Editor's note: This One was written in Denver,  just prior to the Democratic National Convention
Not Another Parking Lot for Words
Made sure the windows
were all wide open
for this brittle haus warning,
God forbid the warming, should we
ever break dead with reclaiming
witches reclaiming their food
for thought and kindness I offered,
them never tasting the bread ...
They insisted they could save me
and then, the saving being done,
called me the devil, the devil,
the devil, three times,
before they were One ...
And compassion is a virtue
sold out in short supply,
gathered in plenty
And there you were, with my backlit
ghost behind the suffused
dark arts behind the computer
screen’s white apple byte light,
the difference between innocence
and knowledge being sub-atomic,
it’s positively Platonic,
allegorical, hysterical ...
when you ask for a cigarette
since it’s my personal policy
to only give out one Spirit
per hour to the hopeless ...
(I mean homeless) ... and if they
claim to have hope I give them three:
That’s how homeless hopelessness can be.
So it’s back to my parking lot for words,
worlds within worlds,
but way far from the gypsy cafes
as Napoleon, fresh face-i-fied,
sleepwalks into Starbucks to be reborn
in its iconic cup of Gaian
corporate glee, which may be good news,
just maybe ... since I saw
a Thunderbird in my dreams,
then his shirt logo of the same
damn military echelon of wings,
eagle spread winking,
he, a soldier sure, retired, moneyed,
yes, a super serene Baby Bomber ...
A crier of you know what? ...
Can’t you hear their birdseye cries,
they are, bling-winged batbirds who cry,
repacking themselves, after landing,
in their imperial cruiser esuvees:
I saw a documentary
on their disappearing, once,
on mah MTVeeee! I guess I need
them more than they need me.
Then one more comes in,
a walking zombie cell phone call
after parking a black hawk
Land Rover, gee ...
she has camo flag pants in tune
to those photos on the big electronic
BBS .. SBB...Bss...BS...Bs...BS...
of Iranian missile launches
all doctored up to be seen
by this property, this land
for you and me ...
(Hey man what’s the plan
what was that you sai-i-i-d
sun tan, sun man, drinking head,
lying there in bed?
You who tried to socialize
but couldn’t seem to find
what just what, Jethro,
you were looking fer,
that sumpin’
on your mind)
But a big heron circles
over Starbucks, wide white
sailing, neither failing
nor flailing
with black-tipped wings
... and just as strangely
I almost missed, the ponytailed
programmer in a Prius
as a potential friend
to send this give up, this smoke,
this one-per-hour cigarette of hope
to a guy wearing a turqoise bracelet: Hey! Hey!
Hey ...
I just got a medal in my dream:
A Thunderbird re-e-e-e-ward,
and another laugh, a smile,
from a strong blueish blonde blondee
bird driving a white trash Ford
~ Denver, Colorado
Newter This! Part One: 
The Schoolmaster's Muster
 ... uh ... Master Plan! 
Bath   Party Solution No. 1?  How about a "Fix the World's Problems"  emergency  noise installed in  every classroom? It would work this way,  because  Newt, as a fucking bazillionaire historian, and world's most  overpaid  high school teacher, is too busy to possibly criticize members  of his  own  congressional do-nothing  fuck  voting blockhead brigade to  possibly write it down ... anyway ...  I now  reveal it to you ... sparing  everyone the, you know ... secret   handshakes and all ... Have our kids,  between classes, listen for the   "Fix the World Problems Emergency  Noise," and when it goes off, all of   the little school children in the  world, going well into the future,   would have to, you know, instead of  going to class or skip out of  class  to smoke crack to kill the pain or, eat at McDonald's  across the   street, because, you know ... we can't afford real school  cafeterias   anymore, because we cut back on education ... have all of the  kids fix   the world's problems for five minutes ... and then, go back to  class    after the "Fix the World's Problems Emergency Noise" ceases  ...  Because  members of my GOP and Democratic administrations, as  well as  this new  Tea Party junta ... can't take time to do it. 
We are  all too busy creating the world's problems!
Greetings 
from 
Nevermoreland!
I  know where horror movies, stories, the very gothic genre come from.
    It  came to me at 3 a.m., and it made me think of Edgar Allan Poe, as    well  as blinded John Milton, pounding his walking stick on the  wooden   floor, shaking silly due to the deprivation of his   rapid-eye-movement   sleep, muttering, “I’m waiting for the muse to   visit.” 
Then,     say Poe, opens a drawer. There’s this scratchy, pulling sound of     wood-against-wood, and he grimaces, trying avoid waking this, hmmm … not     sure how successful he actually was of actually obtaining such  things  …   a raven-haired beauty sleeping on the floor. Then he pulls  out a    manuscript, half-finished, of poems and stories, and paper  falls out. A    rustling sound, loud as a Texas cattle truck going by at  this hour,    falls and plops a swish on the dusty floor. She rustles a  bit. But,    Poe’s heart racing now, nervous, because it’s not his  home, it’s hers,    such as it is, because she, a lady of the evening,  earns more money  than   a poet. He doesn’t want to get thrown out. So,  like a burglar, he    relents. Sighs. Takes a deep breath. He decides to  go out the door,  into   the night air a bit, to smoke some whatever  passed for crack back   then,  to jar the brain and buy him just a  little more time before the   dawn  comes. Maybe he can save his own  life by coming up with a   perfectly  terrifying line to reflect his  Jaggered sensibilities about   God, the  Devil and raven-haired women  and their ever-bleating hearts.   He opens  the door, like a spy. It  goes cree-ee-ee-ee-eek. Loud as Lord   Baltimore,  him once a big chief,  who never said, far as I know, “May   they be sorry  they did not kill  me yesterday” to the rising sun, if   such a person  existed. If Lord  Baltimore ever made a noise, I hope it   sounded like a  Liberty Bell  from hell! Anyway, Poe’s heart jumps:   “Shit, shit, shit …  busted.” He  turns, and sure enough, there she is,   the Raven. “That’s it,  that’s  it! Get out! Get out!” she screams,   totally awake now, furious.  And  then she shouts, as his quill is thrown   at him, the ink flying out  of  the bottle, splattering him,  “Nevermore!  Nevermore!”
