![]() | DrumBeat: September 10, 2006 | The Oil Drum | Jack-2 and the Lower Tertiary of the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico | ![]() |
429 comments on DrumBeat: September 11, 2006
Comments can no longer be added to this story.
429 comments on DrumBeat: September 11, 2006
Comments can no longer be added to this story.
Beware email scams!
Beware email scams claiming to be from this site. We do not have any job openings. If anyone contacts you about a job at The Oil Drum, do not reply to them, and definitely do not give them any personal information or send them money. Read more here.
Search The Oil Drum with Google
Recently on TOD:World
TOD:Campfire
- Passive Solar Design Overview – Part 1
- Radical Retrenchment - A Reference Model
- TOD:Campfire RSS feed
TOD:Europe
- Energy Policy: SER-2 [01] Introduction
- The Russian Bear?
- The Permanent Oil Crisis Conference in Amsterdam, January 21 & 22, 2009
TOD:Canada
- In this house, we obey the laws of thermodynamics!
- The Round-Up: October 24, 2008
- Compressed Air Energy Storage - How viable is it?
TOD:Australia/NZ
- The Bullroarer - Friday 9th January 2009
- 2009: Predictions for Australia
- The Bullroarer - Tuesday 6th January 2009
TOD:Net Energy
Blogroll
Energy Sites
- The Coming Global Oil Crisis
- Die Off
- Dry Dipstick
- Energy Bulletin
- From the Wilderness
- Life After the Oil Crash
- Peak Oil Crisis
- Peak Oil News and Message Boards
- Powerswitch
- Rigzone
- Matthew Simmons
- Wolf at the Door
Environment & Sustainability Sites
- The Daily Green
- EcoGeek
- Eco Street
- Green Car Congress
- Green Options
- green.alltop.com
- Gristmill
- RealClimate
- Sustainablog
- Treehugger
- WorldChanging
Blogs
- The Big Picture
- Casaubon's Book
- Cleantech Blog
- Clusterf
k Nation (Jim Kunstler) - The Cost of Energy
- David Strahan
- The Energy Blog
- Entropy Production
- European Tribune
- GraphOilology
- Health After Oil
- jeffvail.net
- Mobjectivist
- Peak Energy (Australia)
- Peak Energy (USA)
- R-Squared
- Resource Insights
Finance & Economics Blogs
- Calculated Risk
- The Crash Course
- Ecological Economics
- Econbrowser
- Environmental Economics
- Infectious Greed
- The Mess That Greenspan Made
- Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
Organizations
“The aim of every political constitution is, or ought to be, first to obtain for rulers men who possess most wisdom to discern, and most virtue to pursue, the common good of the society; and in the next place, to take the most effectual precautions for keeping them virtuous whilst they continue to hold their public trust.”
—James Madison, FEDERALIST #57 (1787)
User login
Contact
- Content: editors at theoildrum dot com
- Tech support: support at theoildrum dot com
Personnel
- Editors: Prof. Goose, Nate Hagens, Gail the Actuary, Heading Out
- DrumBeat Editor: Leanan
- Contributors: ace, Engineer-Poet, jeffvail, JoulesBurn, Khebab, Robert Rapier
- TOD:Local: Glenn
- TOD:Europe: Chris Vernon, Euan Mearns, Francois Cellier, Jerome a Paris, Luís de Sousa, Rembrandt, Rune Likvern, Ugo Bardi
- TOD:Canada: benk, Libelle
- TOD:ANZ: Big Gav, Phil Hart, aeldric
- Emeritus: Stuart Staniford
- Technician: Super G
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.





GAIA Host Collective
"Much of the crisis we face today in oil refining is the result of not building a single new refinery in 28 years - thanks to the radical environmentalist movement. This must change or we will continue to remain subject to a Mideast political and Black Gold stranglehold."
Ok, so step one is the assumption that we have an oil refining "crisis." We'll ignore that this is an unsubstantiated claim and accept him at his word. Step two is the stated cause being the lack of a refinery building program. We'll ignore the gratuitous jab at environmentalists - most of whom would be pleasantly surprised to find they have so much power. Then step three is to conclude that if we don't build refineries we will remain subject to ME "stranglehold" - an undefined term here, but we'll assume he's referring to the book by a similar name.
