Semi Truths A highly irregular weblog dedicated to Truth, Justice, and American Cheese…!

March 11, 2003

OF PAINTED WINGS AND GIANT RINGS

Filed under: Charlottesville,People — semi @ 2:14 pm

At Cornell University in 1959, a nineteen year old student named Lenny Lipton sat in the library at Willard Straight Hall and read a poem by Ogden Nash about a “realio, trulio, little pet dragon“. As anyone who has ever been nineteen knows, it is a serious and sentimental age. Lenny later found himself thinking about dragons and lamenting the end of his childhood as he walked down the hill to the city of Ithaca to meet a friend for dinner. No one was home at his friend’s apartment, so he just let himself in (remember, this is 1959) and while he was waiting, sat down at a typewriter that belonged to his friend’s roommate, Peter. Lenny wrote down his own poem about a dragon and lost childhood fantasies and left the sheet in the typewriter.

Peter, a performer and concert organizer at Cornell, found the poem, added some words, and set it to music. A few years later, when Peter joined the emerging folk music scene in Greenwich Village, he founded a group with two other friends and that piece quickly became part of their repertoire. Peter tracked Lenny down to give him co-writer credit before the group recorded and released the song on vinyl. By early 1963, their record reached #2 on the popular charts and has been sung thousands of times since. Why, you probably know most of the lyrics yourself…

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February 9, 2003

THE PARSER OF CVILLE

Filed under: Charlottesville,WWW — semi @ 5:32 pm

With so much information available on the web, there are only a few places I turn to on a regular basis to find interesting and updated content. One of the most reliable is CVillenews.com, a meta-news site for Charlottesville, VA (USA), my town of residence. Running since March of 2001, the site carries abstracts and links of stories from other Charlottesville mainstream news sites and provides a forums for registered users to post their own reactions or to submit original items.Recently, there was a thread regarding Charlottesville’s City Council approving a resolution against a pre-emptive U.S. military attack on Iraq (as part of the Cities for Peace movement). The discussion that followed predictably defended and excoriated the council, but also veered into discussions regarding the roles of elected councilors in an representative democracy, providing a cross-section look into the opinions and politics that drive a small University town.

In another example, several months ago I witnessed a remarkable apparition in the skies above Charlottesville, a kind of inverted rainbow high in the sky and pointing toward the sun. At the first opportunity, I logged onto CVillenews, provided a quick description, and asked every one to run outside and take a look, hoping someone could tell me what I had seen. Sure enough, less than an hour later I had my answer: it was a circumzenithal arc.

The site is run by volunteers, with no ads and no one making any money. It provides a lively forum for debate, breaking news, and generally good-natured discussion. Even if you do not live in or near Charlottesville, it is worth taking a look at this shining example of just how good the web can be for a community.

December 8, 2002

Volume I, Issue IV

Filed under: Charlottesville — semi @ 9:20 pm

YESTERDAY’S NEWS

Ethnic Kurds flee Iraq! ~ Bombs rain down on Baghdad! ~ Saddam Hussein threaten retaliations against U.S.! ~ President Bush promises tax cut! ~ Hannibal Lecter Eating up the Box Office!…

Has anyone else noticed that it’s 1991?


AN ACT OF FAITH

There was a remarkable front page article in the Washington Post this last Sunday:

·A Daughter’s Dream Lives at Scene of Her Death·
by Jon Jeter; February 18, 2001; Page A01

(Post articles are available for free for two weeks following publication).

Eight years ago, a 26 year old white American girl named Amy Biehl was killed by black South African protesters during the civil unrest that precipitated the fall of Apartheid. Now her parents have journeyed to the very village where she was slain and are working in the community to improve the living conditions of those who still live there. When the four young men who were convicted of killing Amy appeared before South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission four years ago, Peter Biehl publicly supported their plea for amnesty. As the parents see it, they are honoring their daughter’s life by carrying on her work.

It is an moving tale of redemption, transformation, and forgiveness. Were I in the same situation, I cannot say with certainty that I would comport myself with such civility.

I am also sickened with the irony of contemplating the likely outcome of such an event in this country. If four black men chased down a white girl here and kicked and stoned and stabbed her to death in a barbaric fit of political outrage, would we even care if her parents supported amnesty for the killers?

I am not going to defend the acts of killers; it is a complex political situation that I cannot even hope to fathom from the comfort of my own privileged life.

