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E Plebnista

“The Omega Glory” is often derided as one of the worst episodes of the original Star Trek, for any number of reasons, everything from Shatner’s melodramatic reading of the Constitution (especially his… unique… pronunciation of “TRAWNquility”) to the far-fetched premise of another world that so closely parallels our own that they have a word-for-word version of America’s founding documents. If you simply don’t like Shatner, I can’t do much to change your mind. But as to the other point, I would suggest that you’re taking it all too literally. If it helps, think of this as less an episode of Star Trek than a segment of The Twilight Zone: simply a fantastical setup for making a point that probably ought to be obvious but so often isn’t.

I urge you to watch this clip, but don’t worry about Shatner’s delivery; listen to what he’s SAYING: the “holy words” of America — the ideals of America, and yes, the laws too — must apply to EVERYONE or they mean NOTHING.

I think about that every Fourth of July. And especially on this Fourth.

E plebnista, my friends.

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You Truly Belong with Us Here Among the Clouds

Speaking of Mars, I’m sure my Loyal Readers are aware of all the chatter about the possibility of sending human beings to the Red Planet. Apollo astronaut Buzz Aldrin has been an indefatigable advocate for a Mars mission, speaking before Congress on the subject only last month, selling t-shirts that say “Get Your Ass to Mars” from his online store (I have one myself! Lots of fun in conservative Salt Lake City!), and wearing one of those shirts alongside Stonehenge in a photograph that became a viral sensation. Billionaire Elon Musk  has said flat-out that the ultimate goal of his SpaceX company is to put people on Mars within a decade. And the Mars One foundation is currently winnowing thousands of applications for a one-way colonization mission.

It’s all been very exciting for an old space nerd like myself, but just recently, it seems as if the voices of the naysayers have been getting louder. They point out, quite correctly, that there are a lot of technical problems with a flight to Mars that make the Apollo missions look like a stroll in the park, and that we now know the fourth planet of our system to be far less hospitable than all those golden-age sci-fi novelists like Robert Heinlein imagined. The Mars One mission, according to these wet blankets, is nothing less than a very expensive way to commit suicide. There is an argument forming that Mars is simply no place for human beings.

But what if there is an alternative destination to consider? Another world that is, relatively speaking, more hospitable? But not at the surface… rather… someplace higher up in the atmosphere…

A fascinating idea, no? Cloud City was always my favorite location in the original trilogy… wouldn’t it be something to create an analog of that? Aside from the drifting clouds of sulfuric acid, of course, but hey, that’s better than heavy radiation. It amazes me that so much of what filled my imagination as a child is turning out to be… well, at least plausible.

Via Boing Boing, of course.

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Now I Have a Name for It

My friend Karen posted this the other day:

german_untwisted-plot-comfortTrust the Germans to put a (lengthy) name to a nearly ineffable emotional concept. I need to remember this the next time somebody gives me static about how many times I’ve seen the old shows I like instead of constantly seeking out the new…

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Takin’ It Easy

The morning sun is in my eyes, a white glare risen not far above the lavender silhouettes of the Wasatch mountains. Every tree and telephone pole throws a slanting shadow across the road, and the farm stand at the top of the river bottoms is all gold and orange, dried corn stalks and pumpkins shining with dew. On the radio, The Eagles sing about a corner in Winslow, Arizona, and I have a sudden restless impulse to steer onto the southbound freeway ramp and just go.

But no. I can’t. I have places to be, and responsibilities, a commuter train to catch and a PowerPoint slide deck waiting to be proofread…

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“This Is Bingham”

I was never what you’d call a “school spirit” kind of guy. I never went to games of any sort, and I attended pep rallies only with the utmost reluctance, and even then, I made damn sure everyone knew I was too cool for that nonsense by refusing to participate in anything that might be mistaken for actual pep, preferring instead to just slouch in my old army-surplus trenchcoat and knockoff Ray-Bans. (Yeah, this was long before Colombine made that particular ensemble cause to be placed on a security watch list.)