So: 1) oil refining is in a crisis
2) the crisis is caused by a lack of a refinery building program
3) No refinery building leads to ME stranglehold
Looking at it this way, I'm at a loss as to even how to assess the logic. I could see; 1) there is no refinery building program. 2) therefore there is a refinery crisis. Though this leaves out the intermediate step of - there is a shortage of refining capacity. But at least there is some apparent connection. What is beyond my apparently meager logic skills is figuring out how the lack of refinery building gives the ME stranglehold capabilities. If it really is just a matter of building refineries, how is that the ME's fault? (Oh, that's right, its the fault of us environmentalists).
If logic like this is representative of the mainstream then it is no wonder that we're in trouble.
Peak oil, in part, is where words and reality intersect. Reality wins, every time - words may cause you to look at reality differently, but reality is not interested in how you look at it.
This tactic is also used by the left-wing but in a far more subtle and polished manner.
IMO, Smith truly believes environmentalists are at fault. He is delusional but sincere. Many in Smith's camp have an impenetrable wall of dyslogia that prevents them from grasping reality.
On the other hand, some conservatives like Kevin Phillips are open-minded, trenchant, and present logical points of view. I am non-partisan so I am not defending right-wingers. In fact, I read George Lakoff's works and get what you are saying about framing. It's just that I think it is not wise to paint the right with overly broad brush strokes. Polarization may be good for the elites but it is counterproductive for the rest of us.
I'm not so sure polarization is a bad thing. A real problem in this country are the vast numbers of people in the "middle" who don't vote or are too "busy" to properly inform themselves, as required for a functioning democracy. By their acquiescence they share responsibility for the many horrors being perpetrated by the leadership of this country.
Remember the old quote that appears sometimes at the top of this page? The public has two modes, complacency and panic.
I think to many people extrapolate the complacency far into the downcurve of oil depletion. The really interesting time cmoes after the wake-up call.
Where I am, jobs are disappearing, house prices are falling, and people are on the verge of panic. Every time the wind blows from the east, you can smell that fear sweat that Don wrote about.
One would assume construction and home refinance.
I suspect that some parts of the country are seeing a good and "strong" economy, like in post-Katrina land where construction workers are probably swamped with repair jobs. Also in the military-industrial complex, the Iraq war is just one that keeps giving and giving. (Gee, I wonder who is going to be paying and paying for that one? Let the good times roll.)
The elephant in the living room has to be new homes and mortgage financing. As long as new home sales kept going up and up; meaning continued sales of appliances: refrigerators, washers, garage door openers, etc. and continued good times for construction crews and strong numbers for lumber, wall boards, etc.; then a lot of people were still content. I guess the game plan was to keep it going until right after Novemeber 2006 (US elections). But the system is already showing signs of strain and cracks in the dam.
I dread what comes next. (Le Deluge as Louis the XIV might say. Or who gives a flying f*** as Bush II might say, it ain't on my watch.)
That is difficult to ascertain given that rational and fair-minded conservatives are persona-non-grata in the RNC. The RNC is dominated by neoconservatives and that is a whole different animal than a true conservative. I spoke at length with many conservatives who are appalled at the reckless behavior of the ruling Republicans who inflate the deficit leaving a mess for future generations and also those in their party who care nothing for the environment. These same conservatives are also very angry at the loss of civil liberties stemming from the Patriot Act. They see the hypocrisy of their party but are unable to effect change since the ruling elite only listen to the neocon monied interests.
As a former centrist Dem I had a similar frustration at the lip service the Dem elite have given about responsible govt and fighting for the little guy, yet their actions are always conflicted and ineffectual.
My frustration led me to explore the nature of our political system in depth. I concluded what many others have - that the ruling elite of both parties present a facade of choice when in reality they are controlled by the same financial elite cabal. I had come to this conclusion before I understood peak oil and also before I read books like Ruppert's Crossing the Rubicon and these latter elements just became the icing on the cake.
Polarization is not so great when it distracts the already zombie-like electorate from getting a handle on the really important issues and the MSM is all too happy the fan polarization flames.
I sympathize with your view on the two parties. Since WWII both parties have been focused on a single goal: maintaining the disparity of wealth and power "enjoyed" by Americans at the expense of the rest of the world.
IMO Democrats are worse than Republicans because Dems pretend to be "for" the working guy and the middle class. At least Republicans are up front about protecting their power and wealth.
