knows why. Wouldn’t it be nice if we could 

eliminate them completely? Then no one would have to 

be killed in the War. That would be fun, wouldn’t it, 

Skippy? 


Jeepers, it sure would, Mister Information! Wow, I-I 

can’t wait to see Happyvillel 


Happily, he doesn’t have to wait at all. One of the 

dacoits comes leaping with a whistling sound, ecru silk 

cord strung buzzing tight between his fists, eager let’s-get- 

to-it grin, and just at the same moment a pair of arms 

comes up out of a fissure in the ruins, and gathers the 

colonel down to safety just in time. The dacoit falls on his 

ass, and sits there trying to pull the cord apart, muttering 

oh shit, which even dacoits do too. 


“You are under the mountain,” a voice announces. Stony 

cave-acoustics in here. “Please remember from this point 

on to obey all pertinent regulations.” 


His guide is a kind of squat robot, dark gray plastic 

with rolling headlamp eyes. It is shaped something like a 

crab, “That’s Cancer in Latin,” sez the robot; “and in 

Kenosha, too!” It will prove to be addicted to one-liners 

that never quite come off for anyone but it. 


“Here is Muffin-tin Road,” announces the robot, “note 

the smiling faces on all the houses here.” Upstairs win- 

dows are eyes, picket fence is teeth, Nose is the front door. 


“Sa-a-a-y,” asks the colonel, taken by a sudden thought, 


“does it ever snow here in Happyville?” 


“Does what ever snow?” 


“You're evading.” 


“Tm evading-room vino from Visconsin,” sings this boor- 

ish machine, * ‘and you oughta see the nurses run! So what 

else is new, Jackson?” The squat creature is actually chew- 

ing gum, a Laszlo Jamf variation on polyvinyl chloride, 

very malleable, even sending out detachable molecules 

which, through an ingenious Osmo-elektrische Schalter- 

werke, developed by Siemens, is transmitting, in code, a 

damn fair approximation of Beeman's reeiaie flavor to the 

robot crab’s brain. 


“Mister Information always answers spittle 


“For what he’s making, I’'d even question answers. 

Does it ever snow? Of course it snows in 1 Happyville. Lotta 

snowmen’d sure be sore if it didn’t!” 


“T recall, back in Wisconsin, the wind used to blow 

right up the walk, like a visitor who expects to be let in. 

Sweeps the snow up against the front door, leaves it drifted 

there... . Ever get that in Happyville?” 


“Old stuff,” sez the robot. 


“Anybody ever open his front door, while the wind was 

- doing that, eh?” 


“Thousands of times.” 


“Then,” pounces the colonel, “if the door is the house’s 

nose, and the door is open, a-and all of those snowy-white 

crystals are blowing up from Muffin-tin Road in a big 

cloud right into the—” 


“Aagghh!” screams the plastic robot, and scuttles way 

into a narrow alley. The colonel finds himself alone in a 

brown and wine-aged district of the city: sandstone and 

adobe colors sweep away in a progress of walls, rooftops, 

streets, not a tree in sight, and who’s this come strolling 

down the Schokoladestrasse? Why, it’s Laszlo Jamf him- 

self, grown to a prolonged old age, preserved like a °37 

Ford against the World’s ups and downs, which are never 

more than damped-out changes in smile, wide-pearly to 

wistfully gauze, inside Happyville here. Dr. Jamf is wear- 

ing a bow tie of a certain limp grayish lavender, a color 

for long dying afternoons through conservatory windows, 

minor-keyed lieder about days gone by, plaintive pianos, 

pipesmoke in a stuffy parlor, overcast Sunday walks by 

canals... here the two men are, dry-scratched precisely, 

attentively on this afternoon, and the bells across the canal 

are tolling the hour: the men have come from very far 

away, after a journey neither quite remembers, on a mis- 

sion of some kind. But each has been kept ignorant of the 

other’s role.... 


Now it turns out that this light bulb over the colonel’s 

head here is the. same identical Osram light bulb that 

Franz Pékler used to keep next to in his bunk at the under- 

ground rocket works at Nordhausen. Statistically (so Their 

story goes), every n-thousandth light bulb is gonna be 

perfect, all the delta-q’s piling up just right, so we shouldn’t 

be surprised that this one’s still around, burning brightly. 

But the truth is even more stupendous. This bulb is im- 

mortal! It’s been around, in fact, since the twenties, has 

that old-timery point at the tip and is less pear-shaped 

than more contemporary bulbs. Wotta history, this bulb, if 

only it could speak—well, as a matter of fact, it can speak. 

It is dictating the muscular modulations of Paddy Mc- 

Gonigle’s cranking tonight, this is a loop here, with feed- 

back through Paddy to the generator again. Here it is,