Saturday, December 31, 2005

Tidbits

OK, in this section I'm just gonna add tidbits as I find them. The first is a link sent to me by my sister.

http://www.i-am-bored.com/bored_link.cfm?link_id=14702

It is certainly a reason to learn dutch!

And now I’ve got something to add here. Just got it in the mail. A great credit card offer from CHASE. 0% annual rate for a few months. (Like everybody else.) Then, you get an 8.99% fixed rate! Great, right?

But in the wonderful world of banking. Fixed is more like the fix is in. Click here to check out the fine print!   Mmmm yeah, I’m sure gonna count on that one.



Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Mykel's Column for MRR 274

You're Wrong
An Irregular Column
by Mykel Board (Column for MRR 274)

My advice to you...Get people to think you're a drunken no-good lush... slightly cracked... with a bit of the jailbird thrown in.
                       -- Celine

     I'm happier than a urophile at a beerfest. A reputation! Yowsah. When people know ABOUT you without having met you. When people assume rumors are true. When people deal with you based on your image rather than the reality. That's a reputation. It shows you've lived larger than your life. Oh boy!
     It's John's voice on the answering machine.
     "Mykel," he says, "I did some investigating and found out why they cancelled you at COOL BEANZ. I talked with Jennifer and first she told me they dropped you because you're too right-wing. I thought that was kind of strange. So I asked her what she meant. Then she said she read something on the internet. That you advocated pedophilia. I didn't get how pedophilia is right wing, but she didn't explain."
     [NOTE: COOL BEANZ is a coffee house in St. James, Long Island. John lives near there and offered to get me a reading. That he did. But just before I go to California, co-owner Jennifer calls and leaves a message that she's "canceling me out" of the show she had booked. She gives no reason, but does say "Call me later if you want to talk about it."
     I plan to call her when I get back from my trip. I figure it's a scheduling conflict, and we can reschedule.
     What a joy to learn the REAL reason! ]
     I call John back to get the details.
     "John," I ask, "did she read something I wrote or did she read ABOUT me?"
     "It was something you, wrote," he says. "I think it was a column she found on the internet."
     "Every column is on the internet," I tell him. "You'd have to look pretty hard to find one on children's rights. I've never written one "supporting pedophilia."
     Since that time, I googled "Mykel Board" and Pedophilia together. I found 25 sites. None of them are columns. When I look for "Mykel Board" by itself, I get 10,200 responses. Hmmm.
     What's fair is fair though. Jennifer runs the club and has a right to can people for any reason. Insufficient butt-wiping. Severe acne. Anything. But at least she should ask me to contact her, so she can find the horse's opinions from the horse's mouth.
     I call her at the club number.
     "Cool Beanz, Pat speaking, may I help you?"
     "Hi, is Jennifer there?"
     "She won't be in until 2:30. Is there something I can help you with?"
     "I'm not sure," I say. "I was supposed to read there but was cancelled. I heard it was for political reasons. I'm calling to check on that. Do you know what I'm talking about?"
     "I'm afraid not," Pat answers. "Give me your number and I'll ask her to call you when she gets in."
     I give her my number.
     "I'll let her know you called. Thank you," answers Pat
     It's a week later. No answer.
     And HAPPY NEW YEAR! I write this on Xmas day. The city is quiet. The supremely entertaining transit strike is over. I begged $500 out of Dad for Chanukah so I could bring my checking account up to zero. I've got a reputation! Everything is right with the world. I'm skipping goyish Xmas and going right to New Years. And New Years is the time for resolutions.
     Everybody makes New Year's resolutions for themselves. Stop smoking. Get serious about schoolwork. See a doctor about that wound oozing pus. I will A. I will B. One after the other, you promise yourself to do something that you know will never get done. By January 5th, the resolutions are as dead as GG Allin.
     I've also decided to make New Year's resolutions. But not in the boring old way. I already know what I want to do and won't. I don't need to resolve it.
     Instead, I'm gonna make resolutions for YOU. Here are seven things I resolve for YOU to do during the next year. No I will, but YOU will.
     RESOLUTION NUMBER 1: It's probably against the law for me to make this resolution, so I won't. If it were legal I'd say your resolution is: You will buy a kid a beer.
     My adventure with the COOL BEANZ cafe once again shows that kids is one topic where logic dies. It's where people, who pride themselves on reason, drop that reason and turn shrill. Where unAmericans, suddenly become very American. Where defenders of free speech become censors. Where defenders of human rights become dictators.
     The age of consent in Holland is 12 years old. For reasons I've often discussed, I believe that's too old, but it is logical. The body changes at 12. Puberty hits at 12. Jewish boys, 1 year later, recite at their bar mitzvah: TODAY I AM A MAN. Makes perfect sense. But not in America.
     It's not only sex. At every turn from driving, to forced "education" to laws about alcohol and tobacco. Kids are the only group where discrimination is required by law.
     How can you support freedom for prisoners of war, but not the most oppressed prisoners of peace: kids? Do your part! Buy 'em a beer!
     RESOLUTION NUMBER 2: You will voice your support for Saddam Hussein.
     It's not enough to be against the war in Iraq. Everybody and his Aunt Tilly is against the war in Iraq. You should go further.
     Saddam changed Iraq. He brought rights to women, tearing away the veil. He stood up to the Americans, a David against a hugely bullying Goliath. On trial, he refuses to knuckle under. He fights for his homeland. He denies accusations. He willingly goes forward, despite the already decided verdict. Defense attorneys are getting knocked off one after the other. But there he stands, a beacon of hope to a world bullied into submission by a bunch of oil companies.
     RESOLUTION NUMBER 3: You will give money to a bum every day.
     I don't know about your town, but here in New York there are different kinds of bums. There are the salesmen bums who sift through garbage (or steal stuff), then resell it on the street. There are the musicians, who stand with a two-string guitar and sing Me and Bobby McGee 300 times a day. There are the subway crawlers, who go from car-to-car guilting passengers into giving money because they "just got out of the hospital, have no money, and the same thing could happen to you." And there are the plain ole bums, who say hello, shake a cup and don't really ask for anything.
     To discourage the work ethic, I only give to plain old bums. It's the ideal economic arrangement. I give because I want to give. No product changes hands. No environmental damage is done. I feel better having given out of my own free will. The recipient feels better having received without degrading himself in something as horrible as work.
     Giving money to a bum every day-- and talking about it-- encourages others to do the same. It encourages bum-dom. It encourages an ethic where we don't live our lives as a series of trades for things. But where we give and receive only because we exist.
     RESOLUTION NUMBER 4: You will fuck at least one stranger every month, preferably someone of another race or from another culture.
     What could be ruttier than monogamy? The same peg in the same hole, day after day. What could lead to stagnation, boredom, and conservativism quicker than sexual fidelity?
     Sex is one of life's greatest adventures. It's the most intimate contact one person can have with another. How can you learn about other people, other cultures, other ways of living, if you don't become intimate with them?
     It's hard for me to imagine there are Americans who have never had sex with someone of another race. Let's get this clear: not having sex with another race is as racist as not working with another race or not eating at the same table as another race.
     There's a cliché about not criticizing people until you've walked a mile in their shoes. That cliché doesn't go far enough. You cannot criticize-- or understand-- others until you've tasted their bodily fluids. Your narrow view will remain narrow unless you expand it in the most intimate way possible.
     RESOLUTION NUMBER 5: You will assume whatever most of your friends think is wrong.
     Like a Zen slap, we all need a little awakening from our every day assumptions. During the recent NY transit strike, the union was only trying to tread water. They had bad pay, but good benefits: a 55 year old retirement policy, 100% healthcare: what most of us would want if we had no other choice than to work.
     Management wanted to take away these benefits-- or at least weaken them. Not for current workers, but for future workers. They wanted to lower the future quality of life.
     Most New Yorkers supported management. They felt I don't have a 55 year old retirement policy. I don't have free healthcare. Why should these people have it? At the same time, they called the union selfish, for protecting others.
     Huh? Who's selfish? A public who says because I can't have these benefits, no one can? Or a union who says we already have these things, we want to make sure those who come after us have them too.
     I saw a report on TV. Most white folks were against the strike. Most colored people supported it. Hmmmm.
     Every daily newspaper, and all my friends except one Negress, were against the union. They were all wrong. That's usually the case.
     Don't know what to think? Find out what most people believe. The opposite will be true.
     RESOLUTION NUMBER 6: You will drink every day and get completely soused at least once a week.
     There are very few ways you can rebel in today's world. Both leftists and rightists have assholes closed tighter than a leather band around an Iraqi's neck. It's a remnant of Puritanism that sticks in the brain of anyone who lives in this country.
     "Anything that makes your body feel good, is bad," they say. Instead of regulating actions, they regulate conditions. Do you need a license to sell Pepsi? A Pepsi is much worse for you than a Brooklyn Lager. But a Pespi doesn't make you feel good so the regulators don't care.
     (Yeah, I know. But it won't be long before you WILL need a license to sell MONSTER. Get it while you can!)
     In the meantime, you need to show that you are in charge of your life-- not THEM. You need to fracture the 12-step myth of helplessness. You need to shatter the teetotalers' perverted logic that NOT drinking is somehow keeping control of yourself.
     Not drinking is giving up control. It's making a rule that says I DON'T DO THIS and blindly following that rule. You cannot live a full life by following rules... even rules you think you make for yourself.
     No one would make a no drinking rule for themselves unless: (A) they were actually allergic to alcohol (B) Social or peer pressure made them think they were choosing such a rule.
     RESOLUTION SEVEN: You will masturbate every day-- sex or not. At least once a week, you'll do it in a location you never did it before.
     Sexual energy is like a sunflower. If you keep it hidden, in the shade, without exposure, it will droop and die. If you expose it, it stands straight, tall and beautiful.
     If you see a sunflower every day, you begin to take it for granted. There's that sunflower, in the same garden, next to the same petunia. It moves back, away from your consciousness until you don't even notice it any more.
     But move the sunflower. Put it on the window ledge. In your bathroom. Stick it on top of the computer monitor. It remains fresh. An exciting part of your life.
     How many people jerk off to the same movie, at the same time, every day? It puts you to sleep. Some people use it to put them to sleep. Why?
     Like booze, masturbation is how we can give ourselves pleasure. It is a great tool of stimulation, excitement, adventure. It's a tragedy if it becomes boring.
     Jerk off at work, in the office supply room. At school, under the desk in physics class. Outside, in a park. In the car. In a restaurant bathroom. Masturbation will be an adventure, a thrill, like it was when you discovered it. Send me a video.
     OK. Those are your New Year's resolutions. Have a good one.