        That’s where  horror comes from. Not from ghosts? Fuck. They are in  our   heads as we  creep around, trying to keep our writer-asses safe,  trying   to stay  beneath a roof and in a warm room, and perhaps, trying  to  remain  maybe  just maybe, loved by and in the good graces of the  Raven.
        But now, ah,  now … Mr.  Poesy is finally ready. He clears out fast.    Finds another  lady of the mourning, another place to lay, from the  coins   he made  from having his happy crapped on all too many ways  before. He   writes  his new poem, about a Raven crying “Nevermore,“ his  heart    cracked-silly broken open, and the process begins all over again  in  dark   and sad, impoverished Satanic-milled mid-19th century,   red-bricked,   Baltimore, or, in old blind lonely ol’ London, in   Milton‘s case. Yes,   the muse had come to visit. Personal demons, be   loved.
     Glad we cleared that up. Boo!
Occupy Photo Radar Land 
Special     historical note about this Sen. Barry Goldwater statue in Paradise     Valley,  Arizona,  where they pioneered photo radar for traffic  calming.    However, it used to be that if people at the traffic court  pay window   testified they weren't driving when  they went to town hall  to pay the   fine, they could get away with it, and  not have to pay.  But a protest   of speeders going over the limit in  those "V for  Vendetta," Guy  Fawkes  evil clown faced smiley expressions:  Priceless.  I have no idea  how  they'd sort that out at the ticket window.
Yesterday, it seemed like money is some kind of gravitational virus working in a disorderly fashion
     for living things. Today, it seems like order imposed creates chaos,     money is necessary, feeling better all of the time, and gravity is  no    longer the only law of the universe right now, that there is such a     thing as dark matter, and the red shift is on, with the universe     expanding at an ever-quickening rate all of the time. For me, this says     two things. The first is, were all as more porous, spread too thin,  in    fact, and there is a danger of being completely pulled apart, at  some    point ... and the sun must be getting pretty bitchy about the   extremes,   as well. The second is, what can I do about it? Nothing,   that is what.   Drawing a complete zero, a less-than, even, on the whole   thing ... and   third, humor is everything, and the fourth thing is I   forget what,  ooops.
Occupy Congress First, Stupid!
And Now for a Few Notes on Occupying One Percent
of Time Magazine, Where It's Currently Hip to Be a Contrarian Economeiser
of Time Magazine, Where It's Currently Hip to Be a Contrarian Economeiser
     There      have been many times rock’n’roll has saved my life … but … this has      been inhibited by certain destructive activities, including:  Whenever  I    have read any issue of Time Magazine during the  past year.  For    example, there is the examination of the strange  false rhetoric  of    columnist Joe Klein. For example, during the fall  peak of the  Occupy    Wall Street movement, he apparently was  inconvenienced by its  truth, as    well as its rhetoric and lack of  singular clarity. Now, my  problem is,    while listening to the  Jayhawks’ album, “Smile,” I now  choose to   respond  to something Klein  has written. This event, two  days after I   watched  the DVD, “All the  King’s Men,” which was based  on a great book   loosely  based on the  Louisiana man-of-the-people  politician, Huey  Long,  who,  before he  was assassinated, spoke up for  the “hicks” all of  his  life,  corrupt  as he was, doing great things  for “the people,” in  other  words,  the  99 percenters, against the big  powers of his day,  including  Standard   Oil, as well as their political  lackeys.
         Well, I’d  have to say, “Mr. Klein, Mr. Chairman in Pandemonium, is  no    Robert  Penn Warren. I saw Robert Penn Warren speak once, and Mr.   Klein,   Mr.  distinguished Chairman in Pandemonium of, ya‘ know, Hell,   couldn’t    carry his sharp as a spear pen, keeping it warm for him as   Mr. Warren,    or a million other fine writers, personally went to the   limestone   walls  themselves to pee against their own personal places  of  power!”
        Mr.  Klein  appears to be a mere contrarian at court. A front-runner.   The   type of  guy who, having already failed to notice the zeitgeist  for    Time,  decides instead to write something apparently supporting  the     one-percent, pissing off, thus, the 99 percent, in order to get  more     hate mail and therefore, keep his job.
          Anyway, world-weary as I’m feeling right now, I can’t “Smile” about     Mr.  Klein’s wisdom (a generous use of that word right now), or, his     “wit.”  He’s really not very funny. Tries to be. For example, in his     Oct. 31,  2011 one-page piece, which takes up a little over one  percent    of the  94-page issue of Time, the headline, which I  doubt he    came up  with, is “An Implausible Populist: Obama hopes to  join forces    with the  protesters, but his record tells another  story,” … which,    finds fault in  some book about Obama’s economic  policy because it    failed to “check the  proper spelling of legendary  banker Walter    Wristen’s name.”
       I    mean, only a fuck face from hell, a one-percenter insider  himself,     would ever think any banker, other than maybe the Monopoly  Money Guy or,     and this is still a stretch, someone named Rothschild,  or Morgan,     another good example, is well-known by enough of the 99  percent of us  to    ever be known as a, quoth, “legend.”
          When I’m wearing my rock critic hat, I cringe whenever I see the    word,   “legendary.” Because it’s about as useful of a word, once you    analyze   the term as “behave,” as in what are parent’s actually saying    when they   tell a child to “behave,” Peeing against a big white    limestone wall of   power is a kind of behavior. Publicity people    promoting their hot new   bands use the word, “legendary.” 
~
          This just in: It is November 5, 2011, Guy Fawkes Day, and there is     snow  on the plateau. First snow of the coming winter and it’s a tad     early,  I’d say. Just as the “freak storm” that hit the North  American    Northeast  about eleven days ago, maybe twelve, was  described as being a    tad  early. Personally, I find the term,  “freak,” a bit insulting to    both  extreme storms and “freaks.”  Someone (not me) should write a    strongly  worded letter. Someone in a  position of far more significance    and  readership and therefore  power, such as Joe Klein, who should be    writing  about climate change  instead of inside-baseball shit, for his     one-percent use of the  page he is given each week for Time Magazine.     But Joe Klein  is only in-touch with the Washington D.C. insider.  Yes,    everyone on  the Earth thinks they are an economist. It’s hip to  be so    cardinal  square. But there seems to be more important matter at  hand,    right  now, than dollars and cents. The time and money people,     nonetheless,  are trying to keep, even on a sweet sad Saturday, their     grip on  “winning the future,” as Obama put it in a recent address  about    the  economy and jobs and gross national product and all,  earlier this     fall.
