audio — apologizing to crooks
Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on January 31st, 2016 by skeeterHits: 16
Hits: 16
So I’m at the little park I take care of over on the east side of the South End, loading up a wood ‘sculpture’ the wind had knocked down. I hear a truck roll in to the parking lot, but I’m lugging my wreckage, not paying much attention to bystanders when … geez, here’s the heroin addict who stole my guitars a few months ago walking right up to me. You can imagine, a thousand thoughts are ricocheting off my cranium.
My boy walks right up to me and says he’s been hearing how I think he stole my banjos. I said you heard right, amigo, I think you stole my instruments. Course, my instruments were guitars, not banjos, but okay, let’s hear the man out…. “I didn’t steal from you, Skeeter. I mean, I am a thief and all. I’ve stolen from lots of people, but I wouldn’t steal from you. No way, I have too much respect, man.”
Well, if you think someone has ‘too much respect’ for me, you maybe never met me. My boy has met me and I’ve met him. It’s not that I think a junkie would lie, it’s not that I believe an addict would say what he has to say to wiggle out of a bad situation, it’s not that I didn’t believe him. But … he did walk right up to me and maybe he’s clever enough to mention my banjos when the thief really stole my guitars … or, okay, maybe I’m a naïve sucker. But … I was mouthing off without real solid proof, asking around about his whereabouts, all that, and yeah, I guess I am, deep down, a bleeding heart liberal, what can I say?
What I said was this: “I am going to accept your version here, man. And I’m going to apologize to you for making what you say are false accusations. I appreciate you talking to me face to face about it and okay, I will assume you are not my thief.” He said again he’d stolen plenty in the neighborhood, but he was in rehab, trying to kick the monkey on his back, going straight. I said that’s great, good luck to ya. We shook hands, just two South Enders trying to make their way in this hard hard world. I said I got to get back to work here and he said yeah, he did too, he’d left some clothes in the woods the other day he needed to pick up.
I watched him hike into the woods at dusk, a slow drizzle starting up again, but I lost him in the firs and so I went back to my little park ranger task. I was about to drive out, near dark now, when he emerged through the ferns lugging a box. He placed it in the back end of his buddy’s truck and we waved adios.
The box was too small to hold my guitars, but I wondered whose stuff it did hold. NOT that I’m accusing my new buddy of theft. Sure don’t have any solid evidence for that …. I’m fairly certain he stores his clothes in the woods until he needs a clean wardrobe. Don’t you?
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You might find it hard to believe, but the South End used to be a Destination Spot. The whole island did. The island you could drive to, one developer in the 80’s called it, but 50 years before that, the resorts promoted it the same way.
Camp Grande, Diane, Tyee, Cama, Madrona, Indian Beach, Camp Lagoon, Sunset Beach, Utsalady Beach, Camp Comfort. The poor miserable sweltering city folks could escape their sizzling apartments and rent a cabin for the week. All day long the menfolk would do what menfolk have done since Cro-Magnon dropped their tails and descended from the branches of the nut-trees. They’d sit on their butts and drink. Course we modernists call it FISHING. Which is really a euphemism for Drinking.
When the boat was full of empties and dead salmon, the boys would pull up on the beach and wobble up to the mizzus with their trophy salmons and do what menfolk have done since the 2nd day they hit the ground. Order the womenfolk to cook up the catch.
Back then they had these cute pioneer woodstoves in every cabin. Women must’ve really liked this. Their menfolk, being he-men, could split up the firewood with an axe, probably whacking off a couple of fingers and toes, and she could stand over a 500 degree stove in a cabin with all the doors and windows open and the kitchen about 400 degrees, and she could fry up some smelly fish for the whole squalling family. Later she could wash the burnt-on skillets and the rest in water boiled on the stove. She probably had the time of her life playing pioneer mizzus.
The resorts are all gone now, end of an era on the South End. Some say the fishing dried up. I say the women finally got fed up.
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I was watching an IBM ad the other night. They were touting their genius machine WATSON as an example of how we humans were going to succeed in the future. By out-thinking our competition. WATSON can beat any human in chess. WATSON can whip anybody in Jeopardy. WATSON is as smart as we are and getting smarter every day. We just need to make smarter WATSONS if we want to get anywhere in this brave new world. Down here on the South End we aren’t likely to cobble together an artificial intelligence. Or even much of a natural one, judging by our track record so far.
