Tuesday, 10 December 2013
Tuesday, 22 October 2013
he & He
They say the greatest victory Satan has had is in making us think he doesn't exist. True...to an extent. But I prefer to think his greatest victory to date has been not only in making us disbelieve in his existence, but more in gradually making him God; i.e. having him see and know us on virtually every street, in every building, every room, through every TV and computer. In other words, Electronically Everywhere. In other words, Omnipresent, omniscient! And Omnipotent - after all, Knowledge is Power!!?!...
Oh, to hell with it -- I'm in!!?!
(Amen.)
Oh, to hell with it -- I'm in!!?!
(Amen.)
Thursday, 19 September 2013
Over the Long Haul
Over the long haul
it will less likely be the boulder
falling on your shoulder
than the pebble
in your shoe
that does you in.
it will less likely be the boulder
falling on your shoulder
than the pebble
in your shoe
that does you in.
Wednesday, 18 September 2013
Pickaninny Poo Bah
If one was to trip this electric station here in town, the poor saps cryogenically frozen would start to thaw.
"This isn't a bad thing to do, " thought Mickey, yanking the cryo cords, escaping, and taking his Walt back to the cave outside Disney World.
"I don't know if he'd make such a good President now, though, anymore..."
It's funny. He wears this thing. A little thing, like a contact lens. When's he's 'doing his business' and 'conducting his affairs' (Don't shit where you screw!?) on-line, or on the john, he looks like he's entranced in REM sleep. Maybe more of these things get around after the War (yeehaw(!)), they'll need an even newer and bigger kind of power station, ironically; like a great lighthouse, like a sentinel to all the World, (and what's left of the world inside behind the lenses). We'll be REM 'Lookers', so to speak. And with all the advances in cosmetic surgery & programmed morality, we'll probably ALL be 'Good Lookers', too.
"This isn't a bad thing to do, " thought Mickey, yanking the cryo cords, escaping, and taking his Walt back to the cave outside Disney World.
"I don't know if he'd make such a good President now, though, anymore..."
It's funny. He wears this thing. A little thing, like a contact lens. When's he's 'doing his business' and 'conducting his affairs' (Don't shit where you screw!?) on-line, or on the john, he looks like he's entranced in REM sleep. Maybe more of these things get around after the War (yeehaw(!)), they'll need an even newer and bigger kind of power station, ironically; like a great lighthouse, like a sentinel to all the World, (and what's left of the world inside behind the lenses). We'll be REM 'Lookers', so to speak. And with all the advances in cosmetic surgery & programmed morality, we'll probably ALL be 'Good Lookers', too.
Tuesday, 10 September 2013
Speculative Frag
The strange sky was like a moon might be coming us visiting
living and dead.
Below the sun seemed lost.
We turned our eyes and dropped down into the gulf of earth came a baby on
the tip. The earth. The earth was not used to new. Irked the sight of the shadowy men
there. The sight of the inflamed
them. The men were of lost souls, any
messiahs mess up the party. Would keep
the unwanted out. Kill they wanted
to. Easy.
One over to the prong, glanced baby strongly, grabbed a leg
and took it. He carried it in this over nearer to house turned off toward a pine
tree. Some of the others and he wished
there were more. He gathered up the baby
a little, then swung it hard as he could into the pine tree bark. Strangely that hard of a swing should have
made it die. Did it again time the
crying blood on its face. But wasn=t crying out of pain, man realized,
tightening. Was of some deeper place this
time a bit, taking the leg up, swing harder.
Damned if he - yeah, was smirked at, laughed at little. Enough.
Swung back, carried through, swung the child with all into the
tree. And a Awhack
with the shock. He - he looked at
it. Was crushed, everywhere, but this
was Earth afterall, and nobody outside.
And he was a good man for doing his duty, slaps on his back coming
through, and the thing from a living mess even though should dead, and couldn’t=t figure it why. Wasn=t
a thing in the flesh this was something else.
Real. Thoughts came in, too fast
to separate. And then - what if everyone
could see it. Ooohh, wouldn’t that be for the good of the
Damned? Dangerous, then. Dangerous for too much. Have to see.
All have to see a little. Didn’t
know what we yet...
(cont'd at a later date)
Monday, 18 March 2013
Lux Aeternae (?)
Yeah, it's been a while since the last bender, errr, I mean posting, but who cares, I'm back in the balcony, watchin' the Show...