But having a bad attitude when I was seventeen doesn’t mean that I don’t feel sentimental about my old high school now. (Truth is, I did back then, too, I just didn’t want anybody to know it). So I couldn’t help smiling at the video that’s been going around Facebook tonight. It’s a little long — just over ten minutes! — and it’s not really my style of music (it’s apparently based on a song I’ve never heard of, “I Love It” by Icona Pop). But it has an infectious energy, and it provides a nice peek at what my alma mater is looking like like these days:

I have to admit, I don’t see much about the old place that’s still familiar to me. Back in the ’80s, those hallways were carpeted and the lockers were yellow and orange instead of blue (which actually makes more sense, given that the school’s official colors are blue and white). We never had a costumed mascot that I can recall, and we certainly didn’t have a lacrosse team. And what the hell happened to all the books in the library? Times change…

According to the info on YouTube, this video required over 2,200 participants, 23 soloists, 800 balloons, 250 pounds of flour, 200 glow sticks, and a helicopter. A helicopter. Where the hell did the yearbook staff get a helicopter? I was on yearbook in ’87, and we didn’t have a helicopter. Of course, we were just a smallish school in a smallish country town back then; we didn’t have anything.

I liked that the producers of this seemed to give every group, every activity, every club and interest, every corner of the self-contained society that is Bingham High School its own little moment. And they even managed to include some lyrics from the school hymn, which apparently endures even after 60 years. Hey, I may have been too cool to sing it, but I still recognize it!

All in all, a very impressive effort. Go, Miners!

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Very Expensive Souvenirs

When my dad told me he’d heard that the Rolex store in the mall near my office was going to be exhibiting the watch James Cameron took with him to the bottom of the ocean, my first thought was, “So what?”

Don’t misunderstand, I’ve got nothing against Cameron. As I said last year in my blog post about his record-breaking dive, l find him an admirable figure in many ways, in spite of his reputed arrogance. But I didn’t see the point of going into some hoity-toity temple for overpriced baubles where security guards would eyeball me from the moment I crossed the threshold because I’m so obviously not a member of an income bracket that has any business being in a place like that, just so I could torment myself with visions of some rich bastard’s fancy bling that will forever be beyond my financial reach. Not that I have any issues with economic inequality.

But of course, I misunderstood what the object on display actually was. This thing wasn’t Cameron’s personal wristwatch. It was in fact a one-of-a-kind timepiece called the Rolex Deepsea Challenge, which rode on the outside of Cameron’s submersible during its trip seven miles straight down into the abyss. In other words, this watch was subjected to the full hazards of the least accessible, most inhospitable point on the planet Earth: water temperature barely above freezing, and mind-boggling pressure that Cameron measured at 16,285 pounds per square inch. I don’t think it would be an understatement to call this thing a masterpiece of engineering and, well… that’s different from just a bauble, isn’t it? You don’t often get the chance to stand inches away from something that’s been on an adventure like that and come back to tell the tale. So a week ago Monday, the last day this precious artifact was going to be here in Salt Lake City, curiosity grabbed hold of me and I decided on the spur of the moment to take a little detour during my afternoon constitutional from my office on the 13th Floor.

***TEXT MISSING***

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Perspective

I was just on my way out the door for work yesterday when my phone rang. My landline, to be specific. (Yes, I still have a landline. It suits my purposes to do so. Don’t hate.) Figuring that it was most likely one of my parents at that hour, I answered it. A voice I didn’t recognize asked, “Is this the blogger Jason Bennion?”

“Excuse me?”

“Are you the Jason Bennion who writes a blog?”

A little uncertain of where this was going or whether I should answer, I finally said, “Um, yeah, I suppose I am. Who’s this?”

The man on the other end identified himself as the brother of Shane Gillette, then immediately launched into a diatribe about how wrong I’d been to make his brother out to be such a dirtbag, because it just wasn’t true. Shane was a good person, the man asserted, who’d battled demons for years, who’d been up for four days hearing voices and was convinced the cops were chasing him that horrible morning, but he’s taking his medication now and he’s just not the dirtbag I describe, he’s not. The man on the phone sounded very emotional about all of this, and was speaking very rapidly, but he finally gave me an opportunity to confess that I didn’t have the slightest idea what or who he was talking about.