Republicans wouldn't have a chance of getting elected if they said what they really stood for. They need the religious zealots and moderately well-to-do middle class, as well as small business voters. But the reality is they do nothing for those groups-- nothing positive anyway-- besides offer lip service and hand-me-down scraps.
In my opinion Republicans are much more crass when it comes to their real agenda compared to their claimed agenda.
Republicans don't need any of these splinter groups per se. The real strength of Republicans comes from the right wing Think Tanks.
It is the Think Tanks who tell Republican strategists (i.e. Karl Rove) what mental manipulations will work this week and what won't (i.e. Connect with the lizard brains of those who are easily terrorized by an unknown "those who hate our freedoms"). Note last week's word of the week: Islamo-facists.
Thought Control is Not China's Alone
America has thought control tanks as well --Invisible Hand kind
Absolutely! As you must know, the Neocons are Straussian adherents who believe it is necessary to use religion to control the masses. As followers of Leo Strauss, the neocons are fascists in the Mussolini tradition of merging state and corporate power. Strauss' philosophy is described in the link below:
http://www.alternet.org/story/15935/
However, don't think the emergence of such fascism and corruption began just with the current administration, they just took it to new extremes. Catherine Austin Fitts, former Asst Sec of Housing, wrote a phenomenal expose on the connection of corrupt business practices and the highest levels of govt. It's a long article, but well worth reading.
http://www.dunwalke.com/introduction.htm
The origins of corruption of our govt by the financial elite can be traced back to the creation of the Federal Reserve. I read numerous books on the topic, but as a primer you can check out a link a TOD blogger provided in today's Drumbeat.
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/reserve.htm
"They're rarely upfront about their real agenda which is helping out the ultra wealthy and extremely large business at the expense of everyone else."
One would have to be extremely obtuse not see what their true agenda is. I think rank and file Americans can see through the veneer, but too many are caught up in the confusing media frenzy that directs them to focus on more emotive issues and hence they are reluctant to make class warfare their top issue.
My advice is to keep researching, keep digging, follow the breadcrumbs and you will discover there is much more to our 2-party system than meets the eye.
The Creature from Jekyll Island
Where does money come from? Where does it go? Who makes it? The money magicians' secrets are unveiled. We get a close look at their mirrors and smoke machines, their pulleys, cogs, and wheels that create the grand illusion called money.
http://www.realityzone.com/creature.html
I would also suggest reading Cathrine Fitts articles as you pointed out.
Follow the Money !!!
In 2008 there is a very good chance that Hiliary will take the office of POTUS. At least TPTB seem to have tired of the NeoCons' bungling and are ready for a regime change. Such an outcome will give Americans a chance to participate in a succession of alternating dynasties:
George I (H.W), B. Clinton, George II (W), H. Clinton, and possible George III (P)- Jeb's son.
"In 2008 there is a very good chance that Hiliary will take the office of POTUS. At least TPTB seem to have tired of the NeoCons' bungling and are ready for a regime change."
The sad thing is that the above would NOT be a Regime change. They are both two different sides of the same coin.
Gambino's or the Genovese's they are BOTH mafia.
As a tiny example, Read this one and see how the Clintons run in the same circles as the Bush's.
Follow the Money.
Monsanto buys 'Terminator' seeds company
http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2006/0828.html
One more;
Remember Iran-Contra? Do a google on
'Mena mena airport iran contra clinton'
and read some of what you find.
Like this one.(read 4 or 5 before making up your mind)
http://www.ncoic.com/clinton.htm
Why do you think Clinton and Bush Sr. were so buddy buddy the last few years? It goes way back.
If you think an Independent Thinker could get into the Whitehouse without being "Wellstoned" (yes it now a verb in DC circles) you haven't been reading enough.
Do your homework.
P.S. Kerry's job was just to get "Close" enough that the populace Believed they had fair elections. He wouldn't have(and didn't) dare to look into Ohio's voting scandal.
http://www.dunwalke.com/introduction.htm
Honestly, if you do the research you will recognize that this is the tip of the iceberg.
Spending hours reading about and debating the minutiae of peak oil is futile if you don't understand the political and financial dynamics that fostered the unsustainable and reckless system that exacerbate the problems we face.
We are inundated with so much information every day that it is often difficult to filter out the noise.