ENDNOTES: ENDNOTES: [Visitors to my website: mykelboard.com or subscribers (email to: god@mykelboard.com) will receive hot links to some of the topics here. Visitors to my blog (you can get it through the website) can comment on the column... or anything else.]

--> Give her a call dept: Jennifer, the woman who disinvited me to speak at the COOL BEANZ CAFE, has not returned my call. Her number is (631) 862-4111. Maybe you'll have better luck than I did. If you talk with her, don't be insulting. It's her right to invite or not. It's her cafe. But do ask her why I was disinvited and if speakers are usually chosen for their politics. Then email me her answer: god@mykelboard.com.
-->Discovered by accident dept: My new favorite website is www.landoverbaptist.org. It's a Christian parody site, that comes up on internet searches looking very real. It's like THE ONION, but only for Christianity. Their sub-heading is The Largest, Most Powerful Assembly of Worthwhile People to Ever Exist. Unsaved are NOT Welcome!
     My current favorite article is about how 8-year old girls are getting pregnant from listening to Ricky Martin songs. Pure genius!

-->Ambiguity in Motion Dept: The METRO newspaper in NY reports that Russia plans to launch a `tourist police corps.' The corps will be formed from English-speaking students who patrol tourist areas. They'll get a salary and uniforms. It's not clear whether or not they'll get guns. Few Russian police can speak English which, according to the paper, hampers the security situation in the city. The paper doesn't say if the Tourist Police are there to police those who prey on the tourists, or the tourists themselves.

-->Mickey Mouse This, Asshole! Dept: A Disneyland worker in Hong Kong climbed to the top of a tower on the Space Mountain ride. He was carrying a knife and a banner that said BLOOD and TRUTH in Chinese. Police talked him down after more than two hours. His action came a week after Hong Kong unions officially complained about the horrible working conditions at the park. Mickey Mouse had no comment.

--> Is your printer watching you Dept: The website at: http://www.eff.org/Privacy/printers/list.php shows a list of printers that do (or don't) embed codes in printed documents allowing government (and other) agencies to track the origin of the document. Beware!! Your own printer is probably watching you.

-->Jimmy Reject of Proud Disgrace Fanzine infamy sent me a ton of stuff including 40 pages of things I shouldn't mention. The new Proud Disgrace has an interview with ME. (He calls me a pedophile!) You can download his new novel from lulu.com. That guy is prolific!! Email him at: mailto:rejectone@aol.com. AOL???? It must be a free account!

--> I Love Being Me Dept: I got a letter from a prisoner whose name I won't release without his permission. He says he's not allowed to have zines in prison and asked for me to send my column on paper. He writes:
     I love your foulness. You just don't give a fuck. Your real to the point and totally out of the closet-- ever pushing boundaries. You're the real sexual outlaw.
     OK, stroke me.
     But there's more. ... your openness has helped me understand my desires and know they're natural. I have wondered, 'cause I lost my virginity to a family pet-- a female dog named Spot...
     Letters like that make me feel almost as good as getting disinvited to a reading. Yeah!

-->Hardcore hardness dept: They have the best band name I've heard in a long time: THE TWATS. On Overdose On Records Records, they have a girl singer and a song that reveals the real truth of rock'n'roll: Only In This To Get Laid. Female singer, loud and fast. Yeah! The big question, of course, is Does it Work?