IBM is creating machine intelligence. WATSON is a machine, built by us, programmed by us, in service to us. In a couple years WATSON will build itself, program itself, improve itself and surpass its original creators in no time flat. The mega corporations and the defense departments of the world think this is the leg up for their profits and their success. WATSON and his brethren will simply out-think their competition. Trouble is, we’ll be the machines’ competition. Well, not much competition, judging by the South End, but hey, even MIT, Stanford, NASA, you name it, they’ll be left in the silicon dust too.
We live in a world of machines now. Already machines run machines. Computers run factories, control the banking, game the stock markets, kill the enemy with their drones. They live in our office, control our entertainment, answer questions on our phone, connect us to other humans who have them too. We’re dependent already even though we think we’re boss. We even got em down here on the South End. Okay, we’re mostly using them for e-mail and Google. But we take them for granted already, just a couple decades since Bill Gates put the pods under everyone’s bed.
You think maybe I’m a Luddite. You think I’m paranoid. You think I don’t trust IBM or Microsoft or Apple to make the future a very comfortable place for me. You think we should just let them be smarter. Out-think the competition! You think maybe this is just another tool, like a hammer or a sewing machine or a spinning jenny, something we use to better our lives.
But I’ll tell you something: a hammer doesn’t get smarter. A hammer doesn’t figure out it could make next-generation hammers that self-feed, that replicates those with built-in mobility, that deduces new uses for nails, that realizes its potential as a weapon and identifies the new enemy. A hammer isn’t going to out-think even South Enders. Okay, maybe a couple of us. WATSON isn’t your friend, all I’m saying … and he won’t be your servant much longer.
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There are islands and then there are islands. Manhattan’s an island, but the real estate agents bulldozed down its palm trees long ago. A lot of islands are isolated, a bump in the sea. Some islands hang out together. Geologists call them an archipelago. The islands by us didn’t get invited into the San Juan Archipelago Club. I think they knew we’d put bridges up and drive right on like we weren’t proud to BE an island. Naw, we wanted an umbilical to the mainland.
A Real Island sneers at the idea of the Mainland. A real islander doesn’t commute to a job back on the Mainland. A real archipelagist doesn’t shop at the QFC on the Mainland. An honest-to-God rock huggin, brine snorting, bent back barnacle covered island hermit doesn’t jump on a ferry every chance he gets so he can stand on Terra Firma in the Wal Mart parking lot.
A Real Islander is hoping deep down in his seaweed filled boots that the Tectonic Plates are moving him OUT past the Straits, out past Dungeness Spit, out past Neah Bay, out past the 3 mile territorial limits. A Real Islander came, not so much to Come to an Island, as to LEAVE the Mainland, physically, spiritually and meta-damn-phorically. They’re Escapists. They’re refugees from Real Life.
Our island hedges its bets. Way up at the cold north end, folks hardly know they’re ON an island. Down at the equatorial jungles of the South End, we’re unemployed, the drive just to the bridge is too horrible to contemplate, the only fast food we got is growing in our gardens and TV reception’s poor.
When the earthquake knocks down Camano’s puny little bridge, we’re gonna have some folks real surprised to learn they’re gonna have to make a choice finally. Course, when they build the South End Bridge to Everett, we will too.
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You might find it hard to believe, but the South End used to be a Destination Spot. The whole island did. The island you could drive to, one developer in the 80’s called it, but 50 years before that, the resorts promoted it the same way.
Camp Grande, Diane, Tyee, Cama. Madrona, Indian Beach, Logoon, Sunset Beach Utsalady Beach, Camano Beach, Camp Comfort. The poor miserable sweltering city folks could escape their sizzling apartments and rent a cabin for the week. All day long the menfolk would do what menfolk have done since Cro-Magnon dropped their tails and descended from the branches of the nut-trees. They’d sit on their butts and drink. Course we modernists call it FISHING. Which is really a euphemism for Drinking, stalking the wily six-pack.
When the boat was full of empties and dead salmon, the boys would pull up on the beach and wobble up to the mizzus with their trophy salmons and do what menfolk have done since the 2nd day they hit the ground. Order the womenfolk to cook up the catch.
Back then they had these cute pioneer woodstoves in every cabin. Women must’ve really liked this. Their menfolk, being he-men, could split up the firewood with an axe, probably whacking off a couple of fingers and toes, and she could stand over a 500 degree stove in a cabin with all the doors and windows open and the kitchen about 400 degrees, and she could fry up some smelly fish for the whole squalling family. Later she could wash the burnt-on skillets and the rest in water boiled on the stove. She probably had the time of her life playing pioneer mizzus.
The resorts are all gone now, end of an era on the South End. Some say the fishing dried up. I say the women finally got fed up.
Hits: 52