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Hello, I’m writing to you from the place where I sit atop Eric’s kidneys. I am Eric’s adrenal gland, and I account for the stimulation of certain hormones and neurotransmitters in his body.

I’m addressing you directly because I sometimes feel like my function and my role in Eric’s life is misunderstood. Sometimes, I’d even say people are trying to talk to Eric when I’m pretty sure they are talking to me, and vice versa. This gets to be pretty confusing, so I thought I’d take the opportunity to clear the air while Eric is sleeping.

I’m a fight-or-flight kind of gland. I make no bones. Eric might like to sit down with you and have a nice discussion—debate with you about aesthetics and politics over a brandy cordial or a cheese flight—but I, the adrenal gland, have nothing to do with that. I’m really a very simple kind of organism. All I pretty much ever want to do with you is have a fight or run away.

You see, I respond to stress. There are a whole lot of funny sounding chemicals involved in this, but suffice it to say that whenever there’s a real threat, I take over. I’m kind of like Kevin Costner in that movie The Bodyguard. Eric may think he’s in charge, but that’s just arrogance, mainly because of certain other organs in his body, and I won’t say them name. I don’t brag about what I do. I’m a gland of few words, and when it’s time to fight or flee the scene, I’m the guy you want to talk to, not Eric or his hypothalamus.

Sure, you say, Eric often writes about philosophy, the arts, finance and politics, and sometimes what he writes is nuanced and refined and involves logic and counter-intuitive arguments. Again, I’ve got no time for that. I’m a straight talker and don’t enjoy hobnobbing with a bunch of effete ponces.

The other day, for example, somebody came up and asked me, “Hey, adrenal gland, don’t you think that this bill in the U.S. Senate is necessary to give more people health insurance?”

“You mother fucker!” I screamed, “I’m going to bash your head in with a baseball bat.”

So I guess you’d say my view of life is simple, right? But let’s look at another example.

The other day a woman came up to me and said, “Look, Obama’s tax plan will harm small businesses, the ones who really drive this country’s economy.”

Now this was a very different case, because this woman knew karate. So after she made her point about economic stimulus, I quickly turned on my heel.

“Fuck you, you castrating devil bitch harpy!” I screamed as I ran away down the street toward the river. “You can’t catch me.”

Now as far as I know, this woman was making an excellent point. But the bottom line was, she represented a direct threat and source of stress that would impair Eric’s ability to store energy and recuperate and repair. It’s nothing personal. It’s just my function.

I even have moments where I can’t make up my mind.

“We need to tax the rich more,” someone told me recently.

“I’m going to kick your mother fucking ass,” I said. “No, wait … I’m going to run away! No! No! … I’m going to kick your ass.”

Of course, there are lots of times when I have nothing to say at all. Like when someone is admiring my shirt or asking me to go see a Fassbinder movie. Like I said, I’m a steak-and-potatoes kind of gland, and if I’m not fighting or running away, I’m really at a loss.

There is a proverb that says a fox knows many tricks and a hedgehog only one. But I am an adrenal gland, and I know exactly two: throw down or bug out. Fist city or Splitsville.

I’m not into arguments about right or wrong, what’s fair, who did what to whom, or how much money you owe me. I’ve got a very simple view of life. Like Ronald Reagan. Also, I am much bigger relative to body weight than I should be for evolutionary reasons, which not only means that I’m important to you, but also that you’re likely going to be doing what I want quite a bit of the time. You might not know this, but I swell up in the resistance stage, and even if you got rid of one half of me, the other half would blow up, like in The Blob, and take over. This is called hypertrophy, and I don’t want to bore you with the science, but it basically means I’m one star-shaped endocrine gland with whom a person should not ever fuck.

Sometimes Eric tells me, “Adrenal gland, don’t you see how the world couldn’t work if everybody were like you all the time?”

Of course, it’s like he’s talking to a wall. Sure, call it obstinacy on my part. But I know in his heart, Eric wouldn’t have me any other way. One day he’ll be running from muggers screaming like a little girl to protect himself, and he’ll thank me. Or maybe, for reasons I can’t fathom, he’ll be engaging in hand-to-hand mortal combat with a Mexican drug lord in Tijuana. He’ll thank me then, too. Some days, I know Eric better than he knows himself. That’s just the life of a gland.

I hope this has helped all of you clear up some of the confusion.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to run away from you because you represent a direct threat to my security and other bodily housekeeping functions.

Signed,

Eric’s Adrenal Gland

EKG, Mister?

Don’t worry; we’re gouging the

Insurers for it

***

No insurance, dudes?

No problem! Just hit all the

Emergency rooms!

***

Michelle Obama’s

Hospital turned away poor

Those “bleeders” come first.

***

“Socialism” is

My S&M safe word–stops

All thoughts and progress

***

GOP says new

bill will outlaw private health

coverage, Jesus

***

They’re off writing their

own universal health care

bill. Not really, though.

***

F-22 planes

Fly proudly through the sky. Oh!

We’re not using them?

***

Maybe we can pay

For health care with these planes we

Aren’t using? Nahhh! Pffff!

***

A trillion dollars

In 10 years? Huge Fed waste! Best

Give it to CIGNA

***

“Bipartisanship”

is too hard for the health bill;

And for this haiku

***

“Sotomayor”? Ugh!

“Identity politics”?

Fuhgeddaboutit!

***

How can I write a

Haiku with these big words? Thumbs

down, Judge Sonia!

***

Henry Louis Gates

Renowned scholar; teacher; wears

handcuffs in Cambridge

***

Gates broke into his

own house; you can’t do that when

you’re black, Professor!