-->Ask and ye shall receive dept: In MRR 271, I complained about the dearth of Spanish-singing bands. Not long after, my pal Tomasso (from Trust Magazine in Germany) emailed me about Ruidosa Inmundicia, who he says are "hands down the best band on the globe." Two members are originally from Chile, but they live in Austria. Demos are at http://www.ruidosainmundicia.net.
     And last week I got a cassette from Megan, part of an all girl (maybe lesbian, I can't figure it out) hardcore band from Chicago called Condenada. They sing in both English and Spanish. (Contact them at: PO Box 5027, Chicago IL 60680.)
     Not only did Megan send me the band's cassette, she sent me a lyric booklet and a list of Spanish-singing punk bands. Of course I know Huasipungo in New York, but Punkeke in Minneapolis? Who would've guessed? Thanks girls.
     And for all you world punk rockers. If you wanna sing in English to reach more people, ok, I understand. But sing a few in your own language. You speak it better. And your fellow countrymen need the inspiration. As for Spanish-- that's the WORLD language. If you can sing in it, DO!


Sunday, December 04, 2005

Mykel's Column for MRR 273


You're Wrong


An Irregular Column


by Mykel Board



We live on spaceship Earth. We are its astronauts.

--Jim Bell, San Diego Mayoral Candidate

It's dark. The tile is cold under my cheek. I can feel the crisscross
indentation where it presses its filthy pattern into my skin. Something sticky
drips from my mouth. Something else sticky drips from my nose, mingling
nosehairs with mustache hairs, crusting over my upper lip.

I slowly return to consciousness. After my face, the rest of my body regains
sensations. My left hand jerks, like a frog's leg in a school experiment. It
hits something hard. Eyes closed, I feel the smooth coldness, following it
upward as it curves out. The toilet. It must be the toilet.

My stomach contracts like I've been punched. Something bubbles through my
guts, dribbles out my asshole, down over the back of my leg. I need a MONSTER.
Then it's dark again.

In five minutes-- or five hours-- consciousness returns. I try to lift my
head from the tile, fighting the gummy viscosity between my cheek and the floor.
I open my eyes just enough to allow a faint outline: toilet base, porn mags,
plunger, white toilet brush with tiny brown clumps clinging to the bristles.

I'm naked, curled like a comma. The pain in my stomach slightly less than
before, I try to stretch my legs. BLAU! I slam my toe against the bathtub. A
scream mutes itself against the floor.

Without standing, I swivel my body through the muck and roll up and over into
the tub. Feeling above me, I reach for the handle and turn. Ice cold water pours
over my head. JEEZUS FUCK! Reaching up, I turn the other tap and adjust to
lukewarm. When just the right temperature washes over my forehead, I reach up to
turn on the shower.

Lying there at the bottom of the tub, I let the water play over my body. It
washes away the offal encrusted on my skin. First my side. Then I turn over on
my stomach, and let the water pour over my back. I scoot up slightly so the
shower can work its magic a bit lower, carrying the excreted nutrients off my
body, and down the drain. Then the other side. Then I turn on my back.

The force of the water on the good parts frees them. It allows me to spray my
own shower, strong and beer colored, onto my hairy belly-- to be washed away by
the forceful stream from the metal nozzle.

I fall back to sleep.

Five minutes-- or five hours later-- I wake up drowning. I'm going to die.
Water is everywhere. Covering my mouth and nose. There's no escape. I spit it
out. Immediately, my mouth and nose fill up again. I twist away.

Oh, I get it. I turned over in my sleep and was drowning in an inch and a
half of water on the bottom of the tub.

Now, I'm fully awake. I don't know how long I've been under the shower. My
skin is pink and wrinkled like a deflated balloon. I can stand up now... not
easily... but with the help of the sides of the tub and the wall, I work my way
to my feet. I survey the bathroom. Gobs of food-speckled white cover the floor.
There's a yellow puddle near the toilet. A thin strip of dark brown lies halfway
to the tub.

I shut off the water and pick my way through the liquid obstacle course to
the door. Stumbling out, I turn the corner and head toward the promise of rest
that is my bed. My eyes still not focusing properly, I approach the bed. On it,
is what looks like a huge pink hairy kidney, curled on the black sheets.

From the kidney comes the sound of regular deep breathing. Uh oh. I brought
something home last night. If only I can remember.

Shit! Another one of those nights. Well, I buttered my bread, so I've got to
sleep in it. I pad over to the stove in the kitchen.

I take down the cream of wheat and put on the kettle.

"You want coffee with your cereal?" I shout to the form on the bed.

Yuck? I know, but it's the right thing to do. This whole column is about the
right thing to do.

Actually, there are two kinds of "right things." One is morally right, like
helping old ladies across the street. Or cooking breakfast for last night's
mistake.

EXAMPLE 1: I used to have a best friend. Several years ago he stopped being
my friend because I wrote in a column that he had become "too L.A."

Even after an entire column of apology. Even after sending him my favorite
truck-driving record to say "I'm sorry," he refused to talk to me. Accepting a
gift, but not an apology... it pissed me off.

When GC Press published my Mongolia book. I sent copies to everyone who
helped me with it. I included a form letter thanking the recipient and asking
for any help they could give hustling the book.

My friend-turned-enemy helped me with the book back in the friend days. He
showed it to several LA film-makers, but could not persuade Brad Pitt to play
ME.

I thought about it for awhile, and decided to send him a book and form letter
just like everybody else. I was still pissed as hell at him, but he helped me,
so it was the right thing.

The second kind of right thing is not morally right, but situationally
right. It’s making the right decision. Like investing in a stock just before
it becomes the next Microsoft. In cards, it’s discarding the right cards and
holding the right cards.

EXAMPLE 2: My 70-year old cousin who lives near San Francisco is gonna make
Thanksgiving dinner. I have enough frequent flyer miles to get there for the $20
tax the airline charges to use those miles. I also have a fistful of free car
day coupons at Hertz. If I turn the whole trip into a book-selling tour, I can
make some bucks, see my cousin, have a turkey dinner with minimal family
squabbles, and visit my West Coast pals.

I can fly to San Diego, rent a car using my free tickets. Drive to LA then
San Francisco, and return to New York from San Francisco.

In San Diego, I can see my college pal John who I took more LSD with than any
twelve Deadheads. He now works for Fox News. Bob Beyerle, who used to do Vinyl
Communications records, might set up a show or two.

In L.A., I can visit Leslie, my former next door neighbor in New York. Plus,
I can visit the home of MONSTER. The energy drink that makes RED BULL, seem like
RED LITTLE LAMB. If you don't know MONSTER, you're probably stuck on a baby
drug... like methadrine. Wadda wimp!

MONSTER brews its magic right outside LA. I can do a day reading (Jennifer
Blowdryer gave me the name of "an underground spoken- word promoter"), then hit
the MONSTER factory and try to convince them to sponsor my national book tour.

After that, on to San Francisco, where my pal Jim will set up a book release
party in an old theater on Mission Street.

The trip should cost about $100 for two weeks-- less than I'd spend in New
York. If I can set up a few readings: San Diego, Los Angeles, and San
Francisco... with only 5 books sold at each reading, I'll make a profit. Sounds
like the right thing.

You got the examples. Now let's look at how far doing the right thing... in
either sense... will get you.

I call Delta. No problem. Fly to San Diego. Return from San Francisco. $20
charge for tax and security fees. Not bad. I've paid more for someone to
manipulate my anal cavity.

Then I call Hertz. That's when things begin to go wrong.

"I'm sorry, Mr. Board..." says the Alabama-twinged voice on the other end of
the line. I know there's going to be trouble when someone calls me Mr. Board.
"Those coupons do not allow returns except to the place of rental."

"Can I pay a drop-off fee or something?" I ask.

