Still baking.

Avast, me hardies! Full astern. Hoist the mizzen-mast. Lower the, I don’t know… gang plank. Do something nautical, for chrissake. We’ve got some timbers to shiver.

Sound like Treasure Island to you? Hah – if so, you’ve got a bad memory. Here in Big Green land, we don’t know jack about literature. (We don’t even know “Jack” about Jack and Jill, quite frankly. Feverishly undereducated lot.) And still we try, oh we try… as needs must. Just attempting to entertain the natives, and they’re getting restless, my friends – restless as a slice of capicola on Super Bowl Sunday. That’s right… the man-sized tuber’s various and assorted relatives are still amongst us – putting down roots, you might say – and they have a healthy appetite for musicals. (Especially ones that feature pirates.) In as much as they now find themselves in a cultural backwater, they must satisfy themselves with our feeble attempts at melodrama. So we’re putting on a little production I call “Pirates of the Upper Mohawk Valley”. Essentially a collection of ad-libs and made up songs that would only entertain a roomful of root vegetables. Perfect!

Why do we bother with such elaborate efforts? Well, it has to do with resource allocation. Oh, yes – we’re thinking conservation here, folks. You see, studies show that root vegetables use considerably less water when they’re being entertained. (What studies? I don’t freaking know – ask Mitch, he’s the scientist!) And we ourselves found that, after a solid ten days of these couch potatoes laying about the mill, the local water table had dropped at least 14 inches. (In as much as it’s only about two feet deep to begin with, we obviously had to do something fast.) So it was on with the pirate hats, the peg legs, the eye-patches, the shoulder parrots, and up with the Jolly Roger. (Or the “Jolly Roget,” if you want another word for it.)

I’m not certain about this, but I think Marvin (my personal robot assistant) probably makes the most ridiculous pirate I have ever seen. Sure, Lincoln looks stupid. Sure, the tri-corner hat doesn’t fit John for shit. Sure, Matt refuses to wear horizontal stripes. But Marvin? He never does anything half way. And I really think he should, sometimes. I mean, these are root vegetables, for chrissake. They can’t tell a pirate from a palindrome. (What the hell – even tubey thinks “Long John Silver” spelled backwards is still “Long John Silver”.) Why would Marvin ever think he has to put on the whole nine yards? Just a little nod in the buccaneer direction would be enough to satisfy even the most discriminating of these yams. (Come on, Marvin. You’re making a total ass of yourself, honestly.)

Anyway, that’s the good news. The bad news is, no… the album isn’t ready yet. Still in the oven, my friends. But nearly… quite nearly… All will be revealed. Arrrrrrrrrrr….

Senioritis.

We’re dropping bombs on a ghetto. That is the kind of triumphant mission the Iraq war has devolved into – using high-tech air-delivered munitions on people who live on less than a dollar a day, hitting hospitals, killing children, all by accident (of course), though how you can drop bombs on a densely populated slum and not presume that you’re going to kill innocent people is beyond my understanding. (By the standards established at Nuremberg, this doesn’t hold any water as an excuse.) We’re also dropping bombs on Somalia, the other other war – the one in which we took the side of an invader, the repressive government of Ethiopia, and played a key role in bringing Somalia back to the brink of famine and chaos. The UN and NGOs are issuing warnings about hunger in that sorry object of our attentions. They are also putting out grim advisories on Gaza, where relief programs are being stymied by the siege Israel is imposing on that territory’s citizens, cutting off fuel supplies at a time of critical need… with our full support, of course.

This is looking more and more like a war on the poor. Much as Bush, McCain, and other madmen try to make this out as a titanic struggle against fanatics set on destroying our way of life, this global conflict always seems to target the destitute, the powerless, and the inconvenient. If it were just a matter of poor folks counting for nothing in the eyes of the powerful, that would be bad enough. But this is too consistent with past practice in conflicts dating back to European colonialism for this to be characterized as collateral injury. When the disenfranchised have leaders who do not toe the imperial line, it is the rank and file who pay the price. In Vietnam, we targeted peasants whose siblings, cousins, parents, neighbors, etc., belonged to the National Liberation Front. Same type of thing in El Salvador and Guatemala in the 1980s – Drain the pond and the fish will die. Now it’s Iraq’s turn. Say what you want about Al Sadr, he’s more of an Iraqi nationalist than anyone in the U.S.-supported government. He wants foreign troops out – that’s why we hate him.

