The
first encierro looked out of control. More like a riot than a staged
event. Like the scenes in old monster movies where crowds are running
through the streets, trying to escape a gigantic monster. Only
wilder.
The
encierros, or runs, during the the Fiesta de San Fermín in Pamplona,
Spain are scored by Time (Duración), Corenados (Gorings),
Tramatismos (Injuries) and Peligrosidad (Dangerousness). Oddly
enough, Time isn't as important at the rest. Dangerousness is what
makes a good, or great encierro.
This is
not sport as practiced in Western Civilization. This ritual is more
like religion. Like the pre-fiesta
protests where PETA beauty contest winners wear plastic horns, take
off their clothes, and smear themselves with fake blood. See
Richard Wright's Pagan Spain: It
is the conquering of fear, the making of religion of the conquering
of fear.
Why
not a Church of Tauromachy? Isn't America supposed to be all about
freedom of religion?
In
that first encierro, a woman, after making it to the corridor into
the arena, stopped running, and covered her ears. She had reached a
personal limit. I watch for people like her, who are facing their
fears. Sometimes it reduces you to a pile of quivering jelly, but
what you gain from it is the courage of self-knowledge. There is a heroism in it.
This
is a truer thing than America's “horror” culture, where fake
blood and gore are mass produced and celebrated. Sometimes you need
to reach out of your artificial consumer environment and touch the
gooey mess of reality. It will teach you about your place in the
universe, and the food chain.
It does
cause visions of alternate universes to dance in my head: What would
Hemingway think of what San Fermín has become? How and when did
bullfighting become illegal in Aztlán? What if the Spanish influence
was stronger and bullfighting was part of the cowboy/beef culture?
Where would the running of the bulls be held in America? Would
MacDonald's and Burger King be sponsoring bulls?
There's
a Burger King along the encierro route. And a space that is for rent
. . .
I really
need to find time to finish that science fiction bullfighting novel.
How I
enjoyed the high-Dangerousness – it got an 80! – encierro on
Saturday! At one point, a bull named Finito had three men pinned to a
wall. Finito charged into the arena with blood on his horn. Later, he
threw Iván Fandiño, who had been gored in 2013. With blood on his
face and no jacket, Fandiño killed Finito.
On the
last day's encierro, the bulls from Miura made history for being the
fastest in history. It set a new record at two minutes and five
seconds. It also rated a 60 for Dangerousness. The real action was
at Dead Man's Curve.
The
bulls were muy bravo, and pretty badass, this year. A speed record, 10 gorings (8 were
Americans, we're number one!), and 27 injuries. One bull even refused
to run.
But it's
all over now. Back to the alternate universes that are America and
Arizona. Comic-Con? Really? And there's all this political turmoil,
racist rhetoric, violence, and fighting over flags. So civilized.
I was
reading a crazy book, when the craziness started spilling over into
the real world:
Donald Trump annouced that he's running for president, and mentioned
Mexicans: “They're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.”
A young
man named Dylann Roof told a group of black people in the Emanuel
African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, most
of whom were women, “You're
raping our women and taking over the country,” and killed them.
On
Facebook, Ishmael Reed said the The Turner Diaries were
“Required reading. If you want to know what motivated this church
killer read this book.”
The
crazy book? The Turner Diaries,
the infamous novel written by Nazi William Luther Pierce, under the
pseudonym Andrew MacDonald. It inspired Timothey McVeigh to blow up
the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.
I
had wanted to read it ever since I read Ishmael Reed's essay about
it, in his book Another Day at the Front, and The
Turner Diaries can be downloaded for free on
Internet Archive.
I'm
happy to report that it doesn't work as a manual for guerrilla
warfare. Developments in communications, surveillence, and military
technology have made the practical advice in the book obsolete. Whew.
The
Turner Diaries is not a literary
masterpiece. It's not even good fiction. Pierce tells more than
he shows, avoiding drama for monologue. There isn't much dialogue.
The one attempt to show “the negro dialect” is pathetic. And all
the characters are one-dimensional.
The
narrator/hero Earl Turner has no past, no family, no motivation. The
mere existence of Jews, Blacks, and other non-Whites is presented as
enough for his rage. As for plot, entire chapters could be cut
without taking away from the “story.” This is partially due to
the details that are gone into about making an ammonium-nitirate bomb (the book begins with all guns being confiscated by Black agents
of the government after they are banned by the Cohen Act) and
counterfeiting that is done to destroy the American economy (because
apparently the efforts of the Jews and non-Whites to do so isn't
working fast enough). There's also a Mansonesque/hippie counterculture
that sells White girls to Jewish-run white slave rackets.
Dispite
the racist agenda – Blacks are shown as criminals/rapists/cannibals,
and are killed like vermin – “racism” is often put in quotes, a "lie" that the liberal media is spreading. And though at first the word
“patriot” is used, later the U.S. Constitution is sneered at, and
conservatives are mocked as weak. Hitler is mourned and defended.