"I'm afraid not," says the Southern Belle on the other end of the line. "If
you want the car I can give it to you for $310 for the week."

"Shit," I say politely. Then hang up.

Damn. Ok. Change of plans. I'll call Greyhound and find out if I can take a
bus from San Diego to San Francisco with a stop-over in L.A.

"Sure," says the even more southern voice on the phone, "if you buy the
ticket now, you can use it any time within 365 days. If the bus stops in L.A.
you can just get back on and go to San Francisco."

[Aside: What is it with the south and service calls? Is Mississippi the new
Delhi? Is corporate America tired of people complaining about incomprehensible
Indians? Has globalism come full circle? Back to the Bible belt?]

The ticket costs $49. The Greyhound lady asks me for my schedule. Since I
have a year to use the ticket, I make one up, planning to change it later. I
give Mary Sue Beth my credit card number, hope for another few book sales, pack
a hundred pounds of books and go to the airport to take the plane to San Diego.

I know the suitcase is heavy and, as I remember, there is a baggage limit. Is
it 70 pounds? So how bad can it be? Ten cents a pound? Twenty cents?

"I'm sorry, Mr. Board," says the airline clerk, a meek little man who reminds
me of Mr. Bean. "There's a 50 pound weight limit on the bags. Your bag weighs 97
pounds."

"I understand," I tell him. "What's the extra charge?"

"A hundred dollars," he says.

I choke.

"Are you all right, Mr. Board?" he says. "Do you want to pay for the
overcharge?"

"What can I do?" I ask him. "Do I have any alternative?"

He shrugs. "I can give you a receipt."

I hand over my credit card. There goes the free trip. Pop! Gone in a
suitcase.

Holding back the tears, I sign the charge slip. Mr. Bean lugs the bag to the
conveyer belt. I head for security, hoping someone attractive will want to
explore my inner cavities. No one does.

My pal Brian meets me at the airport in San Diego. We're gonna meet John and
then go out for some Mexican food. You CANNOT get good Mexican food in New York.
(I stick to Mexican food the entire trip. A flatulent cloud, like a silent
friend, follows me continually.)

The first reading is in the rented-out livingroom of
Jim Bell, a local political activist and Green Party candidate. When I go in to check out the space, there's Jim, tall, with a grey beard. He sits in an office typing away at his computer.
Around him, covering every available section of wall space, are posters for
vegetarianism, sustainable development, save the children, and the quote at the
beginning of this column.

Is this guy gonna actually BE at my reading? What's he gonna think about my
politics? For the googoleth time, I thank G-d that she didn't give guns to
liberals.

At the reading I follow a cellist, and Matt. Matt is scheduled to talk about
his life in Peru. Because of a technical glitch in his slideshow, he plays 5
minutes of a telephone answering machine test message run through a sound
processing loop.

The audience? A couple of earnest-looking college girls sitting in the back
with their arms folded. An attractive, though preppie-looking guy, in a light
suit with a dark shirt. He later tells me his name, something like Reginald
Trumpet the Third.

Then there's his even more attractive girlfriend, who sits off to the side
with both her arms and legs folded, pressed tightly together, especially while
I'm speaking. Then, there's Brian. Jim Bell is not there. Neither is anyone
else.

I'm the only performer who says a word. I say a lot of 'em. Talking about
piss-drinking in Mongolia, and sleeping in my own vomit.

After I finish, Matt and Brian applaud loudly. The preppie guy and his
girlfriend applaud politely. The girls in the back have left. I sell two books--
to Matt.

The next show is in downtown San Diego. It's a nice little space on top of
Gelato Vera Cafe. Kind of like an enclosed balcony, there are seats for about 20
people. I set up a little display. My $100 suitcase has books, CDs, cassettes,
anything I've done. Bob has given me the rest of the ARTLESS Beer Is Better
Than Girls Are
7-inches. I'm selling them for $5. Set up website for deal
with singles

This place as a few more people. At least a dozen are here for the start of
Matt's performance. This time the computer slides worked. Matt is ready to talk.

I expect he'll talk about his work with a film crew in Peru. Politics. I
don't know. A travel log. That's a perfect set-up for me to start the gross-out.
Hah! Is this crowd gonna be shocked when they hear the Mongolian piss stuff!

Matt is speaking.

So, I lie down on the table. The shaman takes the live guinea pig and rubs it
all over my body. It's not a gentle rub. She squeezes it against my head, my
neck. Down under my shirt. She unzips my pants and presses that squashed bit of
live fur between my legs. Up and down. Then down my legs, scraping it against my
feet. My toenails scratch rivulets of blood in its little hide.

Then she holds up the half dead animal and tears it open. Just rips right
into the stomach, pulling out heart, lungs, intestines. She runs the organs
through her fingers, poking here or there.

"See," she tells me, "look at this. This means your heart is strong. Look at
these lungs. See that blood on the left one. You need to watch. Don't smoke too
much."

Piece by bloody piece she takes apart the animal. It's impossible to tell
when it was alive and when it died. It's a mess
.

Then it's my turn to speak. Yeah right.

Despite being upstaged by a guinea pig and thanks to a newfound ability to
take credit cards, I sell about a half dozen books and a few CDs.

After the show, we go out eating and drinking at a local pub. I need San
Diego for fish and chips? Aw, that's a minor complaint. It was a fun crew with a
fuck of a lot of Guiness.

"Hey Mykel," suggests Brian. "Fuck that Greyhound stuff. I'll give you a ride
to L.A. tomorrow."

"Great!" I tell him. "Maybe I can get a refund on that part of the ticket.
Let's check at the station first."

Early the next day, I'm at the Greyhound station.

"Solly, Mr. Board," says the clerk. She's a short Oriental, with a severe
Chinese accent. "Yaw ticket dis morning. You cannot use aftah."

"But I was told I had a year to use it," I explain. "365 days."

"That's a legula ticket," she says. "You have 7 day advance ticket."

"I bought that ticket because I was told I could use it for a year," I whine.

"Who tol you zat?" she asks.

"Some hillbilly on the phone," I say, increasingly angry.

"I don't know hirbirry," she says. "You change yaw ticket. You must pay ten
dallas."

"Can I pay in LA?" I ask her.

"You pay here. Use yaw ticket in Ros Angeres. No plobrem."

Ok, ten more dollars. Then to LA for my show. That's Sunday. Monday I'll use
a free day coupon to rent a car. I can return the car to the same place. In the
meantime, I'll visit the folks at MONSTER and convince them to sponsor me.

Tuesday night, I'll take the bus to San Francisco. It's an 11 hour ride, so
I'll be there Wednesday, in time to help Cousin Shirley prepare the turkey.

Having learned the right thing from my first misadventure, I call Greyhound
to check about baggage weight. They too have a fifty pound limit, but it's per
bag. You can take two bags. I spend $30 on another bag and repack.

Brian drives me to L.A. We stop for Mexican on the way. Because it's the
right thing
I buy him a tank of gas. What the hell. If I sell 3 books in LA,
it'll pay for that.

Brian lets me off at Leslie's door, then leaves. From Leslie's house I call
Keith, the promoter for the LA reading. It's gonna be at a prophetically named
bar, The Little Joy Cafe.