My personal case in point for straining to see the forest for the trees is related to my work in medical research. I spent so much time studying science and medicine and every day reading journal articles or attending seminars that I found it difficult making the time to investigate why the U.S. health care system was so dysfunctional, wasteful, and inefficient - yet I was a part of that system. When I finally had a chance to take some courses in public health and preventive medicine and also study health care economics in some detail I began to see that the very nature of the system itself and in particular how the financial interests in the system operated was the source of dysfunction. I understood that the cure could never come in a series of reforms of various policies or the addition of more subsidies. IMO, the two glaring problems were a total lack of transparency and an ideology based not optimal health results but on a technophile treatment agenda (both meds and machines).
In my last position I saw a microcosm of the system Fitts describes - when the private sector begins feeding off the public sector like a tick. My former supervisor wore various hats as VP and the Chief of Medicine of a world renowned private research hospital, a dean of the medical school, and the CEO of a biotech company. He used his role as our director to use NIH grants to perform research on the drugs his company was developing. The NIH grants covered salaries and capital equipment. He had a few dozen medical scientists (MDs, PhDs, and a few MD-PhDs) working to test the drugs his company was developing. These researchers all received their salaries via state or federal tax dollars. Needless to say, I found the arrangement distasteful.
While my last observation may not be very commonplace in research, the general trend in medicine increasingly is corruption of medical science by monied interests to a degree not grasped by the general public or even many in the health care industry. The FDA is no longer even remotely connected to patient safety, it is little more than an arm of Big Pharma. Such is the evolution of the larger system.
You're right. Looks like we are already on the same page.
Have you done any in depth reading about the Trilateralists? The Carter admin was stacked with them. There is a well researched book called Trilateralists Over Washington.
Of course, there are many other elite groups working under the radar but the MSM never reports on their activities.
That ALONE should be a clear signal that the rest of us are outside the loop.
Another oddities that should send warning signals, besides (as you point out) the cozy relationship between Bush Sr. and B. Clinton, include other unusual pairings such as Kerry and Heinz (late husband a Republican and she switched parties right before Kerry threw his hat in the ring for POTUS). The classic example, and perhaps most bizarre is James Carville and his wife Mary Matalin.
That last pairing officially put American pseudo-bi-partisan politics into the realm of Theatre of the Absurd.
Too bad I'm not good at graphics because photos of these two nutcases would make for a good visual.
No the amazing thing is not the Pronouncements, it is that the American people have absolutely no reasoning skills.
You discribe the ability of the writers(and MSM) to set the Postulates of the theorm, and what is soooo sad is that most people take the postulates as "Given".
Have you stopped beating your wife yet?
If you accept the premise of the statement, you are stuck with answering it.
Well, What would you do if you were in a dark alley, in a bad section of town, no one around, and a guy with a gun asks for your money.
Both of the above are better known examples of the issue you are pointing out.
PEOPLE ACCEPT THE PREMISES OF MSM's statements in one swallow.
"If logic like this is representative of the mainstream then it is no wonder that we're in trouble. "
It is representative of MSM because they know it works, and that the Reasoning Skills of their consumers have been completely distroyed. Thank in part the Education system that is designed to raise good WORKERS not good THINKERS.
Remember: IRAQ = Al-Qaida = 911
Osama Bin Forgotten who???
We are toast.
You made me laugh even though what you were talking about is so very sad. A nice balance. I tend not to ascribe quite as much willful malice to the MSM and their keepers. My experience has been that they are true believers and are not so much manipulating as proselytizing. Does GW really think Iraq was involved in 9/11? Yup, I think so. But that doesn't change the end result, does it.
As for toast, I believe it is western civilization that is toast. Unfortunately, its collapse is going to take an awful lot of lives.
Does LensCrafters sell the type of rose-colored glasses you're wearing?
The IQs of the elite didn't take a precipitous drop and GW knows Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11.
You should study the history of the geopolitics of oil. The importance of energy sources for economic and national security has ALWAYS been the biggest blip on the govt elites' radar. Read Brzezinski's book The Grand Chessboard, study analyses put out by PNAC before 9/11, or take a look at Crossing the Rubicon and you will recognize that securing the world major oil reserves was a priority for Neocons (and the elite in general) for many years. What do you suppose Cheney's energy task force was discussing before 9/11 and what were they doing with maps of ME oil in those meetings? Of course, we won't know for certain because the Supreme Court ruled in Cheney's favor.
"But that doesn't change the end result, does it."
