Chewing Raw Grubs with the 'Nutcracker Man'
By Joe Bageant
I spent the middle weekend in April with a group of artists and
thinkers called the April Fools Group. Put together by Brad Blanton,
psychotherapist and creator of "radical honesty" politics and therapy,
the three-day meeting was set on a farm down the Shenandoah Valley amid
the battlefields and rolling countryside of Newmarket, Virginia. Brad,
a world famous redneck headshrinker, had put together old hippies,
theoreticians, musicians, young anarchists, beautiful brilliant women
and aging writers to yap, drink and plot against the Bush
administration. So when I pulled into Brad's driveway to find him and a
fellow named Hank parked in lawn chairs up on the roof with a bottle of
bourbon I knew this thing was off to a good start.
Continue reading "Back to the Ancient Future" »
By Joe Bageant
It was spring 1966 and down at the end of fraternity row in the
exclusive new brick high-rise apartment building, the children of the
rich and the few were partying hard. On the second floor balcony they
socialized, cooked and drank beer with beautiful girls. The building
even had a pool, a rare luxury in those times, and was the kind of
place where only a few high-enders could afford to live while in
school. That day a homeless person, an even rarer thing back then,
shuffled by. Seeing them on the balcony, he asked for food. His
attitude was one of a supplicant at the feet of God: "Pardon me, sirs
..."
Continue reading "The Onion Eater" »
A sordid tale of work release, hyenas and liberal weakness
Raise your glass to the hard working people
Let's drink to the uncounted heads
Let's think of the wavering millions
Who need leaders but get gamblers instead
-- "Salt of the Earth," The Rolling Stones
I stopped into Larry's Gas 'n Grubs for my regular morning commuter
coffee mug refill and lo and be damned! There was my hirsute 300-pound
friend Poot working at the counter. I said, "What the hell are you
doing ringing up my coffee at this crap stand? You're supposed to be a
welder, fat boy!"
Continue reading "Let's Drink to the Slobbering Classes" »
Mr. Bageant,
I just finished your essay, and i wanted to say "thanks" and that I
respect your insight and skillful articulation of it. Your description
of yourself reads like a diary entry I might write in a decade. I'm a
fellow southerner, recently graduated from UGA with a master's in
nonprofit management, which I hoped to use helping some progressive
organization in a green city, but it's slim pickins, and most of the
big NGOs are hollow and sold.
Continue reading "My wife and I cried together, drunk as bluesmen" »
The Wild Palms of Etowah
By Joe Bageant
One mark of our soulless New American Century is the lack of respect
for saintly madmen. By that I mean holy seers of the Blakean-Coleridge
stripe who could be found on America's streets as recently as the hippy
era. The kind of crazy adepts and enlightened iconoclasts honored by
Allen Ginsberg and the beats, holy foolishness in the tradition of
Saint Simeon with the dead dog tied to his waist and throwing nuts at
the congregation, or Tibetan lama myonpas and India's avadhutas.
Perhaps such holy madmen are still out there among the homeless and the
crack whores.
Continue reading "In Praise of Holy Madness" »