"It's tough to find," says Keith. "It's in the Chinese section of a Mexican
neighborhood. There's a big yellow Chinese sign outside and it looks like a
Chinese restaurant. We want to keep it underground."

Leslie finds the address, but it's tough to find the bar. The entrance is in
a little alcove that looks like part of a Chinese supermarket.

Inside, we see a tiny run-down place with a pool table and a set of barstools
with un-matched tears in the vinyl.

We walk in. A couple thirty-somethings play pool. Behind the bar a long
haired, pot-bellied bar-tender who, in another life, was a computer nerd,
Trekkie, or zine-editor, slowly sips something white and bubbly from a chipped
glass. Standing in the middle of the concrete floor as if waiting, is a tall
grey-haired man wearing a dirty cloth jacket. His arm is in a sling.

I enter, lugging a bag with half a dozen books in it. In my other hand is a
MONSTER. I drop the bag in the corner.

"You look like you're a reader," says the grey-haired guy. "My name is Jake."

"Hi Jake," I say, reaching out my right hand. "My name's Mykel and you're
right."

Jake wiggles the fingers on the hand in the sling. I take that as a sign he
wants me to shake that hand. I do. Then he leaves.

I sit at the bar with Leslie. Poolballs clank in counterpoint to Iggy Pop on
the jukebox.

Now I wanna be your dog. KLAK! Now I wanna be your dog. KLAK! KLAK!
Now I wanna be your dog. Rrrssshhh. Thud. Thud. KLAK! Well all right!
Thud. Thud. SHIT!

In walks a late-twenty something, slightly hung-over looking. He sits down at
the bar next to me.

"You Mykel?" he says, peering deeply into the bottles behind the bar.

"Yep," I say. "Doesn't look like much of a turn-out. Did you put up the
posters I sent you?"

Keith shakes his head.

"I want to keep this underground," he says. "If we do publicity... If I tell
anyone... you know... it loses its purity. Before you know it, we'll have just
anybody here. Reading from notebooks or something. If we don't tell anybody,
then it can be really underground. If people know about it, it's... you know...
like everything else."

"But no one's here," I complain.

"Yeah," he says, "isn't that cool?"

"I need to sell some books." I tell him. "Besides, I don't think empty
barstools were the audience I was looking for."

"I'll listen to you read," he says. "I'll buy a book."

I get up to read. Leslie and Keith applaud. I shuffle over to the table with
the books on it and pick one up. I open it to the bookmarked page.

"You don't mind if we have another game," comes a voice from the pool table.

I shrug.

"Now, I want to write about kids and piss," I read.

KLANK

"In Mongolia, piss is a home remedy, like Tylenol in America."

KLANK, KLANK, Shhhrrrr Bunk. YES!

And on it goes for the next fifteen minutes. When I finish, the bartender and
Leslie applaud. Keith is nowhere to be seen. Leslie drives me back to his place.

The next morning, I go to Hertz to pick up the car to drive to the MONSTER
factory. I'm early, but the car dealer says, that's alright. Now they know I'll
be there and they can order the car with the satellite system I need to help me
find anything in California. My reservation is for 1:00. It's now 11. In the
meantime, I'll go to Greyhound to pick up my ticket, then return for the car.

Another person of Asian decent is at the Greyhound counter.

"I'd like to change this ticket for one leaving on Tuesday night," I tell
him. "I already paid the $10 change fee."

"You no can leave Wednesday," he says. "This special fare ticket. Seven day.
Wednesday holiday. You ticket no good holiday. Look. Look."

He shows me a little sign that says SPECIAL FARE TICKETS NOT GOOD FOR HOLIDAY
TRAVEL.

"I never saw that sign," I tell him.

"It come today," he says. "Juss today."

I slowly inhale. Count to ten. Exhale. I can feel the blood pulsing at my
temples, ready to burst forth in a bleeding hemorrhage that will bring a red
tide to the entire terminal. I count again.

"Okay," I say, "when can I leave?"

"You can leave day afta Thank Give," he says. "No lestliction."

"But I have to be in San Francisco for Thanksgiving. That's why I'm in
California."

"You reave today. Okay? Erevan tah-dee tonight. Okay? You be in San Francisco
tomollow."

There goes my MONSTER sponsorship. There goes... fuck it. I'm outta there.
Back to Leslie's, back to the Greyhound. Off to SF where my brave cousin picks
me up at 7AM.

I'm just about out of column space, so I'll speed up. San Francisco is the
best of the trip. Jim set up a good show at THE DARKROOM. John Trubee and
Jennifer Blowdryer also read.

Before I fly back to New York, I call Delta Airlines on a hunch.

"This is Mykel Board calling," I tell the reservations clerk, somewhere in
Delhi. "I'm calling to find out about your weight limits. I know there's a 50
pound limit. Could you tell me if that's the total? Or is it per bag?"

"You are allowed two bags," she says. "Fifty pounds each."

"Why wasn't I told this when I checked in?" I ask. "I had to pay $100 when I
could have just bought another bag."

"I'm sorry, Mr. Board," says the operator. "Did you ask?"

"How could I ask?" I answer, feeling my blood pressure rising again. "There's
no way to ask if you don't know the question. You can't ask EVERYTHING. Should I
ask if there's a penalty for wearing blue pants instead of black?"

"And what color pants will you be wearing, Mr. Board," she says.

I hang up.

So for this trip, the right thing was to make a bundle, promote my book and
find a sponsor. Yeah right.

And my former friend who I sent the book to? I hear he threw it away
immediately. He was pissed that I didn't sign it... make it special for him.
Yeah, right.

Listen buckaroos, forget about this right thing stuff. It'll only get
you in trouble and cost you a shitload of money. Be WRONG. It's easier... and
more fun.

ENDNOTES: [Visitors to my website: mykelboard.com or subscribers (email to:
god@mykelboard.com
) will receive hot links to some of the topics here.
Visitors to my blog (you can get it through the website) can comment on the
column... or anything else.
]

-->Feeling Lousy? Pick on a Wimp! Dept: According to the
Achives of Disease in Childhood:
Children who bully are mentally and physically healthier than
those they persecute.

Scientists studied more than 1,600 primary school children, aged between six
to nine.

They found children described as "pure bullies" - those who bullied, but were
not themselves victimized - were the least likely to suffer either physical or
psychosomatic illness. On the other hand, bullied kids, had more physical and
psychological problems than other children.

Just further proof that it pays to do the WRONG thing.

--> And PETA Says We Don't Need Animal Research Dept: According to
This Week
Magazine, Harvard University Medical School researchers removed
from rabbits the spongy penis tissue that swells during an erection. Then they
used cells from this tissue to grow replacements. Because the new penis cells
originated from the rabbits' own cells, their immune systems did not reject the
replacement. Once the rabbits recovered from surgery they could "copulate,
penetrate, and produce sperm." Their erections, however, were only half as firm
as usual.

"It's analogous to the penis of a 60-year-old man versus that of a 30-year
old," explained one scientist.

His team is now trying to grow a complete penis.

-->Up Against The Wall Bubbela dept: Artists in New York, Tel Aviv
and Ramallah have coordinated their efforts against the Israeli constructed wall
between Israel and Palestine
. It's amazing how people who were victims of
ghetto walls now build walls to ghettoize others.