As if
all this wasn't enough to boggle the mind, when the Great Revoltuion
finally starts, after the Organization gives up on winning over the
public and decides that terrorism is the way to go, Jews and
race-traitors hanging from every lampost in L.A. are just the
beginning. It's a sadistic orgy of bloody vengence. Over and over,
we are told that it's all “their” fault. After all, they aren't
human, er, White . . .
Refusing
to recognise the humanity in others is the core of The Turner
Diaries. It's the most
single-minded book I've ever read. There are no real characters. No
one is human. Mass slaughter is reasonable, if it helps make Earth
into the Planet of the White People.
So,
what's the appeal? It's feel-good reading for racists.
And
it is ridiculous. Like the White teenagers who happily
take the place of Mexican migrant workers. (Would Dylann Roof take
the job?) Like the very idea of an all-white planet.
Yet, we
hear such ideas being taken seriously.
This
book should not be banned, but brought out into the light. Let
everyone see how absurd it is.
Chester Himes said, “Realism and absurdity are so similar in the lives of
American blacks one cannot tell the difference.”
But if
we don't try, we all become absurd, and the Dylann Roofs of the world
win.
Riots in
the streets. Conflicts spreading like viruses. And a presidential
election looming. Looks like it's time to go searching for America
again.
It's not
that we lose America. It's more like we lose track of it. It's
especially easy in this days of social media, when you can fine tune
your input according to your tastes – then, oh, the shocks when
your step out of your comfort zone onto . . . the road.
That's
where you find the real America, on the road. Huckleberry Finn knew
it. So did Jack Kerouac. And Hunter Thompson.
And so
does John Waters.
His
latest book, Carsick, is
another fine example of the Great American Road Book. He tells of
hitchhiking across America, and more.
Carsick
is another work of American literature that straddles the borders
between fiction and nonfiction. After an introduction, he presents
two outrageous novellas: one presenting the best case scenario, the
other the worst. Waters' own twisted utopian and dystopian visions.
Magnificently outrageous. The kind of stuff that makes you fall in
love with America as the fantastic place where anything is possible,
the way it should be, if only so many Americans weren't afraid of
everything.
This gets into speculative fiction territory, crashing through
alternative universes and all. Maybe John deserves a Hugo award for
this.
Then,
he goes on to document his real trip. Celebrity hitchhiking in the
time of interwebs. Real people that are strange in ways his
imagination didn't expect. The amazing, mind-blowing thing is – and
I'm fighting the urge to commit spoilers here – it leaves you
feeling good, and hopeful about this country.
It's
the sort of book we need right now. And it makes me once again think
of John Waters as a Great American.
is a recombocultural Chicano mutant, known for committing outrageous acts of science fiction, cartooning, and other questionable pursuits. He can’t help but be controversial. Everything he does offends or causes psychic harm. Rumor has it he’s doing it on purpose. Some people think he’s funny. Read on at your own risk . . . His novels are CORTEZ ON JUPITER, HIGH AZTECH, and SMOKING MIRROR BLUES. his short fiction has appeared in AMAZING STORIES, ANALOG, SCIENCE FICTION AGE, SEMIOTEXT(E)SF, SUPER STORIES OF HEROES & VILLAINS, WE SEE A DIFFERENT FRONTIER, and MOTHERSHIP: TALES FROM AFROFUTURISM AND BEYOND.
WITH MY STORY: "THOSE RUMORS OF CANNIBALISM AND HUMAN SACRIFICE HAVE BEEN GREATELY EXAGGERATED"
"THE BOOK AMERICAN GODS WISHES IT WAS." - DESPINA DURAND
THE DERANGED ADVENTURES OF FLASH GOMEZ IN THE 20TH CENTURY
Click on the above for the Introduction, follow the links to synapse-scorching climax!
Tezcatlipoca vs. Hollywood!
Guerrilla art from the Barrio to the stars!
“If Hunter S Thompson and Alfred Bester had a Chicano child, it would be this.” -- Dave Hutchinson
“Sometimes I read it front to back sometimes back to front. Sometimes I just drop down in the middle of it it and read anywhere. It's a great book.” – Misha Nogha
“. . . each of you with a wild mind and a cerveza or two under your belt should immediately buy it and see what truly imaginative, ALIVE, literature can be . . .” -- Arlan Andrews
John Ottinger III: "an excellent collection." Steven H. Silver: "explore what it means to be alien in different ways." The Guardian called it, "an excellent snapshot of modern SF." Library Journal says it's, "a choice volume for sf fans and a good introdcution to extraterrestrial encounter stories." Bookish Ardour: "some of the best stories of the last 30 years, by today's most exciting genre writers." Paperback or Kindle. Includes GUERRILLA MURAL OF A SIREN'S SONG!
THE GREAT MARS-A-GO-GO MEXICAN STANDOFF -- in which a private eye in Godzilla costume in fights for his life in stateroom full of gangsters on a casino/luxury liner headed for Mars. Order yours now!
Buy: 2020 VISIONS
Victor Theremin takes on the Border, radioactive marijuana, and the Singularity in RADIATION IS GROOVY, KILL THE PIGS
Buy: VOICES FOR THE CURE
Features HUMAN SACRIFICE FOR FUN AND PROFIT, the first Victor Theremin story!