      “Future”? What     future? Without addressing climate change immediately,  Mr.   Pandemonium   Chairman, what kind of future do you have in mind?  Both   sides are right,   hence, your confusion, about the economy, which  is   clearly beyond the   mortal consideration of any one mind.
Get over it. Get over it … so we can move on …
~     
          Anyhow, on the face of it, the use of the word “legendary” is      short-hand for “I have absolutely no new information or light to share      about this person I am now mentioning, if only because I am writing  on     deadline from an ivory tower right now and, well, I have a lunch      appointment I have to get to downtown. And with all of these      bad-smelling protesters outside, I am going to be late … and anyway, I      have never misspelled a name before in my life and all … and anyway,   if  I   did during my tenure at Time Is Money Magazine, there are about a zillion copy editors and proofers and control ‘freak’ editors to pluck it out …”
          Have I ever heard of any “legends” about “legendary banker” Walter      Wristen? No, I have not. Never even heard of him. Not surprising,   that.    Am I an economist of any sort? Nope. Nope. Nope. Saying   anything,  quite   honestly, prior to this year, about bankers, is a   pretty new  terrain.   But I have seen Mr. Klein on various talking head   broadcasts,  ivory   towering, and, well, I have never given him much   thought. As a  head   talker, that is. Hardly, you know: Legendary. Not   even colorful. A    pretty drab man. Just another, as Ryan Adams might   sing … another    “political scientist” who lives, as that fine song   goes, “on the edge of    town.”
       More    interesting, and more “legendary” is the Geico.com insurance   Gecko    featured on another page, also taking up a little more than one   percent    of the Oct. 31, 2011 of Time, on the page opposite  of  Klein’s    column. “Geckonomics,” the advert states. “A case study,”   the ad quips,    “… in Saving People Money on More than Just Car   Insurance.”
      And time, one hopes … dreams, in fact. Gotta make good time, right?
           And as the Jayhawks are getting the loud on, I realize: Hey, the    Gecko   is funnier than Joe Klein! If I’d just looked at the    advertisement and   spent less time and money on Time, reading Joe    Klein’s work today, it   would have saved me a tremendous amount of time    in my life that I will   never get back.
          Because (boy, this is really starting to feel like “werk” now)  Klein     also has had something rhetorically useless to say about some  arcane     appointment, about some Washington D.C. insider sort named to   something    called the National Economic Council. Look, angels, I’m  no  Klein or    Robert Penn Warren or even a funny Brit Gecko, but I do  know  a few    things about journalism and how, on the national level,  it has  failed us    all. Or, at least 99 percent of us. Klein has been  kissing  up to  power   with his pretty pen. It’s what pays for his,  well, high  position  in  life  as false scribe of phony, not-very-funny  rhetoric.  For  example,  about  this Obama appointment for this thing  called the   National  Economic  Council, it dismisses the “atmospheric  intelligence”   of this  guy,  Lawrence Summers (Klein’s legendary,  Okay, Okay,   Orwellian  phrasing  here). Then, Klein writes, the  appointment has the   “emotional   intelligence of a gnat.”
          For me, this is an insult to all gnats. The National Council All    About   Gnats should be disgusted with being compared to a man who,     apparently,  this Summers’ guy is, “prohibited the government from     regulating  financial derivatives.”
          Yeah, that sounds pretty stupid, I guess. Whatever derivatives are.    We   are all supposed to know because, clearly they are all part of   that    zombie-technology machine that has actually now, count them all,    emptied   people from their houses, their jobs, their homes, torn up    families,   caused suicides, long lines at the food banks, shootings  at   Wal Marts,   assassinations at strip malls, started some wars,  choked   off others …   but sure has fed a lot of bitchy talking heads  to yell at   each other on   the different network shows currently still  not   discussing more   important things all day, all night, such as,  the   current weirdness of   the “atmosphere.”
        My   question is this … Who the fuck is speaking up for the gnat  right   now?   Joe Klein? Nope. Nope. Nope. Nope. These days gnats are  like   girls gone   wild. He’s not even speaking out against the magical    television   salamander Geico man who is a spokes lizard for car    insurance we are all   forced to buy; in many cases even if we don’t    even own or drive a car!
     Try to get flood insurance!
     That, as Fleetwood Mac might sing, “Is not that funny, is it?”
~ 
Previously Unreleased Material That Has Not Been Written, Much Less Published:
The Pedestrian Peace Piece, aka, Public Transportation in Small Town USA, Aye!
~ 
Climate      change and the subsequent social disorders it creates, is the No. 1      story, and No. 1 security threat in America this week, the next,  the     next, and then, the next ... and it doesn't look like those  facts are     going to change soon, politicos ...
~
Time to bring the boys and girls back home? ... Well, according to the Huffington Post      ... "Military Spending Waste: Up To $60B In Iraq, Afghanistan War     Funds  Lost To Poor Planning" ... seems to me the storm-wrecked nation     could  use a little nation rebuilding back home ...
~
Currently      working on: "An Apology for Walking: A Pedestrian's Galaxy Guide to      Provincial Tactics in Avoiding to Get Hit By Weaponized Bus Drivers   and    Other Weapons of Mass Public Transportation." ... But before I   post  it   up for free I'm going to put it up for auction on eBay to  see  if I  get   any fee-based interest there ..
~
Sure,      it's looking like snow here in Arizona, but yeah, I'll wear my blue      Columbia rain gear out to breakfast this a.m., as a symbol of  mutual     support for my brother and sister journos out there on the  East  Coast,    fluttering in the breeze and waving their arms in the  wind to  entertain    us. Sure, I'll do that.
~
Now featuring "reality lit" and poetry by author, poet and Bards of Mythville singer/songwriter Douglas McDaniel ... http://mythville.blogspot.com/
Beloved
Revolutionary
Sweethearts, 
Unite!