“You were a friend of Julie Jorgenson, weren’t you?” he asked.

Ah. Yes. Now I understood. Julie. My coworker who was killed in a car accident a little over two years ago. This man’s brother — Shane Roy Gillette — was responsible for her death.

The man on the phone continued in the same vein as before, repeating over and over that his brother had been misrepresented by the media, that he’d been out of his head and not high on drugs the morning his pickup truck slammed into the rear of Julie’s car with such terrible force, that he hadn’t even known there was marijuana in the truck and that there’s a difference between the inactive THC found in his bloodstream and active THC (I have no idea if this is correct), and that I’d been wrong to write all those things I’d written. I let him talk, not knowing what else to do or say. The man eventually explained that Shane’s attempts to plea-bargain were being denied, and he — the brother who was talking to me — had been googling for information on the case when something from my blog popped up in his search results. (I’m guessing it was probably this entry, in which I said some very unkind things indeed about Shane Gillette.) The man hadn’t appreciated what he read… understandably so, I have to admit.

He was running out of steam now, talking slower and repeating himself more, and I felt like I had to say something to him. “Look, I wrote those things two years ago,” I began. “I was angry, and I was just going on what I’d read in the news. I hope things turn out for your brother.”

The man apparently had been ready for an argument, had expected me to be more defensive or belligerent or something, because I got the distinct impression that the wind had just fallen out of his sails. He mumbled a suggestion that I ought to take down my blog posts, or edit them, and then he said he’d just had to get all this off his chest. I thanked him for offering his perspective. Then he hung up.

I’ve been thinking about the incident ever since. I’m more than a little shaken that he tracked me down at my home. I’ve never made any effort to conceal my real-world identity or location during my online activities, but I also haven’t put my phone number here on my blog and invited disgruntled readers to call or stop by the house. If I were the paranoid type, I’d be locking my doors, hunkering down behind the couch, and jumping at every shadow that flashes across the window shades. Thankfully, this guy didn’t seem to be threatening me or suggesting he wanted to do violence to me. He was just upset that I’d ripped on his brother. As I said, I understand. If I had a brother and stumbled across some smart-ass blogger calling him dirty names, I’d be upset too. However, the caller also expressed a lot of sympathy for Julie’s family, which helped allay some of my worries that he might be waiting behind a bush somewhere. He’s not lacking in empathy.

And neither am I. So I find myself troubled by how easily I’d overlooked the possibility that Shane Roy Gillette might have a family and people who are hurting for him as much as the people who knew Julie are hurting. That Shane himself might not be a monster, but just a guy with problems who had an accident and now has to live with the consequences. I like to think of myself as such a fair-minded person, a genuine liberal all-people-are-essentially-good bleeding heart… but in Gillette’s case, my sense of empathy totally deserted me.

I don’t mean to trivialize this situation in any way, but I keep thinking of the Star Trek episode “Arena.” If you don’t know it, briefly, it begins with an alien lizard race called the Gorn attacking a Federation outpost for no apparent reason. The Enterprise pursues the Gorn ship, intent on destroying it. But when the two ships pass through an unexplored star system, a third race — the mysterious, god-like Metrons — stops them dead in their tracks and sends Kirk and the Gorn captain to a barren desert environment to fight one-on-one… to the death. Naturally, Kirk eventually gets the best of the Gorn and prepares to do him in, but when he has his knife at the creature’s throat, he has a change of heart. He refuses to kill the alien, conceding that maybe the Gorn had had their reasons for attacking the outpost, that perhaps they’d thought they were defending themselves against intruders. The lesson, of course, is that there are two (or more) sides to every story. It’s all a matter of perspective. And we should be willing to exercise a little mercy in light of that fact. By realizing this before he took the Gorn’s life, Kirk passed a test being conducted by the Metrons to determine just how advanced these two combatant species really were. But of course he passed… he’s the hero. I fear that I failed essentially the same test two years ago.

