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3/08: I'm in poor health, which limits my posting; MG addicts can check out my Beatles group blog, Hey Dullblog.


Jon calls this "a work of genius"--and I had to pay him almost nothing for the blurb. More mystery and mayhem in the Ivy League, mixing my world with real history to create something entertaining.


I've combed my archives to create this collection of my magazine humor. From The Yale Record to The New Yorker, the best of the pre-Barry years is in here.


My first non-parodic novel is now available! It's school like it ought to be: loud, eventful, and full of swearing!


I'm probably going to Hell for this C.S. Lewis spoof.


The ultimate Harry Potter parody. Three novels, 25 foreign editions, over a million copies sold--it's too much to list here, but you can read excerpts and buy the books at Barrytrotter.com!

Monday, June 5, 2006

A few words about RFK

Today is the 38th anniversary of the day Bobby Kennedy got shot--no, it wasn't marked on my calendar, Slate reminded me. I thought I'd take a short break from revising Sophomore to share some thoughts.

I come by my Kennedy assassination fetish honestly: My mother was raised Catholic, and my seldom-seen father died when I was young. By 1978 or so (when I was nine) I was spending too many hours delving into JFK books filled with timetables and testimony, alibis and ballistics, tryng to figure out what had happened. This fascination persisted for years. I never understood then why the adults in my life all got so emotional when I asked about it. Now, of course, I get it: to me, JFK's death felt like ancient history, but it was no more remote than the Challenger explosion is today.

The JFK assassination is a maze with no end, and I eventually lost both the heart and stomach to run it. I read about the murders of Martin Luther King and RFK, too, but they seemed (wrongly, it turns out) too open-and-shut to sustain my interest. Eventually life--by which I mean, girls--took hold, and I moved on to other things. I was fortunate; these riddles are poisoned. Attempting to solve them is a religion that eats its acolytes.

When I think of the assassinations now, there is no curiosity or nostalgia; because they have never been definitively solved, I feel that they are still with us. History is fact robbed of its ability to injure; these events still bite. And so, when I saw RFK on Slate today, the long-haired, doom-etched RFK of '68, I felt the bite again, and not a little dread. JFK's death was about the unthinkable happening, but his brother's murder was the world confirming the terrible fact of what it had become. Or maybe, what it always had been.

Forty years on, Kennedy-King-Kennedy looks to me like the moment things started going bad, when control really clamped down from above, and apathy really took root below. Our country is headed in the wrong direction, and without a shred of romanticism, I think that direction was set by the assassinations of the 60s--not only by the loss of those people, their ideas and their ability to inspire, but also by our getting used to unsolved public murder as business as usual. That is a coarsening equal to any suffered by the Roman Republic. Is it merely coincidence that we've turned from a country of possibilities to one grinding out the same tragic, hoary imperial script? The country is traumatized, directionless, hurt; and a generation of politicians have risen who are experts at keeping us that way.

We go around in circles, searching for Kennedy-manques, a right wheel turning around a chewed stump where the left wheel used to be. If you don't like metaphors, here's a fact: All of the "lone nuts" of the 60s weakened one side of the spectrum, in favor of the other. We may think that's a mournful coincidence now, but I doubt future generations will. In my dark moments, I'm convinced that those bullets marked the beginning of American civilization's decline, the time when our capacity for fear and corruption decisively outstripped our desire for positive change. Perhaps the internet will save us; perhaps this glorious chip-and-wire hive-mind is stronger than the gun. I hope so.

Comments on "A few words about RFK"

 

Anonymous benway said ... (8:37 PM) : 

Go Back to SLEEP deep deep SLEEP

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (8:59 PM) : 

I agree with the assessment about people being killed in the 60s being a kind of zenith in pro-worker momentum and the feeling of "we're in this together"

... which compares to the current "you're on your own" social movement of privatization/mergers/layoffs.

-k

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (10:02 PM) : 

The good die young but we still love them and remember them, and their dreams. Whether we see it or not their dreams are coming about, maybe not how we like or as fast yet they march on. They left us something to work for, their goals, and it is up to us to bring them forth. They are the dreamers, we are the workers, the builders. It was ALWAYS left up to us. That's why they told us their dreams, they were never going to build the reality from them, we were. The net won't save us, AMERICANS wil save us. The net is just another telephone that we can use to talk to each other with, another postal system that's all. Living people, that's who creats the dreamer's dream, that's who does the laborous work, that's who will save AMERICA.
Mike Meyer- member Voter Initiative Political Party of Wyoming (VIPP)

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (5:41 AM) : 

Just too depressing. I'm a bit older so I'd like to add a word on King's assassination.

I lived in Houston at the time, and on my way home from work, I stopped off at the 7/11 for cigarettes.

The 7/11 was unusually full of men. They were listening to the radio, and all of them were grinning viciously.

Then I caught what the radio was saying - King had been assassinated.

I cannot get out of my mind those faces of evil grins.

 

Blogger Mazeppa said ... (9:53 AM) : 

Brilliant, thank you. I posted a link to this piece on my blog The Mazeppist (http://mazeppist.blogspot.com). We shall overcome.

 

Blogger Mazeppa said ... (9:57 AM) : 

Brilliant, thank you. I posted a link to this piece on my blog The Mazeppist (http://mazeppist.blogspot.com). We shall overcome.

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (10:38 AM) : 

"Perhaps the internet will save us; perhaps this glorious chip-and-wire hive-mind is stronger than the gun."

No, its not. First of all the internet is not an American playground as many thing it is. The internet is an application which allows global society to evolve faster. There is not direction to evolution other then that of environmental pressures. I don't see anything pushing against the environment that these assasinations created.

 

Blogger Dave said ... (7:32 AM) : 

This is a very depressing post. I'm just not sure where this leaves you now if the progressive movement has been effectively emasculated by a few mysterious assassins. Maybe you should take a page from the Bush administration self-help guide: They took a potentially emasculating attack by a few mysterious terrorists and parlayed it into a huge PR victory, winning the short-term support and long-term intimidation of the "opposition" party.

If you are anxiously waiting for the next celebrity demagogue to lead the masses to full enlightenment, you need to look for someone bold and charismatic, of course, but mostly they need to tap into the nascent optimism in the populace.

Unfortunately for the Looking Backward crowd, there is no popular optimism on socially progressive issues. That's why it is depressing to read when you guys write about these topics.

 

Blogger Mitchell J. Freedman said ... (5:33 PM) : 

Got to you through Tom Tomorrow. Excellent post. 1968 and RFK's murder were definitely a turning point away from the best America can be to the worst it is now.

While I still believe, and believe even more so today than say last year, that we can turn things around, it can be argued that it is getting harder and harder to do so.

As someone who was 11 years old in 1968, and will be a half century old next year, I would simply ask young folks to continue to be skeptical about government pronouncements about the environment, wealth and war, but have more hope in rebuilding institutions that actually help people, starting with unions and yes, even government.

 

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