Down the Road 
from Crawfordsville
Somewhere at the end of the road
Down where the railroad used to go
In her trailer she slept with a frown
Trying to stare her demons down
The statue of libertines came around
The wolf had already walked the town
I wrote poetry without much sound
Except for a laugh 
from all of the dumbing down
Down the road from Crawfordsville
the broken motor man turned to stone
like Apache copters a'rotoring on
and wagons circling from raging clowns
they argued the point 
till the town burned down
Though they paid the rent
for ten dollars a week
the world was shred
by wolves among sheep
as smokes he borrowed
he burned to keep from weeping
and anhydrous ammonia
came up from the deep
and she worshiped her stars
when lacking sleep
while pine needles fell
in symmetries at her feet
before the dogs all howled
in the morning light
down the road from Crawfordsville
They all got a book out
about self-proclaiming,
about water-board wording
and daylight savings,
burning bushes, barns,
the hay needle's laughter
about the unicorn dying
while the Republican Party's
secret headquarters
has gone to rust
down the road
in Crawfordsville
Yeah, down the road
from that tiny Ta'Iowa town
a pig farmer named Lester
is happier than hell
He's driving by
with a sleeping hawkeye
his parallax view
can tell no more lies
and the good book sold now
to the controverted
stands in the way
of truth's memory
of the local sounds
in Crawfordsville
Cardinal square in sharp-cut corners
the coroner croons with each hard winter
turning summer waters cancer cluster bitter
Down the road from Crawfordsville
"climate is dead" for the motorhead,
fertilizer falls from the fire-up sky,
we need not ask for the season of why
Down the road from Crawfordsville
the maharishi's prayer is for a limo
in need of more corn-fed gasoline
and up the road: the Wal Mart roadkill
is churned up dust from that shuttered
restaurant full of crap for the ghostly haunt
Down the road from Crawfordsville
that old shack is burning still
with bushels full of Monsanto seed corn
breaking your teeth on porky porn
as the Synergy trucker waves goodbye
but even with buckets full of energy
we want heroes, well here are three
with eleven cups of free coffee, cigs,
some sanity for satiety, a kind kinda
Fire Safety Week society
for squeaking toys and dogs
to run free
Down the road from Crawfordsville
there's good folks out there, out there still,
while the eye in the sky is scorching 'em dry
they don't even ask the reason why
since loose lips sink ships, Holy Reagan cow!
The washing machine's roll is terror, Wow!
But the tenderloin's pound is a tender drum
of country folk who ain't ho hum
Can you hear them tommy tum tums
of the super farmer's food taught, like magic,
by a hand-held Fibonacci sequence tool
Down the road from Crawfordsville
the Big Box trucker armies
broke 'em up bad,
so forget those things
you learned in school
about how Frodo kept the ring
and the Golden Rule, 
about how mega Hertz
made German tanks, 
cause techno Teotihucuan
gives good thanks 
at the dinner table, to the cops,
to your loan at your banks
Just let it roll by, let it fire its blanks,
'cause down the road from Crawfordsville
you can still greet the sun in sacrificial light
and the morning moon will come a day too soon,
so swim with the shore you supper fools ...
Down the road from Crawfordsville
worms from the air get carved up, cool,
the super farmer's just awe right
'cause disinformation is far outta sight
and William Shatner just plain lied
to those poor folks in Riverside
and east to west the buffalo returns
to beat the dust from the Bible belt's urn
Down the road from Crawfordsville
a bard's lament is the ever-giving quest,
despite the wormwood, yer guns, yer tongue,
you'll give great thanks when mourning is done,
when her sacrificial second sight is Mary singing
about storms to come, about enough blood to drown
the terrorists of shock, awe, the dumbing down,
just can't avoid the daily bank scam man
who hits the train station burned to the ground
and the bump in the road will kill you if found
Meanwhile the ranch gets saved up the road
from Crawfordsville, where sileage choppers
look like haircut machines by day, E.T. by night,
like giant Sandworms harvesting spice,
and the golf course tanned Dan
is a thousand miles away, tinkering
with puppets to sway, like bobcats
shot and killed and made into hats,
the collection plate is eternal
as the frightly nightly news
the heroes go on despite these views
when asked how she feels she sighs and says,
"Peaceful," she says, "and peaceful is nice."
~ Ames, Iowa
Note: The first private meeting of what would become the Republican Party came when Whig Party     defectors met privately in Crawfordsville in February, 1854. The     meeting was to lay the groundwork for the creation of a new political     party. The first public meeting was held in Ripon, Wisconsin one month later.
                      To be higher,
M'Shi Ha M'Shi
Shi Melek Shamayiim
Each day is a birth, an adventure, followed by the personal apocalypse, leading to revelation ... then we sleep, in dream, a kind of pyrotechnical death ... then we are reborn ... hopefully learning from yesterday ... doing it all over again ... each day ... Each Day
~
                      To be higher,
than my own mind,
up the stairs, in a tree,
singing sweet electricity
~
M'Shi Ha M'Shi Shi Melek Shamayiim
~
Currently a mayor of maybe 100 monkees, which was the plan all along ...
~
Have you noticed that most of those things we call terror or security or surveillance are essentially zombified zero-tech fear-brained zoo animals intended, successfully so, to scare only you, are only automated devices signifying nothing ... or is it just me?
~
M'Shi Ha M'Shi Shi Melek Shamayiim
~
They found him beneath the stairs staring at your feet, but seeing your head,
 all back-masked and Beatlesque
Ordering in, ordering out:
They found him naked,
running mildly about
They found him lighter,
mightier, than the devout,
in Las Vegan, New Mexico
They found him in Las Vegas,
too, too, too, turning off the TV,
staring back at you.
They found him on a tape recorder,
after having recorded,
a mad chant to an enchantress
They found him, laying on his back
on a mattress, having failed to pay,
with coin, to breathe Fox News air
They found him everywhere:
In journals, on bathroom walls,
on the covers of novels unsold
They found him brilliant, lit,
deviated and sane: They found him
listening to Jefferson Airplane
They found him scraping ice
off some shorecraft
in British Columbia
They found him with forty eight
states of being on forty eight
motel room keys, thumbing dumb
They found him at the Ritz Carlton
chewing Wrigley's authentic
chewing gum on the run
They found him totalled
in a Thunderbird car
he called "Blue Desire"
They found him riding
the next red micro-wave wave
raiding irradiated green wire
 
They found him giving back,
the gift that keeps on giving ...