Nah, it's not amazing for two reasons.
1. The worst violence is always committed by people who have had violence used against them.
2. They probably read about how bullies are so healthy.

--> Stop Welfare Abuse dept: Airbus, the European airline maker is
suing Boeing because of its huge subsidies-- typical for government Corporate
Welfare.

Airbus bases its case on the technologies used in the Boeing 777 and 787.
Those were developed by the US government and then released without charge to
Boeing. In addition, the Japanese government has provided "launch aid"
(government subsidies) for Boeing's Japanese subcontractors.

Oh yeah, Boeing is also suing Airbus. They say that European countries have
given low-cost loans to the plane-maker. I say Airbus should complain. They're
only getting a loan. Boeing gets the whole kit and caboodle-- interest free!

-->Let's Teach Them Folks The Real Meaning of America dept: A Spanish
language reality show called Gana La Verde (Earn The Green) provides the clearest view yet of melding American values.

The TV show features worm eating, jumping from a moving train and other
fear-factor type contests. But there's a difference.

The "Green" referee to in the title is not cash, but A GREEN CARD. That is,
legal permission to work in the US. Since the show is not actually run by the US
government (it should be!), the producers cannot guarantee a Green Card.
Instead, they provide lawyers, who do their best to help winners find nice LEGAL
$5.50 an hour jobs making tacos in Laredo.

-->I Only Followed (written) Orders Redux Dept: Both Bob and Dick had
comments about my last column where I wrote about falling into the trap of
obeying an order just because it's written.

Dick said it was lucky I didn't pass a sign that said VOID WHERE PROHIBITED,
or someone would have arrested me for public urination.

Bob said it's lucky people don't write the oft heard (by me) command GO FUCK
YOURSELF, or I'd still be stuck somewhere trying.

If YOU'D like to comment on a column, try it at the BLOG version, or email me
at: god@mykelboard.com

--> Good Riddance dept: Under the headline George W. Bush is Just Too Liberal, the Utne Reader reports that a rightwing Christian groupis urging its followers to move to South Carolina. When there's enough of them,they can force the state leaders to succeed from the Union. Check out ChristianExodus.org. I hope the plan works. We'll be better off without those guys.

As for George W, with his low poll ratings, and universal scorn, it's about time to come to the defense of poor bastard. He may be a Christian. He may be amoron, but I'd sure like to be his friend. He sticks by his friends.

If Karl Rove, Scooter Libby or Dick Cheney were Bill Clinton's friends, they'd be at the bottom of a river by now.

--> Oh yeah don't forget dept: I have TWO books out now. If you're in the New York Area, you can check 'em both out through the BOOKS link on my webpage: www.mykelboard.com. Thanks.


To Mykel's Homepage

Saturday, October 29, 2005

Mykel's Column for MRR 272

FORGIVE THE WEIRD SPACING. I'm still learning this blogging stuff, and my html doesn't work the same here as it does in Opera!.



You're Wrong


An Irregular Column


by Mykel Board

 

     Perhaps there exists no
one, however virtuous he may be, who may not be led one day by the complexity of
his circumstances to live on familiar terms with the vice he condemns most
expressly.
-- Marcel Proust


 


     In 1973, Professor Milgram
wore a white laboratory coat and surrounded himself with scientific-looking
equipment. A student volunteer became "the teacher." It was "the teacher's" task
to give steadily rising degrees of electric shocks to "a learner." This
"learner" was supposedly strapped to a chair in a nearby room in front of a task
to be "learned." "The teacher's" job was to condition "the learner" with a shock
every time he made an error. "The teacher" couldn't see "the learner."


     Unknown to “the teacher,”
“the learner” was an assistant of Milgram's. He did not receive a shock. He
merely acted the part--complete with cries, shouts, and pleas for mercy all
coming from the next room.


     The teacher sat in front
of a sophisticated-looking "electric shock-inducing" switchboard. It had a
keyboard with marked buttons ranging from "slight shock" to "danger--severe
shock." Before the teachers administered shocks, Dr. Milgram gave each a tiny,
genuine shock. That way they could understand what sorts of pain the learner
would be receiving-- but in ever-increasing doses.


     The learner made many
mistakes requiring the teacher to give numerous and more severe shocks. At one
end of the experiment, there was a suffering victim calling for the experiment
to stop. At the other end there was the authority figure instructing the teacher
to continue.


     The authority figure would
first say "in the interests of science continue." Then "please continue." Then,
"the experiment requires that you continue." Then, "it is absolutely essential
that you go on." Finally, "you have no choice but to go on."


     This proceeded until the
teacher pressed the button for "fatal shocks." After that, there were no further
cries from the learner.


     "The teacher" was the real
subject of the experiment. The object was to discover how far a normal male
would go in carrying out orders by an authority. This included orders injuring
or killing another human being.


     Milgram repeated this
experiment many times. He found that ordinary young men would invariably obey
orders to torture and murder a complete stranger-- someone they never even saw.


     Milgram writes, "even with
this low degree of expected zeal or commitment and without prior conditioning,
not one participant refused to go on the moment he knew he was beginning to
cause discomfort to another human being. Two-thirds of the subjects obeyed the
experimenter to the last and severest shocks."


     His conclusion: "This is,
perhaps, the most fundamental lesson of our study: ordinary people, simply doing
their jobs, and without any particular hostility on their part, can become
agents in a terrible destructive process. Moreover, even when the destructive
effects of their work becomes patently clear, and they are asked to carry out
actions incompatible with fundamental standards of morality, relatively few
people have the resources needed to resist authority. A variety of inhibitions
against disobeying authority come into play and successfully keep the person in
his place."


     Flash ahead thirty years.
At first, it looks like nothing has changed. The soldier-scapegoats in the
torture of Iraqis are the most obvious example that come off the top of my
thin-haired head.


     I sit on the stoop of a
building on St. Marks Place. I'm tired, slightly soused, and want to take a
breather. I just sit, watching the Japanese tourists telling each other how
exotic this place is. From behind me comes a voice-- loud and jockish.


     "Hey," it says, "can't you
read?"


     "No," I say. "I don't have
a book."


     He doesn't get it.


     "Look here," he says.


     I turn and look at what
he's pointing to. It's a piece of paper, printed by computer, in Microsoft Word,
in large type: NO SITTING!


     "Sorry," I say. "I didn't
see the sign."


     I get up and stagger home.
It's only an hour later, while I'm letting loose the brown squirts, that I get
pissed off.


     "I'm just like one of
them!" I think. "I just listened to that guy on the steps. Not because he said
anything. But because it was WRITTEN. Because there was a SIGN. What the fuck is
a sign?"


     Suddenly I'm depressed.
I'm one of those authoritarian folks. I HATE authority, and here I am following
it, just because it's written.


     A few turds later, my
depression turns to inspiration.


     "Maybe our way out of
authoritarianism is overkill. Just as no one pays attention to commercials any
more... because they're everywhere. Maybe authority will die because it's
everywhere. I obeyed that sign without thinking, but how many written
instructions do I reject? Every day signs tell us to do so much. We CAN'T obey
everything. Maybe it's a kind of automatic rebellion."


     But the more I think about
it, the more I have my doubts. I think about Iraq... and my own knee-jerk
response.


     I wonder what happened to
the debriefed members of the Milgram experiment. They learned how blindly
obedient they were. I bet they'll forever be more distrustful of authority.