It DOES make a difference if the electorate is being manipulated through various sources of propaganda. It is nearly impossible to effect change when the underlying cause (in this case deliberate misinformation) is unknown.
Some form of collapse is inevitable, but adopting a sense of bewilderment and defeatism that will permit collapse to take its worst possible form is irresponsible.
As for my glasses, most folks here know what color they are and few would suggest they are rose.
But, then, you seem to have made a misreading of what I was saying by putting some of your own expectations into it. Did I say that GW had a low IQ? Do you know that I accept that argument? No, you couldn't know that because it's not the case. But you blundered on making assumptions and you know what happens when you do that.
You seem to think I was suggesting that GW believed that Iraq helped plan or somehow participated in the 9/11 attacks. That would be silly. But does he believe that they (Iraq, terrorism, 9/11, islamic fascism, etc.) are all related, connected? He's been spending the last two weeks telling us so at every turn.
As for what I should study. Let's just say that I was doing post graduate work in the same department that Brzezinski taught in after he left public service. You make assumptions about my education that demonstrate 1)you know nothing about me and 2)demonstrate that you have a lot of education to go yourself.
Your take on the "manipulation" of the eloctorate is charmingly naive. The belief in the "man behind the curtain" is always amusing. But there are aspects of our culture and political system far more influential than a few "powerful" men in "smoke-filled backrooms."
I'd be happy to discuss how I see these things working. But please don't come in here telling me to go read a couple of books that influenced you. It would be the equivalent of me telling you what medical texts you should read to "really" understand your field.
It looks like you do me the same injustice that you claim I have done to you by assigning me views that I don't have. I don't naively believe in "powerful men in smoke-filled rooms" or the "man behind the curtain" as in a handful of people running the world. I do recognize that coalitions of monied interests have corrupted our govt. Exactly how these monied interests interact with each other is what needs to be brought into focus and THAT is what never gets clearly reported in our media.
If you have a background in pol sci it is hard to imagine that you wouldn't appreciate the inherent problems a continually centralizing economic and political force presents to represenative govt. I wonder if you are too close to the fine details of social or economic theories to empathize with the concerns an ordinary citizen has on this topic. Not saying you don't have the empathy but my larger point on today's threads was the problem that surfaces when professionals are too caught up in the fine details of their work to see things on a larger scale - a matter of perspective.
BTW, the reading recommendations were not condenscension, they were meant to be helpful. I can't tell you how many books and articles I have read from recommendations coming out of TOD and from friends interested in social and political issues. I was always grateful for the overtures to share knowledge.
This is precisely what I was suggesting is the oversimplification. This is the men in smoke-filled back rooms. My suggestion is to step back yet again. Why are these men (and a few women) in the position to influence our government? Why is our government susceptible to them? But even more importantly, what place do these people have in our culture? How is it that they (and their money) are influential in our broader society? Or turn that around, why does our society raise people with wealth into positions of influence? Better yet, what do we learn about our soceity and culture by understanding such people?
Let's face it, if Warren Buffet stood up tomorrow and said we should all stop pursuing wealth, should stop driving, become vegetarion, move to a farm and learn organic gardening, etc., what do you think would happen? Likely his children would have him committed. While people may be the local actor, the carrier of culture, so to speak, the individual only has that power to affect change that is available to them from where they stand in that culture.
"If you have a background in pol sci it is hard to imagine that you wouldn't appreciate the inherent problems a continually centralizing economic and political force presents to represenative govt."
I've met lots of political scientists who see no contradiction between centralized economics and institutions and representative gov't. Indeed, one of my best teachers was such a person (Saul Mendlovitz), he and others believe our best chance to avoid the woest of corporatist control of the planet comes in the shape of a representative world government. I disagree with them, though.
Indeed, your statement attributing those certain beliefs to me is somewhat baffling. I don't see where you are drawing it from. And clearly you haven't read other posts of mine where I make it clear that I not only believe that the current economic system will collapse, but believe that collapse is the best thing that can happen to us. What I actually see happening is the collapse of western civilization - not just the economy. We may have contributed some excellent ideas and institutions to the world, but I believe that we have gone over into excess. We are, in the construction of Toynbee, idolizing an ephemeral self and are no longer capable of reacting to the changes in our world in any manner other than we have in the past. (Indeed, this is precisely why one of the worst aspects of globalization is the concurrent homogenization of our lives.) This inability to respond with new social ideas, institutions and ways of living will condemn us to failure. What will make this collapse so utterly tragic is that western civilization has spread into every corner of the planet. The economic system you are concerned about being too centralized is the economic system of the western civilization, carried out to its illogical extreme.