They found him. They found him.
 
They found him, finding you,
spitting blood on a white napkin,
they found him, finding you.
~
These governments and their sociopathic corporate supervisors cannot possibly be telling us everything they know, or, perhaps even more importantly, don't know, about the radioactive plume as it falls into the Pacific Ocean and gets carried into the breezes, and in the sea currents, west, toward North America ...
Ordering in, ordering out:
They found him naked,
running mildly about
They found him lighter,
mightier, than the devout,
in Las Vegan, New Mexico
They found him in Las Vegas,
too, too, too, turning off the TV,
staring back at you.
They found him on a tape recorder,
after having recorded,
a mad chant to an enchantress
They found him, laying on his back
on a mattress, having failed to pay,
with coin, to breathe Fox News air
They found him everywhere:
In journals, on bathroom walls,
on the covers of novels unsold
They found him brilliant, lit,
deviated and sane: They found him
listening to Jefferson Airplane
They found him scraping ice
off some shorecraft
in British Columbia
They found him with forty eight
states of being on forty eight
motel room keys, thumbing dumb
They found him at the Ritz Carlton
chewing Wrigley's authentic
chewing gum on the run
They found him totalled
in a Thunderbird car
he called "Blue Desire"
They found him riding
the next red micro-wave wave
raiding irradiated green wire
They found him giving back,
the gift that keeps on giving ...
They found him. They found him.
They found him, finding you,
spitting blood on a white napkin,
they found him, finding you.
~
These governments and their sociopathic corporate supervisors cannot possibly be telling us everything they know, or, perhaps even more importantly, don't know, about the radioactive plume as it falls into the Pacific Ocean and gets carried into the breezes, and in the sea currents, west, toward North America ...
~
M'Shi Ha M'Shi Shi Melek Shamayiim
~
V
Image by the late Fritz Scholder
A Conspiracy of Ducks
The entanglements of the Spider Woman
led me here to tell you of too many things,
but hear me now and keep all a secret:
Only half of what Soutenang spoke
of yesterday is Wormwood true:
Tomorrow it will all be a lie.
The company we keep must shift
from year to year, day to day, hour by hour ...
Shush, my sweet, silence! Everything and nothing
we say can ever be heard or listened to, or, known.
This is the shady place, dark and in smoke
where the paranoids go pop to meet on the street
of the most disowned, dark and unfavored muses.
Networked societies throughout history and herstory,
powered in the puppeteer's mechanized iron arms 
are frightening to the uninitiated anxiety angels
of change ... Trust me. And trust me alone!
I like it on top that way ...
Damn you! We've been discovered!
Who talked! Who!
If not for my dragon visage they would not run.
I did not kill the three headless women they speak
of in the shadows of the dying afternoons ...
Now I need a new cave to breathe my fire from!
Fore they will chase me down and kill the truth ...
I weep for them. They do not know what they do.
II
These crystalline stones in the center of the Earth
contain values within values leading to absolute nowhere.
These mountains will tell you nothing, my final secret,
without the keys forged in the four corners of my mind
and if I squint my leaden cold eyes tight enough,
the Sarcosuchus of my dreams held in the sarcophagus
will once again share a dream with the Eddie Allen Poe
ravens tweeking in the deep dark wounds of our dreams ...
These ravens speak just as we do, just as all of the birds
of the world understand in accordance to our mutual
misunderstanding, just as I keep my watch stuck on eleven
to remind me how real the hour is, the day is, near or far:
Your heartbeat will tell me the rest and the black helicopter
is just a fairy tale, a whiff of helicopter blade, echoing
in your circuitous canyons and endless energy fields
of mere rumors repeated, for sales purposes, only to be
maximized in the marketplaces for my profit,
and my profit alone.
III
I saw three ghosts
through the window
and they were posing
as three nude females
as if it were part
of the same damn plan.
I saw them again
in the fanatic swirl
of teenage faces,
happy and light
and forbidden.
Finally, they appeared
as blue topped, short-cropped,
senior citizens who could give
a damn about your generation,
who were around long enough
to catch the last sweet scent
of the wild white roses, caught,
tight in the controlled gardens,
imprisoned, elect, in enlightenment
and mutual decay.
IV
Despite fundamental needs of fear
and the aquamarine teardrop
of your sad eyes,
when my MIB sunglasses
fell into my tortilla soup
my personal cosmic rodeo clown
was kicked out of the bucket
by the Bull, and the cartoon cowboy,
listening to Jefferson Airplane,
fell down the hill with laughter,
because, see, the movies
don't show you their eyes
behind cool black shades
to keep you believing
in the narcolepsy of suspense
about inhuman Blackhawk riders
who quite literally actually really
need to feed and fight and feel and pee
like children, too.
And that Spider? It shudders
to our mutual Sarcosuchus,
running to underground homes
to atomize quick harvests of love,
just as the secret government agent,
quietly, soulfully, somewhere in some
movie theater near you is weeping,
sentimental, quite literally sorry
as he or she watches the slow motion
action of the sequence about the birth
of baby ducks in the spring.
(Editor's note: In the ongoing effort to prevent American voters from sinking into the poppy-filled fields of forgetting, here's another excerpt from my book about the end of the 20th century, and the beginning of the 21st century, " 23 Roads to Mythville. " This chapter, "Denial of Access, " could have also been called, "I Should Have Known My Days Were Numbered When I Tried to Pitch That Story About Echelon Dot Calm. "")
The    date is Dec. 13, 2000, and the Internet landscape is teetering  on  the   brink of the big die-off. But McDaniel and his co-workers seem    secure,  successful, self-satisfied, most certainly self-congratulatory,    on top  of the e-publishing world. Or so they believe. Even as the   U.S.  Supreme  Court is deciding the result of the presidential election   for  them  all, ruling on that very day that all uncounted dimpled   chads are  null  and void, they are so self-assured they barely even   conceive of the   dissonant vibrations emanating from the very core of   the earth.  