I’m not going to retract or apologize for anything I said about Shane Gillette in the past. Blogs are essentially a stream of consciousness, and I wrote what I wrote at the time I wrote it. I was angry then, and I see my expression of that anger as an act of honesty. I’m still angry about what happened to Julie. Whether Gillette was high or delusional really makes no difference in the big picture — he shouldn’t have been behind the wheel of that truck, and a beautiful young woman died because he was. But I do regret that in my anger, I caused more hurt to people who already had a boatload of it to deal with. I shall try not to make that mistake in the future.

If nothing else, that phone call was a valuable reminder that words have power, and the online world is not so insulated from the real world as we all like to believe.

 

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The Real Way to Tell Spring Is Coming

It’s got nothing to do with that poor, groggy Pennsylvania rodent that gets dragged out of his cozy den every year and held up in front of a camera, blinking like a video-game junkie emerging from a 36-hour World of Warcraft session. Poor Phil wouldn’t be anywhere near that harsh, brain-piercing daylight if it wasn’t for us impatient bipeds who can’t pay enough attention to the signs all around us and should be obvious if we’d only open our own bleary eyes. Signs such as these:

  • The sad final rind of filthy, gritty, grayish snow has finally melted from that spot on the front lawn that’s always shaded by the front of the house.
  • The kitty boys want to stay outside all day, and most of the night.
  • There’s a tremendous line at the carwash as everybody decides now is the time to hose off a three-month encrustation of road salt.
  • A gleaming yellow-and-white ’57 Chevy Bel Air pulls up next to you at a stoplight. Fifty-seven Bel Airs never have a three-month encrustation of salt on them, because they don’t leave the garage during the salty cold season.
  • You see people wearing shorts at Target. Granted, this is Utah and people here are weird, so you can see that at nearly anytime of the year, but they’re not wearing a parka over their shorts.

But you want to know the real indicator, the bottom-line, surefire, yep-there’s-no-going-back-now portent that we’ve finally broken the frigid back of Old Man Winter and those carefree summer days are right around the corner?

  • You drink your morning coffee to a serenade of about 257 Harley motorcycles rumbling past the house.

After the winter we’ve had, that’s sweeter music than “Moonlight Serenade” was to a 19-year-old private dancing his first dance back home after V-E Day. (Sorry. I’ve been watching a very long TV documentary on World War II lately…)

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Right on the Nailhead

I’ve spent much time over the past few weekends trying to reorganize the dusty stacks of bankers boxes in my basement — the fabled “Bennion Archives” — into something a bit more useful, namely a kind of library, since most of those boxes contained books. And as I’ve gone about the huge task of unpacking the boxes and placing book after book onto cheap, thrift-store shelving, I’ve found myself experiencing successive waves of despair. The whole effort is driving home certain harsh realities that I’ve thought about in passing in recent years, but tried to avoid really confronting. You see, buying a book is an act of optimism in a way, because you anticipate having a future with this object: reading it, absorbing it, thinking about it, possessing it, displaying it, collecting it. It’s much like a first date, when you think about it. And I have gone on many, many first dates in the past 20 years, committed that act of optimism many, many times, because for a long time it brought me great joy to acquire more books. But just as dating begins to wear thin after a while if it never leads to anything deeper, I find the optimism and joy have largely drained out of my relationship with my books. The thing I keep thinking about now that I’m seeing them again, handling them again, is how few of my books I’ve actually read. Even worse, when I consider the ones I have read, I find my memory of them is hazy at best. Oh, I remember them as objects. In many cases, I have bright, shining memories of buying them — the location, the circumstances, who was with me at the time, the joy and rush of finding a book I’d been looking for, or that sounded like something I needed to own.