     Maybe I have to provide my
own debriefing. Maybe I have to train myself to disobey authority by showing how
foolish-- and evil-- it is to obey. Starting tomorrow, for 24 hours I will do
what I'm "told."


     Tomorrow: I leave my
apartment on Bleecker Street. On the way to the subway, I walk past a bunch of
newspaper boxes. White, red, blue, they're filled with free newspapers. On the
front of each box is a Plexiglas door and a handle. Etched into the Plexiglas is
a sign that says: TAKE ONE.


     I open each door and TAKE
ONE. Soon my arms are filled with THE COMPUTER SHOPPER, NY EMPLOYMENT WEEKLY,
TENNIS NEWS, L-MAGAZINE, PARENTS WEEKLY as well as the local free dailies. The
bundle is as thick as two phonebooks.


     I go down the stairs into
the subway station. Once in the subway itself, I sit with the stack of
newspapers on my lap. Next to me, a chubby white woman, whose too short shorts
bind into her thighs, reads the front page of AmToday in my lap.


     Across from me is a large
sign. On the sign is a picture of an empty subway car with a big black bag under
the seat. Under the picture, in 288 point type: IF YOU SEE SOMETHING, SAY
SOMETHING!


     I turn to the lady sitting
next to me and point to the poster. "There's a sign over there. See it?"


     "Yeah," she says. "What
about it?"


     "Nothing," I tell her.
"I'm just saying something about it because I see it. Want a newspaper?"


     She declines... and a
lucky thing too. When I get out of the subway, I pass a large wire bin with a
sign from GRAND CENTRAL PARTNERSHIP. [Note: I don't know about your city. But in
New York, PARTNERSHIP means homeless people forced to work for a flea
infested place to sleep because the city prohibits them from sleeping on the
streets... or fines them for lying down in the subways.]


     This partnership tells me
to PUT TRASH HERE. Ok, I'm ready. I dump my armload of papers into the can. And
walk on. Uh oh. There's another can, also telling me to PUT TRASH HERE. Shit!


     I go back to the first can
and pull out most of the papers. Then, can by can, I throw a few pages away so I
can follow the written orders.


     Turning the corner in
Grand Central, I see a huge banner over the entrance to the exhibition hall.
VISIT THE SUPREME COURT EXHIBIT IN VANDERBUILT HALL.


     Dammit! I'm running late
for school, but an order is an order. I turn the corner and walk smack into one
of those saw horses. When I start to climb over it, I hear a female voice behind
me.


     "Hey! Whadaya think you're
doin'?"


     I look back and see a
short Oriental policewoman.


     "There's a sign out there
that told me to visit this exhibit. So that's what I'm trying to do."


     "It's not open yet," she
says. "It doesn't open until 9:30."


     "But the sign says VISIT!"
I protest. "Aren't I supposed to follow what the signs say?"


     The cop looks skywards as
if saying, Another nut. Is this what I get paid for?


     "The exhibit opens at
9:30," she says. "You'll wait until then. Okay?"


     In my thirst to obey
signs, I let nothing stand in my way. I throw down my remaining papers, pick up
the wooden barrier and slam it into the cop's belly. Then I trudge ahead to the
exhibit.


     No I don't.


     "I'm sorry officer," I
say, sheepish as a Jew in a cattlecar. "I'll come back."


     To official head-shaking
and tsk tsking, I head for the escalator in the back of the building-- a
relatively cop-free area.


     At the escalator, there is
a sign on the space that separates one escalator from the other. [Note: There
must be a technical word for this space. When I put "escalator separation space"
into Google, however, I only get a bunch of building codes, no special word.]


     HOLD HANDRAIL. ATTEND
CHILDREN. Says the sign.


     If I get on the escalator
and there are no children, I won't be able to do both. Holding the handrail will
force me to go to the top. It will also keep me in one place so I can't attend
any children.


     I'm not exactly sure what
attend means. But I figure it's something like watch so they don't
slide down the escalator separation space and make sure they don't do other
nasty things.


     Ah, there are some people.
They look like tourists. A plump blonde, with her husband. He's tall, skinny
with glasses. He wears shorts and loafers. NOT a New Yorker. And they've got a
kid with them! A little girl, about 8 years old. Her brown hair is cut about
chin length. Her turned up nose and turned down mouth corners make her look like
a perfect brat.


     They get on the escalator.
I get on the step behind them. Holding tightly to the handrail, I place myself
behind the little girl. I bend my knees slightly so my legs are right behind the
little brat. If this isn't attending, nothing is.


     Dad looks back at me.
Looking me up and down, hat to boots, he pulls the girl around in front of him.
If he punches me, I bet it'll cure me of bending to authority.


     "Please don't move her," I
say to him. "I'm attending her."


     The muscles in his arms
and face tighten. His wife tugs at his sleeve.


     "Please, Sam," she says.
"It's okay."


     By this time, we're at the
top of the escalator. The family turns quickly to enter to Grand Central Deli. I
walk out the door on my way to work.


     At work, there are lots of
little signs about refilling the ice cube trays after you use them. Not pouring
water down the cooler drain. Nothing that would make me act in any way different
from usual.


     After work, I take the
subway home and get out at the Houston Street exit. On Houston Street, there is
a shelter where busses start and end their uptown/downtown journeys. I pass it
every time I go to the post office to check my PO Box. Today, I notice a sign.
It's on the pole just on the east end of the shelter. BUS STOP, it says. NO
STANDING ANY TIME.


     No standing at a bus stop?
What are you supposed to do before the bus comes? Well, if I'm going to follow
orders, I can't quit now. I sit down. Right at the curb.


     A taxi passes too close.
In wetter weather it would have covered me with the remains of a muddy puddle.
Now it only scares me into backing up a bit. But I've still got a problem. I
need to cross the street to get to the post office. As long as I'm at the bus
stop, however, I can't stand.


     Leaning back, I push
myself up on my arms and legs and crabwalk. I propel myself back, away from the
street. Right arm. Right leg. Left arm, left leg. Moving slowly so as not to
bump into any one or any thing, I navigate around the L-shaped bus shelter
toward the cross walk. Bang! My shoulder hits something.


     "WHAT THE FUCK'S WRONG
WITH YOU?" comes a deep voice above me. From the courtesy of the comment, I
figure it's a New Yorker.


     I tilt my head back to
look at him. He's a skinny guy, about 23, with acne so thick you can grate
cheese on it.


     Balancing on two legs and
one arm, I use the other arm to point to the sign.


     "Can't you read?" I say.
"This is a bus stop. No standing."


     "ASSHOLE!" says the zitguy
with typical New York conversational wit and aplomb. But he doesn't do anything
else. So I still may not be cured.


     It doesn't take long
before I crabwalk around the shelter to the crosswalk. There, I stand up and
wait for the light to tell me to WALK.


     Coming home, I check my
personal mail box. I put the key in the mail box door and take out a bunch of
bills and a couple other envelopes. In the elevator up to my apartment, I see an
envelope that says WARNING ADULT CONTENT on the front. That isn't really a
command. Then, one from Citibank, says PLEASE DO NOT DISCARD on it. I pull that
one out. When I get into my apartment I stick it on a bookshelf next to my first
edition SHARDS OF GOD. It'll keep.


