8.29.2025 – suddenly precious

suddenly precious
in the age of violence –
tough gent on our side

Adapted from the passage in the book, Six Men by Alistair Cooke (New York, Penguin, 1985), where Mr. Cooke writes about Humphrey Bogart:

There was nothing now to offend the most respectable suburban patriot in a hero who used the gangster’s means to achieve our ends.

And this character was suddenly very precious in the age of violence, for it satisfied a quiet, desperate need of the engulfed ordinary citizen.

When Hitler was acting out scripts more brutal and obscene than anything dreamed of by Chicago’s North Side or the Warner Brothers, Bogart was the only possible antagonist likely to outwit him and survive.

What was needed was no knight of the boudoir, no Ronald Colman or Leslie Howard (whose movie careers compensatingly slumped) but a conniver as subtle as Goebbels. Bogart was the very tough gent required, a murderously bland neutral who we knew, if the Germans didn’t, would in the end be on our side.

I am waiting.

Waiting for that person.

Waiting for that person, that kid, that someone, anyone, to say “But he has no clothes!”

Someone on our side.

What was needed was no knight of the boudoir, no Ronald Colman or Leslie Howard (whose movie careers compensatingly slumped) but a conniver as subtle as Goebbels.

The very tough gent required, a murderously bland neutral who we knew, if the Germans didn’t, would in the end be on our side.

This character is suddenly very precious in our age of violence.

Very precious and very rare.

Where is that person today?

Let me ask you a question.

In the movie, Casablanca, which side do you line up with?

In the movie, Casablanca, who do you identify with?

Now ask yourself this.

If the current president was in that movie, who would he be?

I can’t see the current president playing chess, stopping the arrogant German from entering his casino, helping out the couple from Bulgaria or allowing the band to play the La Marseillaise.

But I sure can see him marching across the room, leading his entourage of cabinet secretaries to the piano and singing German marching songs.

I feel he would love and embrace the role of Major Strasser.

So again I ask, who can watch Casablanca and want to choose that side.

The OTHER side.

Who?

Who wants to stand and be counted with that side?

I don’t know.

Not me.

Me?

I am waiting.

Waiting for the very tough gent,, a murderously bland neutral who we know, in the end, will be on our side.

And this time, I know, our side will win.

Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?
Our nation turns it lonely eyes to you.

8.15.2025 – honour anew those

honour anew those
whose service and sacrifice saw
liberty prevail

“On this day of profound remembrance, I speak to you in that same spirit of commemoration and celebration as we honour anew all those whose service and sacrifice saw the forces of liberty prevail.”

King Charles III on 80th Anniversary of the end of World War 2.

The back of this photo has the legend, “Capt Olson Capt Hoffman Capt Dareakauf”

That Captain in the center is my dad, age 25, somewhere near Regensburg, Germany in the fall of 1945.

Three guys waiting to be sent home.

I like this picture.

I like this picture a lot.

I like to think of the forces of liberty that prevailed.

America in a better light.

America in a better way.

America in the way it used to be and hopefully will be again.

Also something about these guys reminds of the exchange in the movie The Great Escape between the Commandant and the American pilot Hilts (played by Steve McQueen).

The Commandant says, “I have had the pleasure of knowing quite a number of British officers in this war. And I flatter myself that we understand one another. You are the first American officer I have met. Are all American officers so ill-mannered?”

Steve McQueen responds, “Yeah, about 99 percent.

8.14.2025 – great imponderable

great imponderable
whether have been happier
without his success

The great imponderable, given how much misery it caused him, is whether Fogerty might have been happier without his success. If he had written and recorded all those songs, but no one had ever bought them and there had been no money to fight over, would he have happily gone back to El Cerrito?

“I like to hope that being a history teacher – if I found my partner and had this wonderful life I have found – would have made me very happy. But my second answer … I don’t know if you can see the picture on the wall behind me.” He gestures to that print of him in full flight as a young man.

“Someone asked me about that, about a month ago: ‘Tell me about that guy up on the wall back there.’ Maybe a couple days before that particular question had been asked, I actually had this conversation in my mind: John, would you trade places and be that 24-year-old who was so confused and unhappy and scratching his head trying to figure out life? Would you trade places? Or would you be the person you are now at 80? And my answer was, and it’ll always be, I want to be the guy I am here now, even though I’m 80. That poor young man had youth, for sure, but he was so confused about what was going on with his gift. I wouldn’t want to live even one day like that. I prefer being really happy, very settled, completely in love with my wife, Julie, having raised great kids. It’s a sense of being that’s irreplaceable.”

From the article, ‘I tried to be nice. Sometimes I would explode’: John Fogerty on Creedence, contracts and control.

Mr. Fogerty says:

I want to be the guy I am here now, even though I’m 80.

That poor young man had youth, for sure, but he was so confused about what was going on with his gift.

I wouldn’t want to live even one day like that.

I prefer being really happy, very settled, completely in love with my wife, Julie, having raised great kids.

It’s a sense of being that’s irreplaceable.”

Having just turned 65 I know what he means.

I want to be the guy I am here now.

That poor young man had you for sure but so confused.

I wouldn’t want to live one day like that.

I prefer being happy.

It’s a sense of being that’s irreplaceable.

8.13.2025 – up down and down down

up down and down down
sure, what goes up must come down
why downside farther fall

Rungs.

Ropes.

Ladders.

All reach up.

One slip.

One change.

One moment.

All fall down.

Fall much further than you were ever up.

Why do far?

Can’t keep making the climb.

Not lack of energy.

Not lack of desire.

Enthusiasm for this effort lacking.

8.12.2025 – tomorrow, and tomorrow,

tomorrow, and tomorrow,
and tomorrow, sound and fury
signifies nothing

Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time;
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury
Signifying nothing.

William Shakespeare, Macbeth, Act V, Scene V,

Brother oh brother but a consummation devoutly to be wished.