Ok, I'd better bring this to a close. I'll check back on this thread occassionally to see if you'd like to continue this discussion. Otherwise, I'm sure we'll have chances to exchange barbs in other threads ;-)
On this commemeration day for the 10-1/10+1 event,
I think it behooves us at TOD to explore again the concept of cognitive disassociation.
Why do so many people "think" or fail to think in the way they do? In the way we do?
Why can they not come to grasp the Peak Oil idea and what it means?
On 9/10/2001 Americans believed that we were the most powerful, smartest people on Earth. If not Al Gore alone, then "we" had invented The Internet. We had invented the "New Economy". Prosperity was everywhere. Our non-negotiable way of life was spreading out like a good virus to conquer the whole world, to Globalize it, and to prove once and for all that this indeed was the "American Century". Pax America had begun and would last for 1000 years if not longer. Ronald Reagan had been so right and all the doomsters had been wrong --101% wrong. The Russian Evil Empire had been vaquished by our brilliant, though ficticious, Pebbles. We Americans were invincible and clearly God's chosen ones.
Then the 10-1/10+1 event happened.
The reality of it sent messages we dared not utter in open forums:
- "They" had outwitted us. Ergo we were not the most ingenius peoples on Earth. We were not as smart and powerful as we have deceived ourselves into believing.
- Our advanced technologies had made us vulnerable. (Who in their wildest dreams would have thunk that commercial jet aircraft could be turned into weapons agianst their own masters? --Please don't answer that with the hindsight knowledge that there were Cassandras in our vast Empire already screaming about the dangers and that the Empire chose to ignore the doom sayers. The point here is cognitive dissonance and not that "nobody could have dreamed of it".)
- We were no longer special. Up until 9/11 we Americans could argue to ourselves that we were unlike any other nation on Earth. We were special. Even though bad things had happened everywhere else (i.e. Germany under Hitler, Russia under Stalin, China under Mao Tsetung, Cambodia under the Kemer Rouge, etc., etc.), "it" the bad thing would never, could never, happen here.
Now in the gloomy aftershadows of 9/11, along come these Peak Oil doomsters, out to attack even more of our self-evident truths:Poem by Bob Dylan
--------------------
Stay in line. stay in step. people
are afraid of someone who is not
in step with them. it makes them
look foolish t' themselves for
being in step. it might even
cross their minds that they themselves
are in the wrong step.
do not run nor cross the red line. if you go
too far out in any direction, they
will lose sight of you. they'll feel
threatened. thinking that they are
not a part of something that they
saw go past them, they'll feel
something's going on up there that
they don't know about.
revenge will set in. they will start thinking
of how t' get rid of you. act
mannerly towards them. if you don't,
they will take it personal. as you
come directly in contact face t' face
do not make it a secret of how
much you need them.
if they sense that you have no need for them,
the first thing they will do is
try t' make you need them. if
this doesn't work, they will tell
you of how much they don't need
you. if you do not show any sadness
at a remark such as this, they
will immediately tell other people
of how much they don't need you.
your name will begin t' come up
in circles where people gather
to tell about all the people they
don't need. you will begin t' get
famous this way. this, though, will
only get the people who you don't need
in the first place
all the more madder.
you will become a whole topic of conversation.
needless t' say, these people
who don't need you will start
hating themselves for needing t' talk
about you. then you yourself will
start hating yourself for causing so
much hate. as you can see, it will
all end in one great gunburst.
never trust a cop in a raincoat.
when asked t' define yourself exactly,
say you are an exact mathematician.
do not say or do anything that
he who standing in front of you
watching cannot understand, he will
feel you know something he
doesn't. he will react with blinding
speed and write your name down.
talk on his terms. if his terms
are old-fashioned an' you've
passed that stage all the more easier
t' get back there. say what he
can understand clearly. say it simple
t' keep your tongue out of your
cheek. after he hears you, he can
label you good or bad. anyone will
do. t' some people, there is only
good an' bad. in any case, it will
make him feel somewhat important.
it is better t' stay away from
these people......
It has nothing to do with the conversation, but it came to mind.
John Carr