Gathered in a large enough quantity in a hotel meeting room, they,  the    full-time, well-paid employees of Access Internet Magazine, create a     convincing air of self-confidence, of go-go e-business wiles, high on     the Net-savvy narcotic of the zeitgeist vibe. Sure, some of them  worried    about rough times ahead. At least McDaniel did. Yet, even  considering    his natural pessimism, it would have been hard to imagine  how quickly    things could change. 
So many start-ups, as in new magazines, whole living cycles, forests  of    ink and paper, so many all come and gone. McDaniel had done them   all:   multi-million dollar projects, national monthlies, regional rags     covering sports and art, grass roots enviro’ ops out in the desert,     entertainment weeklies, all gone. Killed by everything from the Gulf  War    to a Major League Baseball strike. And now, the looming dot-com  bust.    All due to the inherent liabilities of having too much  investment    capital to burn. Due to wannabe publishers who always  believe they are    capturing the so-called crest of the wave. Until,  that is, the wave,  the   demo, crashes on the shore. 
The next wave is on the way. But it’s too late. Ink on paper just can’t adapt in the stormy seas of the new century. 
They are at the annual sales meeting for Access Media Inc., just  before    the lavish Christmas Party on the far end of a Boston suburb.  It's    December 13, 2000. Publisher Mike Veitch stands in front of the     magazine’s blown up cover featuring then president Bill Clinton: who     could likely barely work his e-mail. At least that's what the cover shot     of the stumped and befuddled president seems to depict. As if he is     looking into one of the impenetrable miracles of our time. Like he  fit    the demo of newbie readers to "America’s Guide to the Internet." 
It's December 13, 2000, and if anyone had turned on any talk-radio     station, they would have heard a war of words over Clinton and Gore,     Bush and his Supremes, a howling that hadn't been heard since, well ...     hadn't ever been heard. 
But Access staffers, mostly those on the advertising side, had come     from all over the country after a remarkable year of growth and,     apparently, breakthroughs in publishing. It was a day to be catered and     plump. You might have wondered, with so much growth in circulation so     fast, from 4 million to 10 million weekly within a little over a  year,    if they had a bigger audience than the president on any single  day of    the week. Whole suburbs of newsreaders, gadget fanatics or,  more  likely,   grandmas wanting to know how to receive photos by e-mail  of  their   grandchildren, practical professionals wanting to know the   latest   investment site, moms looking for cooking sites and so on … a     demographic that was nothing less than a cookie-cutter composite of  the    whole country: But the emanations of the earth, well, that was   somebody   else's business. 
Access was riding the crest of the Internet wave, but it was trying  to    hit an impossible moving target. The first weekly publication of its     time, it attempted to cover the entire mélange of the fab  electricities    in the air as they crossed over into the mainstream.  But it was like    chasing a lightning bolt with a dinosaur. 
Even as Veitch was self-congratulating the rotunda roomful of  attentive    ears, maybe 150 people, for publishing Access on a weekly  basis as   the  third largest weekly in the United States, a circulation of  nearly   10  million, all distributed as an insert through newspapers  across   the  country: something was wrong. Even as the hotel was notable,  from   the  outside, for huge radio tower landmarks, much older than the  Web,   that  served as testament to the long history of Route 128’s silicon    valley  of telecommunications wizards, mass marketers, open sourcerers,    dot-com  rebels and computer-related trade ’zines out the ying yang:    something  did not compute.  
So powerful and amazing is Access, Veitch tells the group, one  Access    expose had uncovered some invasive America Online malfunction,  which    was then fixed by the safe-surfing company because it had been  first    criticized by one of the columnists. 
"The simple and direct way we have helped people in their lives," Veitch says, "is what journalism is about." 
McDaniel, inspired by Veitch's soliloquy, could barely contain his     excitement. He thought of the 100 monkeys, and there they were, right in     that room. The vibrations of the earth seemed to be churning in him,     and he couldn't be silent anymore. When Veitch asked if there were  any    questions, McDaniel took his turn to speak in a rambling  soliloquy of    his own. The first part of what he said, he doesn't  recall now, but  he   always knew how it was going to end. 
"The real question isn't how we are going to turn all of this paper     into gold," he told the group. "The real question is: How do we turn     this gold into soul?" 
This was followed by a long, slow, deep, most surely stunned, silence. 
When the group broke up, no one spoke to McDaniel. In fact, they didn't even look at him. 
Maybe a week later, in the red brick office park that was somewhat     secluded on the Charles River in Needham, Veitch would call McDaniel     into his office. It wasn't for an executive-to-employee lashing,     exactly, more like a "come-to-Jesus." Veitch boasted about how Access     was conceived of, as a business plan, on a single sheet of paper, a     metaphor for the integration of all media.  
"Access is the first fully integrated mass medium of the post-Internet era," he says. 
McDaniel responded with 50 ideas of his own, none of which would fit  on    a single piece of paper, then dutifully returned to his cube: the     human search engine. 
Being an editorial staffer at Access was like being the subject of  some    unprecedented behavior experiment. They were, basically, paid to    surf.  Paid to be led through the bottomless eddies and channels of the    World  Wide Web. Visitors to the office, especially journalists from    other  newsrooms, often commented about how creepy the whole thing  felt.    Newsrooms, after all, are usually boisterous places.  Considering how    tightly Access staffers were packed in after growing  from 24 or so to    nearly 100 employees in less than a year, it was if  nothing else an    intimate situation. By this time, Access Media was an  atypical cube farm    of too many employees cramped into a honeycombed  beehive. Basically,    what you could get with a $27 million venture  capital investment,  spent   over a year and a half or so. Yet, even  with so much electrified    density, even with so much juice, it could  be quiet as a library. 
