|
AUTHORS
NOTE: The
Derbs are off on a ski vacation for a few days, so this week's postings
consist entirely of two blogs I blogged over the weekend. This is
the second of the two. I am sorry to blog twice in one week, violating
my previous vows on the subject. By way of compensation, and in
response to overwhelming public demand, I have put some Derb photographs
on my personal web site, under "
Photographs."
reader e-mailed in to chide me for supporting capital punishment
but opposing torture. Gimme a break. Anglo-Saxon civilization got
along just fine for the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries with torture
illegal and strongly disapproved of but capital punishment legal
and popular, and that's the way I'd like it. Does being hanged,
shot, or electrocuted hurt? I bet it does, and I don't mind admitting
I hope it does. (Apropos which, by the way, the English magazine
New
Scientist had a fascinating discussion a few weeks ago about
whether decapitation is painful. The consensus among experts was:
Yes, it hurts like a bitch, but not for long.) With execution, though,
the pain is incidental to the point of the thing; with torture it's
the whole point. Could I live with a regime of painless execution?
I guess. Could a person who supports torture live with a regime
of painless torture? Huh? How do people come up with this stuff?
It's like those other people (probably the same people, actually)
who tell me I can't disapprove of abortion and approve of capital
punishment. The hell you say. What crime has a fetus committed?
Over
dinner the other night the kids were talking about "multicultural
week" at the local school. Each of them had been assigned to
do a little event. Danny: the Mexican hat dance. Nellie: an Irish
jig. To amuse Nellie, I sang the following little bit of schoolboy
doggerel to the tune of the Irish jig. (Is there more than one?
This is the one that, as Isaac Asimov pointed out, scans like "paradimethylaminobenzaldehyde,"
which is to say, dactylically.)
O'Connor
is dead and his brother don't know it.
His brother is dead and O'Connor don't know it.
They're both of them dead, and they're in the same bed,
And sure neither one knows that the other is dead.
For some nine-year-old
reason, this seized Nellie's imagination, and she spent the rest
of the evening skipping round the house singing it at the top of
her voice. Danny, the inquiring mind of the family, wanted to know
how these unfortunate Hibernians died. "From drink, I suppose,"
said Derb, who just can't get the hang of this Political Correctness
business. "Shot by British soldiers," riposted Rosie,
who still nurses a grudge for the Opium Wars.
Speaking
of which, I get regular requests from people who want me to give
them a China booklist a list, that is, of books to get yourself
up to speed on China and her culture. I tried making up a list,
but it came out rather long much too long for a regular blog
column. I have therefore put it in my website under "Notes ... China Booklist."
There's
a plan I want to carry out to impress the importance of gun safety
on my kids. Here is the plan.
I shall call
both my kids (ages nine and six) down to the basement (unfinished,
concrete walls) with the announcement that I'm going to teach them
gun safety. I shall then stand them at my work bench and bore them
with talk about how they must never, ever touch a gun without permission,
if they see a gun lying unattended should call an adult, etc., etc...
To the point where they begin to fidget (i.e. approx. 20 seconds).
Then I'll show
them my two handguns lying on the bench, waiting (I tell them) to
be cleaned. I'll assure them the guns are unloaded. However, I'll
warn them that even when you are absolutely sure a gun is unloaded,
you must never fool with it, and must never, ever point it at
anyone.
While explaining
this I shall pick up my revolver and handle it in a manner apparently
casual (but in fact carefully rehearsed). I'll add that as well
as never pointing a gun at anyone you don't intend to kill, you
must also never put your finger on the trigger, except when intending
to shoot. At this point I'll "accidentally" press the
trigger... firing a single magnum round into a large block of wood
set behind my bench for this purpose, backed by concrete wall &
solid earth.
The noise will
be absolutely deafening, the smoke visible & pungent, the shock
effect tremendous. (Neighbors will be pre-warned.) I myself shall
act surprised and embarrassed. The kids will run howling from the
scene, and will forever afterwards take guns very seriously indeed.