Science fiction's worth is found in the way it explains our times to us in a different light. At its best, it can be magical, at it's worst painful; and either way, the quality of the writing is always adolescent. Seriously - one hears about the great Philip K. Dick - and as fas as writing goes , the dick stops there. He's an awful writer. Asimov, the most prolific science fiction writer should perhaps have been more concerned about his thinning skin than his fecundity- I mean, really, what science fiction writer in their own right mind writes a big book about Shakespeare? Shakespeare?? It's as ridiculous to me as if some mechanical engineer proficient in CAD decided he would just go up one day and illustrate the local Church's ceiling, like a latter day Michelangelo, thinking it would be just as good as the Sistine Chapel. (It stinks of astronomical vanity, Mr Asimov!)
But there are transcendent experiences in sci fi - one of my favorites is, in fact, in a story by Mr. Asimov and it is called "Nightfall". A world with a few suns, so it never knows darkness. And, since it has been darkness-free, there should be no reasons to head the warnings of the world's Prophet, who warns of a coming darkness, as he has read in the ancient scriptures - a total darkness, where all the suns will turn away and leave the planet lost - again. Anyways - no one believes the Prophet. The darkness falls. The world goes into panic, hysterically afraid of the darkness, and they do what they can only do to regain the light. They burn everything - set everything wildly ablaze!?. And the Prophet watches this all from his balcony, kicked back, munching on popcorn, chuckling to himself warmly. Heehee. (Just kidding).
But to play the part of Asimov's Prophet I do think we live in "the Light" of electricity a little much, and our reliance grows. Where would we be without electricity? I mean, full out all out loss of electricity lasting weeks or months or more. Pioneer time, but a hell of a lot more people. The riots and lawlessness would flood the world. What to do? I've thought - buy a gun. But how could I ever have enough bullets, esp. if confronted by a mob? It would be like "Lord of the Flies".
Cell phones might mitigate things until their batteries ran out. Generators could help to an extent, if they haven't blown in the first place when the electricity was lost. What about we have mini generators connected to stationary bikes that store energy in batteries which we can then plug in for a few minutes of telephone or computer usage. But what about heat? Especially if this happens during the winter? Burn!! I say, BURN everything! We'll start over tomorrow!? Yee haw hallejuhah!??! Let's all go down tonight! Outta sight!?
Science fiction's worth is found in the way it explains our times to us in a different light. At its best, it can be magical, at it's worst painful; and either way, the quality of the writing is always adolescent. Seriously - one hears about the great Philip K. Dick - and as fas as writing goes , the dick stops there. He's an awful writer. Asimov, the most prolific science fiction writer should perhaps have been more concerned about his thinning skin than his fecundity- I mean, really, what science fiction writer in their own right mind writes a big book about Shakespeare? Shakespeare?? It's as ridiculous to me as if some mechanical engineer proficient in CAD decided he would just go up one day and illustrate the local Church's ceiling, like a latter day Michelangelo, thinking it would be just as good as the Sistine Chapel. (It stinks of astronomical vanity, Mr Asimov!)
But there are transcendent experiences in sci fi - one of my favorites is, in fact, in a story by Mr. Asimov and it is called "Nightfall". A world with a few suns, so it never knows darkness. And, since it has been darkness-free, there should be no reasons to head the warnings of the world's Prophet, who warns of a coming darkness, as he has read in the ancient scriptures - a total darkness, where all the suns will turn away and leave the planet lost - again. Anyways - no one believes the Prophet. The darkness falls. The world goes into panic, hysterically afraid of the darkness, and they do what they can only do to regain the light. They burn everything - set everything wildly ablaze!?. And the Prophet watches this all from his balcony, kicked back, munching on popcorn, chuckling to himself warmly. Heehee. (Just kidding).
But to play the part of Asimov's Prophet I do think we live in "the Light" of electricity a little much, and our reliance grows. Where would we be without electricity? I mean, full out all out loss of electricity lasting weeks or months or more. Pioneer time, but a hell of a lot more people. The riots and lawlessness would flood the world. What to do? I've thought - buy a gun. But how could I ever have enough bullets, esp. if confronted by a mob? It would be like "Lord of the Flies".
Cell phones might mitigate things until their batteries ran out. Generators could help to an extent, if they haven't blown in the first place when the electricity was lost. What about we have mini generators connected to stationary bikes that store energy in batteries which we can then plug in for a few minutes of telephone or computer usage. But what about heat? Especially if this happens during the winter? Burn!! I say, BURN everything! We'll start over tomorrow!? Yee haw hallejuhah!??! Let's all go down tonight! Outta sight!?
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