Employees were more likely to interact from the computer, often by     Yahoo’s instant messenger service, often without speaking to anyone, in     person, all day. Human search engines paid to be hooked into machines     and surf the Web. Like something out of "The Matrix." But it wasn’t  as    if there weren’t plenty of people in their lives. They weren’t     disconnected from humanity. In fact, McDaniel may have never come in     contact with so many people in his life. It seemed to work, until, for     McDaniel, more than 100 e-mail messages were received one day, many of     them from struggling dot-coms in need of publicity for their  shopping    sites, especially before the Christmas push. Or from other  editors,    wondering why he hadn’t gotten back to them. McDaniel tried  to respond    back to them with missives about his doubt and fears about  what was    really happening in the Noosphere. 
Considering the extent of its weekly circulation, maybe 20 million     people in affluent suburbs across the nation who may have been actually     looking at it at the same time, and the high-priced talent (USA Today     online staffers, mainly) who were brought on to head up a new  Web-page    undertaking, one might have hoped that it could have  accomplished  more   than the mere tweaking of your home computer’s  keypad control.    Considering all of the computerized wizardry of the  place, it could have    accomplished pretty much anything it wanted. For  McDaniel, it was as   if  Access were a kind of revolutionary force  bringing the liberating   Web  to the masses. That was the best of what  he could hope for. 
He kept thinking: How do we turn all of this gold into soul? 
But forces much, much larger than a mere circulation of 10 million  were    at work, almost invisibly. The big die-off first sniffed out by     Fuckedcompany.com was becoming apparent. First, Access Internet Magazine     scaled back its online operations, laying off 21 employees shortly     after the beginning of the year, mostly those who worked for     accessmagazine.com, about 25 percent of Access Media’s payroll. 
Veitch would eventually be pastured into a role as an adviser to the     company and board member. John Jay, president of Access Internet     Magazine, and Larry Sanders, president of accessmagazine.com, left the     company.  
Sanders came from USA Today online wars to start up the Access Web     site’s expansion during the Internet gold rush heyday. They were     predatory times. So he tried a sticky hit style, the "roach motel"     approach, attempting to "drive them" like cattle. That was common     nomenclature in Access executive culture: This whole idea that people,     somehow lacking any choice in the matter, could be "driven" into its   Web   of multimedia ventures. For bizarre reasons, the site never drove   huge   numbers, and for a long time ended up with fewer hits than most     alternative zines, especially considering the self-marketing     possibilities of sending out 10 million flyers ... that is, the magazine     itself, with the Web site’s URLs at the top of each page and the     banner. For whatever reason, readers felt little need to get the same     thing at the Web site, too. 
By the end of 2000, the company had been working on plans for a     national online advertising network and new e-mail products, but scaled     back as the Internet tide changed. A new investment from General     Atlantic reportedly served as a blood transfusion of less than $1     million. Access had previously raised money in August 2000, when     investors contributed $17 million. Employees were always told $27     million, but who knows how quickly $10 million bucks can go up in smoke.     Other venture investors in Access Media included Sequoia Capital,  One    Liberty Ventures, and Labrador Ventures. Individual investors   included   former Time Warner co-CEO N.J. Nicholas Jr. and E-Trade   founder Bill   Porter. 
The cost of newsprint (about a half-million dollars per edition) and     the decline of the Web as an item worthy of mass media interest,     especially in terms of potential advertising dollars, were also to     blame. 
It could have been, and very often was, a media project that     exemplified the realm of possibility for its time. Access could be just     about that, access to the new world of megamedia, to the glittering     electric palace of wisdom (at least as far as the Internet could     provide). But the focus group directives thought otherwise. Such events,     with so-called readers paid and given a sandwich to say "yeah, sure,  I    read the magazine," revealed an apparent need for the editors to     dumb-it-all down. The average reader, apparently, could barely grasp a     slice of what was going on out on the Web. The focus group directive     became a tiny little hole indeed, a limitation for depicting what  was    really out there on the Web. If you are less outrageous than the  FOX    Network when dealing with Web topics, well, you get the picture …  
But in December of 2000, even as Florida presidential election     embroglio roiled on, and angry e-mail bounced around in incredible viral     swirls of angst, McDaniel and the editors of Access Internet  Magazine    were debating whether or not to veto listing the URL for a  short, but    relatively dated, "South Park" film depicting a rumble  between Santa    Claus and Jesus Christ, an animated fight between  animated good and    animated evil. And while the real Internet buzzed  with conspiracies,    overworlds, underworlds and terabytes of skin, it  was decided the short    film was just too riske’ for the supposed  audience of Webizens they   were  trying to reach.  
McDaniel argued (and argued): The Web is far, far weirder. And the geeks and wizards are moving into the mainstream. 
As it turned out, nobody really got the shot in the arm they were     looking for. Access included. But maybe in some small way, the Noosphere     moved just a little further along. In a little more than six months     after the beginning of the new year, Access suspended publication.  The    last posting on its Web site read: "Access Magazine has suspended     publication, due to the continuing uncertainty in the economy."     Apparently the business of producing a for-print mag announcing the dawn     of a new media era is just a little too much like being a Trojan    horse.  McDaniel guessed once readers figured the Internet out, "they    just  don’t need ink on paper anymore." 
A few days after Dec. 13, 2000, a mere six months before the  magazine's    demise, such statements increasingly began to rankle  McDaniel's    bosses. The whole "gold into soul" episode was no doubt still  on their    minds. His gloomy pronouncements about the imminent demise of   shopping   sites that were about to be touted in the Christmas shopping   issue;  how  the whole shebang would be up by the end of the first  quarter  of  2001;  how the ever expanding network of geeks would be the  only ones   worth  writing for when it was over; it all led them to  write him up on   the  "Vision" thing. 
One day he came to the office, muttering something about how he'd  seen a    solar storm over the Merrimack River Valley. " I saw a lake of  fire   in  the sky," he said. He rambled about how Verizon rhymed with   Urizen.   How the nation could be divided right down the middle between   the   techno-haves, who lived in the cities on the coasts, and the more     conservative have-nots, the landlocked crowd, and how the  presidential    election had split the electorate the exact same way.  Liberalism on the    Internet, he said, was spreading like a virus, but  the forces of  Urizen   were working, even as they doddled on the latest  new doodles,  to take  it  back. He railed about how the Hopis were  going online, and  this   signalled the end, for sure. 
All true, but scattered, a victim of too much information. Like the  Web    itself, his mind became a human search engine's cache of non-linear     connections. 