That's the
plan. I am sure it will have the required effect. Unfortunately,
it has hit one largish snag: Rosie tells me that if I try to implement
it, she will divorce me.
I
wrote in my INS piece last month about being the only person reading
a book among 80 or 90 people in a waiting room. A number of other
chronic readers wrote in to share my bafflement. This is genetic,
though, or at the very least congenital. As a child I was forbidden
to read books at the table. It was, I was told, very bad manners.
I therefore read the labels on condiment bottles. This gave me my
first encounter with a foreign language. Bottles of HP Sauce
a wonderful mustardy concoction that can be found in every working-class
English home used to have the label printed in both English
and French for some reason. I had memorized the French long before
taking any formal instruction in that language, and I think can
still recite it from memory: "Cette sauce de haute qualité
est un mélange spécial d'épices orientales..."
Anyone
who writes for the public knows the following rule: You can say
anything you like about the president, the governor, or the mayor.
You can pour scorn on religion, science, capitalism, socialism,
motherhood, or the flag. You can spit at the PLO, the IRA, the Chinese
Communist Party, the EU, the U.N., NOW, the AFL-CIO, ACT-UP, Rainbow/PUSH
or even, if you are exceptionally brave, the teachers' unions. Nothing
much will happen to you. Your house will not be fire-bombed, your
car will not be vandalized, your children will not be taunted in
the schoolyard. But if you leave a dangling participle, split
an infinitive, or attribute an H. L. Mencken quote to Ambrose Bierce
then, get busy stocking up the fallout shelter and
set the kids to filling sandbags. Nothing gets people worked up
like a slip in grammar or usage.
A few days
ago, by way of excusing myself for a misquote, I wrote this in a
web piece: "You try being chained to this oar 3 times
a week while Goldberg whacks a big drum up on the fo'c'sle and Kathy
Lopez strides up and down the aisles brandishing a whip." This
drove the language nuts crazy. It turned out, in fact, to be one
of those sentences like that famous passage about the tide
in Timon of Athens that has about as many factual
errors in it as actual words, if not more. On a slave galley, the
drum was not on the fo'c'sle (where the rowers, who of course faced
sternwards, would not be able to see it) but on the poop deck. Since
there can only be two oars, left and right, there can only be one
aisle... etc., etc. et bloody cetera.
Well, phooey.
Much as I like the word "poop," I like "fo'c'sle"
a hundred times better. In my galley, the drum is on the
fo'c'sle. Why do the rowers need to see it? The point of a drum
is to be heard. And my galley has a middle row of seats where
fresh slaves are positioned ready to take over a rower's place when
he drops from exhaustion and has to be pitched overboard. So there
are two aisles. Got it? Now leave me alone to brew up more
wild metaphors or better still, read chapter 12 ("The
Language Mavens") in Steven Pinker's book The Language Instinct.
And when you've done that, check out the list of excuses I'm building
up on my website under "Notes ... Correct English."
My
assertion that Mike Tyson is not a member of the human race
drew some disapproving e-mail. Well, here's one small item of evidence:
The actual words Tyson said at that encounter with Lennox Lewis
the other week. I have had to asterisk them considerably for display
on a family website, but I think I have done this skillfully enough
to maintain the essence of what Iron Mike was trying to convey.
Remember that these words were uttered in front of a battery of
TV cameras and microphones. They were not reported in full in any
of the U.S. newspapers I consulted why is that, I wonder?
but the British and Australian press had them in all their
pithy vigor. Responding to a reporter who had shouted out that he,
Tyson, should be in a straitjacket, the champ responded thus: "I'll
put your mother in a straitjacket, you punk-a** white boy. I'll
f*** you in the a** till you love me, f***ot. You're a little white
p***y scared of a real man. You wouldn't last two minutes in my
world, bitch." I rest my case.
|