Something I needed to own. Not something I needed to read. That’s a key observation, isn’t it? But sticking to my point, of the books I have, in fact, read, I find I can’t recall what many of them were even about, beyond a simple premise  and an impression of whether or not I liked them. And that’s not how it used to be for me. I used to have a sharp memory of books I read, and movies I saw, and things I did. Not so much anymore. Now it seems like I’m already forgetting the details as soon as I’ve finished something. And I really hate that. I know my age is a factor in this. I’ve noticed lately that I can’t always find the words I want, or recall where I left my damn cellphone, and that seems perfectly normal for a busy fortysomething who has a lot of mundane demands on his mind… the same problems every fortysomething has, unless they’re the extraordinarily lucky type who have their shit together (I suspect these people are actually mythical). And I’m sure it doesn’t help that I read for a living eight or nine hours a day. There can’t be much focus left over after all that. And of course years of sleep deprivation are probably catching up with me too.

But all this is beside the point. The fact is, my relationship with books — with all the media I used to be so thoroughly immersed in, and so knowledgeable of — has changed. I’ve lost the deepness I once enjoyed, if that makes sense. And yes, it really troubles me. As I look at my library and my DVD collection and the stacks of VHS recordings I made 20 years ago, expecting to catch up someday with shows I didn’t have time to watch then — never imagining that entire decades would pass and I still wouldn’t have caught up with them — I feel overwhelmed. And sad. And more than a little foolish. There’s just too much of it all. I’ve replaced the quality of the experience with the quantity of my collections.

All of which is far more than I intended to write by way of introduction for a quote I ran across today… one of those observations that is so resonant with something you’ve been thinking or feeling, you almost feel a mechanical click somewhere inside your head when you first encounter it. Mr. W.H. Auden knew exactly what I’ve been struggling with as I shelve those books of mine, and mourn the loss of the specialness of books and other media:

“Again, while it is a great blessing that a man no longer has to be rich in order to enjoy the masterpieces of the past, for paperbacks, first-rate color reproductions, and stereo-phonograph records have made them available to all but the very poor, this ease of access, if misused — and we do misuse it — can become a curse. We are all of us tempted to read more books, look at more pictures, listen to more music than we can possibly absorb, and the result of such gluttony is not a cultured mind but a consuming one; what it reads, looks at, listens to is immediately forgotten, leaving no more traces behind than yesterday’s newspaper.”

Secondary Worlds (1967)

Guilty as charged. And yet, I just keep picking up more and more titles, or at least adding them to lists in the hope that I might get to them someday. Ten years ago, I basked in the pleasure of living in a time when pretty much any book or movie or TV show I could think of was — or at least soon would be — so easily available to own forever. What a ridiculous state of affairs, a true embarrassment of riches.

Spock was right. Having a thing is not so pleasing as wanting it.

Hat tip to Andrew Sullivan for sending me down this particular rabbit-hole.

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The Unexpected Poetry of the Spambot

I don’t get a lot of junk email anymore. I guess the Nigerian scammers finally figured out that I don’t accept the logic of sending them money in return for an imaginary fortune, and the bottom has apparently fallen out of the all-natural male-enhancement market. Either that, or I’ve finally got the filters tuned properly. Regardless, my “spam catcher” account — the one I use for commerce and newsletter subscriptions — doesn’t receive a lot of unsolicited traffic anymore. But every once in a while, one lone ninja manages to slip past the defenses in the dead of night and remind me of the weird and wacky (and yet strangely sublime) crap that used to be such a common part of the online experience.

I got one today, for example, that was mostly inscrutable in its randomly generated nonsense text, but it contained a single vibrant line that caught my eye, because it comes so close to sounding like it actually means something:

“Yes, we must rave. I went out for a activate, and it was so individual I longed to shimmer in the classification.”

My first thought was that somebody had programmed a ‘bot to rewrite A Clockwork Orange in the voice of Jack Kerouac. This line dances in my mind, coming achingly near to comprehensibility, and then skating away again like the pretty girl on an ice rink who teases and flirts and never quite lets you touch her as you flail about and grab for the side railing, and curse your clumsiness even as you find you just can’t take your eyes off her tiny little skirt and the way it flutters in the breeze…

Yes… yes, we must rave. It’s so obvious. I, too, long to shimmer…

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