On January 1, the Frankenstein that Access created was let go. Sent,     once again, falling into the Void. In a pathetic act of vengeance, he     went home, closed the door, turned on the computer, and posted the     following message to everyone he'd ever met on the World Wide Web: 
"Predicting the future is only an act of hubris, and it’s a symptom  of    spending too much time on the Web to believe you are better at it    than,  say, throwing darts on the big target of possibilities.    Techno-savvy  prognostication is standard practice for the highly sought    out members  of think tanks and leading edge members of the digerati    fringe. As one  attains greater tools and more power and believes    something other than  simply being human is happening to him, as he    deigns himself to have a  greater awareness and insight into things,   it’s  nonetheless an act of  folly. Still, we try. 
"It’s no accident that the spirit of Prometheus, that Greek deity  who    gave fire and the alphabet to human beings, who then went on to  speak    and build things, much to the consternation of Zeus, is now   recognized   among many techno-wizards and members of digerati to be a   technology   god who is sometimes referred to as 'one who sees far.' The   hubris is   derived from the resulting megalomania inspired by tools  that  provide a   supposedly superhuman reach across the networked  world. Which  is what   made Zeus angry and perhaps a little jealous,  incensed enough,  at   least, to bound Prometheus to the rocks on the  shore: His real  concern   that humans, believing themselves to be Gods,  just might foul up  the   whole hierarchical system of nature. But  Prometheus refused to bow  to   this higher power just as many of us  refuse to recognize that,  despite   the heady intoxication of so much  technology converging on our   desktops  at lightning speed, we are all  still pinned to one big rock in   space. 
"In 2001, the architecture of the Web will continue to evolve by the     very same seemingly random patterns, the ebb and flow of living things     and forces that dictate events on big rock in space. By known economic     and social patterns that repeat throughout history. By natural   currents   that are all quite mysterious to even the most profound and     comprehensive thinkers about what’s going to happen next in  cyberspace,    which is as equally pinned to the real world as  Prometheus. In fact,    many of these mighty ones are falling, or about  to fall, even as I  write   this, because they believed they had the  secret key to the  Emerald   City, convincing a lot of others to come  along. 
"In the upcoming year, many of the most notable pioneers of  e-commerce    will lose their grip and slip into the abyss. Only to  replaced by the    vultures and transformers of their best ideas, usually  by corporate    nation-states that had long recognized the strength of  being tethered    to material things. In short: Meet the new boss, same as  the old  boss.   If you don’t believe it, look at the revenge of the brick  and  mortar   stores as they restore order at the online shopping mall. It   has always   been that way. Why should the Web be any different? 
"In 2001, the Web will seem more human, but only because humans will     seem more robotic, that is, they’ll morph into cyborg citizen-servants     to the emerging order of the electronic beehive. Space will continue  to    fuse ubiquitous cyberspace to the collective mind of the  earthbound.    Reality and unreality will become harder to discern.  Especially for    those who don’t have a proper grounding in the  physical and metaphysical    laws at work on both ends of the spectrum.  Many might believe, for    example, that Martin Sheen really is a good  president. Others, seeing    this trend, will take advantage by creating  all kinds of multimedia    assurances that, if propagated to enough  people, will enable them to    achieve any cynical end they might  desire. 
"The next-generation Web will seem more virtual, and the real world     will be more often referred to as 'just like the Internet.' But by the     end of the year, closed networks and intranets will be more prevalent.     From that point on, the World Wide Web will become fractured,     disordered, and many will complain. Hyped all year already by those it     might serve, for calling for security and privacy, the Web will become     less a tool for communication, more often a function for those who     command, those who control. Most will comply and register for the  Mark.    Greed and self-interest will rule a society dictated by this  fact: Bar    code is law. Technological man will, after all, have no  choice if he    wants to feed from the mutual marketplace of e-commerce.  
"This loss of a sense of an online community, this descending into     electro-tribes, set into motion whenever a comprehensive hegemony     dissolves, will be reinforced by gated communities created out of the     desire to re-establish bonds with our fellow man. The digital divide     will widen. The technocrats will only get stronger. As resources become     more and more scarce, and global warming moves closer to its   inevitable   redline say, 50 years from today, those who dictate the   architectures  of  technological space will find themselves to be   increasingly able to   drive people like cattle to the diminishing   safety zones of   survivability. 
"Conflict will arise out of the resistance to this, but the system  will    only fracture more as a result of this literal cyberwar between the     competing hierarchical layers of technocrats, corporate interests,     governments and its cyborg servant class trying to just keep up and     survive. It will be too bad. We could have all got along. We could have     put the automobile to pasture. Finally, a large number of enlightened     ones who are scrambling, even now, to discover practical ways to   unplug   from this insanity we like to call 'civilization,' will find a   way to   connect in a mutually effective, quite spiritual way. The   wisdom of this   passion for self-sufficiency will only become apparent   when the lights   go out, when dwindling resources for fuel and then,   cheap electricity   fails to feed the system, which collapses from the   weight of too many   voices, too many demands, too much desire for more   civilization, more   production, for its own sake. The neo-Luddites,   though quite   techno-savvy, will be the meek who inherit the eventual   earth. After   all, small is big, slow is fast, spirit is all that   remains, and ever   shall be, on terrain both cyber or dirt real. 
"Of course, since I’m only a mere human casting you this Web of     apocalyptic imagery with a gnostic’s mysterious writing machine, quite     the opposite is equally likely to happen. What do you think I am, the     Wizard of Oz?" 
His message to the New Year complete, he then crumpled into a ball.     When he awoke, he found himself unable to lift himself out of bed.     Information overload was a real disease, he'd decided, then and there.     Within days, his entire life blown apart, he bought a train ticket to     take him far out West, careening down a slice of rail line into the   Void   as waves of invisible solar storms pounded the earth, casting   untold   vibrations into the very core of the wired century. He jumped   on the   train, leaving pretty much everything behind but his laptop;   leaving   everything, turning it all in, lugging his machine and still   wondering:   "How do I turn this gold into soul." 
~
An excerpt from "23 Roads to Mythville," a "reality lit" novel by Douglas McDaniel