     Another envelope is from
The Franklin Mint. It offers me



a Medal, plated with 14 carat gold. On one side, a picture of liberty's arm,
torch lit. On the other the profile of the 43rd president of the United States,
George W. Bush.


     Along with an illustration
of the offending medal is an order form. Send a check or money order for
$39.95, today!


     I'm cured.          


 


ENDNOTES: [Visitors to my
website: www.mykelboard.com or
subscribers (email to:

god@mykelboard.com
) may receive a few extra endnotes. Plus you'll get live
"click on" links.]


 


--> Incentives Dept:
Maybe it's in the genes, but I can't resist a free offer. Every time I get a
magazine subscription coupon that says "first issue free, cancel if not
satisfied," I always subscribe and write CANCEL on my first bill.


     You can imagine how
excited I was when HEALTH AFTER 50 NEWSLETTER offered me a free issue and a
special bonus. Yours to keep no matter what you decide. Said the ad.


     The offer? A free
health calendar, specially prepared to help you keep track of your own health
needs.
So when I got the first issue of the newsletter I tore through the
too-skinny envelope, looking for the health calendar.


     What I found was an 8 x 10
piece of paper. On each side were 6 months. Each month was labeled. MARCH is
National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month
, for example.


Within each month, one week is
highlighted. The week is also named. In case you didn't know, the week of April
17, 2006 is Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week. July (Eye Injury
Prevention Month) and August (National Immunization Awareness Month) have no
special weeks. My specially prepared calendar says so.


 


-->National Sex Offenders
Persecution Month?
I continue the story I wrote last week about how sex
makes crimes forever unpaid.


     New Jersey is now
providing a map of registered sex offenders. At http://www.mapsexoffenders.com
you can check where they live. It's easy to pinpoint those houses for a
latenight raid, cross burning, or simple brick throwing. As long as you don't
say homo or nigger, no jury in America would ever convict you of
anything.


 


-->I Expect They're As
Accurate With My Credit Dept
: It used to be the mantra of conservatives that
private enterprise can do anything better than the government. Of course, when
the conservatives get hold of government, that's true. But if you want an
example of Private Enterprise try calling for your "free credit report" from the
credit collection agency at: 877-322-8228. A machine answers the phone.


     Speak, then spell your
last name...


     "Board, B-O-A-R-D"


    I understood BORGE, B...
O... R... G... E. Say YES if that's correct...


     "NO"


     I'm sorry, I didn't get
that. Please say YES if that is correct.


     "NO!!!"


     Ok, we'll try again,
please spell your name...


     "B-O-A-R-D"


    I understood CORBE, C...
O... R... B... E. Say YES if that's correct...


     "NO!"


     I'm sorry, I didn't get
that. Please say YES..


 


-->Quality of WHOSE Life
Dept:
NY's soon-to-be reelected mayor has somehow managed to bamboozle the
city's Democrats. His smile, non-confrontational style, and tons of money make
him a nice sop for the locals-- despite his huge contributions to George Bush's
coffers.


     Now, The Independent
newspaper reports that three police sergeants from the 75th precinct in
Brooklyn testified that their commanding officer presumably with orders from
higher up, "had circulated a note mandating that officers issue at least 33
quality of life
summonses per quarter in order to avoid poor performance
reviews."


     Quality of life, if you
don't know, is a code name for crimes without victims. "Crimes" like
pan-handling, drinking on the street, and cleaning people's car windows. And
people say Bloomberg's not a real Republican. Tsk tsk.


 


-->Nuclear Reaction Dept:
Sierra Magazine reports that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
is working on recycling contaminated materials. The agency is considering
selling the dirt to home owners as compost, the clay to brick makers, and other
material to landscapers. When critics argued that maybe this could be hazardous
to ordinary people, the agency answered:


     "We're not going to react
to emotions. People are afraid of radioactivity; they're afraid of anything
nuclear. It's just like a built-in emotion. And we're not going to react to
that."


 


-->Plastic Wrap Tax:
Denmark is my favorite country... and they've just added another reason. They've
started a "green tax" on product packaging. The more "environmentally
unfriendly" the packaging, the higher the taxes. Glass and cardboard-- low tax.
Polystyrene and aluminum-- high tax. Yeah!


 


-->Is It Safe To Do It?
Department
Samsung has a Korean only cellphone that does more than bore your
neighbor with intimate details of your bodily functions-- it measures them.
Marketed to women, this phone counts calories, keeps track of your period, tells
you when you're ovulating and when it's (relatively) safe to screw around.


 


-->Is It Safe To Do It? Pt.
2:
Named in
New York
Press as one of New York's most despicable people,
Attorney General Eliot
Spitzer continues to prove himself worthy of the title.


     Spitzer was notorious
during the Guiliani administration. It was his intervention that fought free
speech and closed the porno shops in Times Square. This made the area safe for
Disney and Starbucks.


     In his latest fight
against freedom, Spitzer has fined a local hip hop station a quarter of a
million dollars for promoting "Smackfests." These are smacking contests between
volunteers-- young women usually-- in search of prizes and fame.


     Not only is Spitzer an
opponent of personal freedom. The enforcer is also a hypocrite.


     "We are not, nor should we
be, the arbiters of good taste and bad taste in the media," says Spitzer.


     Oh yeah? About this case,
he says, "Hot 97 violated good judgment and it violated any sense of decorum and
taste."


     Just what are you
arbitrating there, Mr. Spitzer?


 


-->No Evidence Dept:
These days Christians are pushing for Intelligent Design to be taught in
science class along side evolution. This despite the fact there hasn't been one
article on I.D. published in a scientific journal, or one peer-reviewed
experiment. The essence of science is review, test, and counter-test. It makes
sense.


     On the other hand, humans
are pretty dumb. They react in stupid ways. As a matter of fact, a lot of human
design is pretty damn poor. Take pain. Please! Don't tell me it's a "warning
system." Why not have a doorbell ring? What about pain that can't be stopped?
What about cancer, and other horrible diseases? What about bird flu? If they
proposed a "stupid design," theory I might buy it and let 'em teach it in
science class. The fundies would be their own best proof of the theory.


 


-->Whoring for Dollars Dept:
If you hate this column, there's more where it came from. I've just published a
book of columns called I, A Me-ist. If you'd like to look at it, check
out the links from my website
www.mykelboard.com
. I'll be traveling around to support the book, so if
you've got any ideas of where I can read, or hold a book signing, or just set up
a table at a punk show, let me know at:

mykelboard@gmail.com


 


 

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Theater Club Note

For those who know TROY from ibec... or those who just want to see something weird. Come to the THEATER CLUB October 28. You'll need tickets before hand. Info is available at: http://home.netcom.com/~mykelb6/Shared/theaterclub.html

Sunday, October 02, 2005

My first Post

This is my first attempt at this official blog stuff. I'll be doing more once I get the hang of it. For now, I just wanted to comment on the nastiness of creeping stupidity. Scopes again!! The CREATIONISTS and other morons are out to do to science what Al Quaeida did to the world trade center. I don't know if this'll show up, so here's the link. http://home.netcom.com/~mykelb6/Blog/churchstatemap.jpg

This Too Will Pass! or Mykel's March 2024 Blog/Column

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