Instead, I simply want to posit this: if ordinary people thrust into excruciating circumstances can react with such extraordinary charity and humanity, why should we not ask the same of our nation’s leaders?

I was thinking of this as I listened to “President” Bush huffing and puffing at Saddam Hussein last week after ordering missile strikes against Baghdad . Critics contend that he wants to “finish the job” that his father started ten years ago, though few world leaders view Iraq to be a serious world threat anymore. A decade of deprivation in the wake of economic sanctions continue to punish Iraq’s already disenfranchised population and remain a pathetic substitute for sound policy. So here is my proposition for the new President”, a unique and, as far as I know, heretofore unspoken proposal for dealing with Saddam Hussein.

Forgive him.

Yep, call a press conference and publicly pronounce: “Saddam, I forgive you!”. This will fit right in with your new policy of Christian charity and will demonstrate to the country that you are so secure in your masculinity that you do not need to demonstrate it by raining missiles down on occupied cities in Islamic nations. As the son of the President who successfully organized the coalition to push the Iraqi army back over its own border, you are in a unique situation to close that circle with dignity and compassion (remember compassion?). You should immediately urge the U.N. to lift the economic sanctions and start rolling out trucks of food and clothing for impoverished Iraqis. The world will applaud you for your boldness and the Iraqi people, once fed, may remember who is their actual enemy. Also, we might be get some good deals on cheap oil.

Oh. Right. I forgot … you and Dick Cheney would rather drill for oil domestically.

Hmm… you don’t have any vested financial interest in the domestic cigar industry, do you? Maybe you could give Fidel Castro a call.


WORLD WIDE WEB WORDS

This week’s words all have to do with public ignominy…

ex·co·ri·ate:
to tear or wear off the skin of; abrade. To censure strongly; denounce.

op·pro·bri·um:
disgrace arising from exceedingly shameful conduct

au·to-da-fé: public announcement of the sentences imposed on persons tried by the Inquisition and the public execution of those sentences by the secular authorities.

de·fen·es·tra·tion:
the act of throwing someone or something out of a window.

I particularly like defenestration. I first came across the word a few years ago in a European text and asked a friend of mine who was a history major what it meant. Apparently, defenestration was a fashionable form of political assassination in medieval eastern Europe. According to a report on the Radio Prague website:

“One of the most bizarre and typically Czech ways of dealing with opposition was the so called defenestration. The first one, which took place in 1419 in Prague, set off the Hussite revolution, while the most famous defenestration, which took place in May 1618, led to the uprising of the Czech Estates and marked the beginning of the Thirty Year War in Europe. In the 17th century, defenestrations were considered as a kind of Czech national custom…”

In contemporary jargon, Defenstration has become a popular term to refer to the act of removing Microsoft Windows © from a PC in favor of another operating system. I like that, too!


SEMI SITES

To read more about the art of joyfully hurling political leaders out of windows, see the full text of the Radio Prague report at http://www.radio.cz/english/archive/3-6-98.html.

To learn more about the inspiring life of Amy Biehl, see The Amy Biehl Foundation website at http://www.amybiehl.org/

The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) website can be found at http://www.truth.org.za/.


WRITERS ON WRITING

People want to know why I do this; why I write such gross stuff. I like to tell them I have the heart of a small boy … and I keep it in a jar on my desk.Stephen King


All Contents (except the stuff I stole) Copyright © 2001
S.M.McCord.

Redistribution allowed, provided you cite http://www.semitrue.com.

July 5, 2002

THE FOURTH RIGHTS

Filed under: Charlottesville,Essays — semi @ 11:18 pm

Got a nickel?

On the front you will see the familiar profile of Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence, a founding father of the United States, and our third President.

On the back is a representation of his home, Monticello. Jefferson spent the last seventeen years of his life there, trying out new discoveries and inventions, collecting his many books, and writing copious letters and essays detailing his thoughts on this infant nation that he helped create. He died on July 4 1826, fifty years to the day after the 2nd Continental Congress, meeting in Philadelphia, adopted the document that he authored and which contained these words:

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness…”

(When studying early American history in grade school, we were endlessly amused by the fact that the handwritten “S”, 200 years ago, resembles our contemporary “F”. To this day, I cannot hear the preamble without wanting to interject “We hold thefe truths to be felf-evident … Life, Liberty, and the purfuit of Happineff“. But I digreff….)

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