Rest assured, our president is thinking very, very deeply about the implications of this policy. (“We’re killing them,” he was recently heard to say.) He represents the worst case of senioritis I have ever seen, and I’ve seen a few. Far from “sprinting to the finish,” Bush is drifting through his last year, letting the dishes pile up in the kitchen sink, watching the lawn go to hell, and saving his dirty laundry for the trip home. Just bobbing along, not a care in the world. Let me tell you, friends – there’s going to be one hell of a party chez Bush when January 21 gets here… get your tickets now. As a warm-up, Dubya will continue to lob explosives at the neediest, building separation walls around Sadr City, and sending his legions into that sprawling slum that is home to 2.5 million – close to 10% of the total Iraqi population. No party for them.

And no party for us, either. Don’t think this will stop when Dubya lands in Crawford.

luv u,

jp

Branching out.

No I can’t get the phone. Can’t you see I’ve got my hands full? It’s a shovel, you idiot – what do you think? I’ve been using it all morning. And I don’t know the first thing about kneecap replacement surgery, so bugger off.

Oh, I’m sorry. Didn’t know anyone was reading this blog at [INSERT CURRENT TIME HERE]. Just fending off requests from the various minions at large here in the abandoned Cheney Hammer Mill, where Big Green resides. It happens that I’m a bit indisposed at the moment, shoveling up another cubic yard of dirt to make way for the spreading tendrils of the man-sized tuber’s many relatives. They’ve become something like permanent residents here over the past week. You know the drill – shirt-tail relative drops by for a couple of days, unpacks the suitcase, and next thing you know, you’ve got a lifer. That’s right, friends – tubey’s kin are putting down roots. (In this case, literally.) So naturally, those of us who have arms and legs are press-ganged into accommodating them. Just a slave, that’s all. Crying shame.

Why do we agree to this indignity (and what may, to some, seem like the final indignity)? Well, remember – we invited all these groundlings over to cheer tubey up and out of the deep funk he’d fallen into, pining for the fields of his youth. It would hardly do to let the fellow down again, especially now, in front of all his fellow tubers. Yeah, it’s inconvenient. Yeah, I’m getting sick of hauling fertilizer over from the local ag supply store (at great personal expense, I might add) and pressing it around the roots of some oddly misshapen mega-yam. Yeah, there’s a limit – but we haven’t reached it yet. At least I haven’t. (The Lincolns reached theirs a long time ago. I think anti-Lincoln would sooner debate Hillary Clinton than raise another shovel of topsoil for tubey’s relatives.) So on with the work assignment. One hand tied behind our back. No Lincolns. No Mitch. No Marvin (my personal robot assistant).

I know what you’re thinking. Marvin’s a machine, right? Why not program him to do the digging. Well, there are machines and then there are machines. Marvin’s the latter. Not big on programming, generally. Also, he’s being press-ganged by his inventor, Mitch Macaphee, to assist in one or two little experiments the esteemed scientist has taken on during his sojourn chez Big Green. What’s he working on? Don’t ask. No really, you don’t want to know. Okay, okay, I’ll tell you about one. It’s a zombie thing. Yes, Mitch is a mad scientist, so this comes up once in a while. Turn your back for a day or two and he’s resurrecting Frankenstein’s monster. The thing with him is, he gets all the hard stuff right (giving it life, for instance) but skimps on the details. Like his latest zombie creation has been stumbling around for just a few days or so and it already needs a knee replacement. Couldn’t he see that coming? (He borrowed the body parts from a carpet installer. I mean, even I could guess the knees would be history.)

So what the hell – how is a guy supposed to turn enough soil to keep the tuber family happy when he’s got these half-baked zombies to deal with? Enough to drive you to the drink.

Weird ass music since 1986