Stephanie and I have just released Episode 15 of “The Retributioners.” This one is titled “Debasing April,” and in it, Stephanie really, really, really, really wants to give her former colleague April a good job reference. You can watch it here or on our site at http://www.theretributioners.tv.

Stephanie and I are also excited because we have expanded our Web page and added more content. You will now be able to read my blog from the site, as well as link to other Web shows and our friends’ blogs. These include “Fool’s Errand” by Gene Justice (a blog about poetry, literature, politics and a lot of other good stuff) and “Bartography” by my friend Chris Barton (who focuses mostly on children’s and young adult literature). Please go and check out our updated site and rediscover it for the very first time.

From The Periodical, Really True Crime Magazine

By Blaine Dubrowski

As you may or may not know, I am a fan of hard-boiled crime fiction, and for the longest time I’ve been trying to ensnare reclusive crime fiction writer Mason R. Hibbert into a sit-down interview where I can plumb the depths of his dark soul. Hibbert, as you may know, has written 98 dime store pulp novels, as well as his share of penny dreadfuls. His work has been informed not only by the world of thieves, grifters, whores, lowlifes and cops on the take, but also by a sense of deep-seated cynical outlook best encapsulated by the heroine in 40 of his novels, the gum-smacking, crack-smoking private detective Jayne Druthers: “Nature hates us,” Jayne says. “That’s why I live in a city.”

Over 20 years, we’ve seen the seamy underbelly of Jayne’s world, whether it’s her delivering a mulatto baby in Hawaii with a Nazi war criminal on the lam or strangling a chicken in Utah to save its soul. And don’t ever call Jayne “Miz.” “I’m Mrs. Druthers, after my husband Ed, who was killed in the war,” she says. “Don’t ever disrespect Eddie with that feminist shit or I’ll shoot you in the carotid artery and the day you stop bleeding will be the day you die.”

Jayne is the type who prefers leather trench coats, bright red lipstick, a pack of Camels, bright white fish net stockings. Also, she hates pretense. One of my favorite scenes is when Jayne is enjoying her favorite show, “My Mother The Car,” when a man staggers to her doorstep and asks her to kill him so his family will get the insurance. Jayne says she’s up for it until he offhandedly uses a polysyllabic word.

“I ain’t got no use for a big vocabulary,” Jayne says. “So I ain’t killing you. I hope you live longer and suffer a bit more. Get out of my office.”

Of course, Mason R. Hibbert’s own history is a bit shadowy. The legend, well cultivated by him, is that either his entire family was wiped out by a gang of thieves in the 1930s or they are all still alive and quite comfortably sitting on the board of Boeing Aircraft. Because of my need to get to the bottom of his mystery, I tracked him from the diners of Vermont to the rathskellers of Boston to a Wal-Mart in Topeka, Kansas. When I asked the locals about him, every answer was the same: “Who in the hell is Mason R. Hibbert? Are you going to buy something or do I gotta call security?”

I got a line from his fourth wife Esther, a short-haired gamine in a stevedore shirt and cigarette pants who lived in Hoboken, N.J.

“You want to talk to Mason?” she said. “That’s a tickle. If you want his number I want some folding lettuce. A couple of G’s should do it.”

So I finally tracked him down at the dog races in Miami, Florida. This is our interview:

RTC Magazine: Mr. Hibbert, it’s really an honor to meet you.

MH: I don’t know who in the hell you are, but you’ve got a lot of nerve coming here. You have five seconds to get away from me or I’m going to tear your lungs out.

RTC: I’ve always wanted to know how you came up with the idea for Jayne Druthers. Was she based in part on someone you knew? Perhaps one of your four ex-wives. Some have suggested she’s based on your mother.

MH: Get the hell out of here before I pop out your eyeballs and stomp on them.

RTC: There are many apocryphal stories about you. One says you hitchhiked to Belize and wrote your 16th novel, “My Iron Lung Breathes Mustard Gas,” while sitting holed up in a tiny bathroom for three days with nothing to eat after your third divorce. Is that true?

MH: I take your calumny and I hand it back to you, you cack-handed potato eater. I spit in your navel.

RTC: Another story about you, of course, is that your first writing partner died of either a suicide or autoerotic asphyxiation or brain cancer. Of course, what I love about your poem, “Autumn Leaves Don’t Know My Pain,” is your assertion in it that all three things could conceivably be true. Such is the absurdity of life, right?

MH: You have as much chin as my dachshund, you chinless wonder. I oughta dump you in Biscayne Bay after putting you in a dress.

RTC: It’s 1974. Your second wife Nora’s first husband, a mafia guy, arrives at your door with five mooks, all of them carrying Nagant pistols. You’re in your underwear. What did you do?

MH: That never happened. I don’t know what you’re talking about. You know, you’re a real wet smack, Jackson.

RTC: It’s 1975. You’re hitchhiking to Alaska to write your weirdest Jayne book, “Strung Out in Nome.” Here, Jayne goes through a strange experience after a couple of hippies give her a tab of acid. She loses herself. She starts to question who she ever was or if anything is real.

MH: I’m shaving points on my dog, “Luck be a Doggie,” and you’re ruining it Roscoe. Why don’t you make like an egg and scramble.

RTC: She meets Eddie in heaven and he says, “What are you doing here? We saw each other enough in life. Geddout of here?” She takes in a young black kid and becomes his mother and says, “This is it. This is life. It’s to give of yourself only in the moment and not be bitter.” Then the drugs wear off, and she goes back to Newark, and it’s like the whole thing never happened, and she’s the same tough talking bitch dame she was before. Nothing was learned. There was no redemption. The end.

MH: Shit! My dog lost.

RTC: I’ve got to tell you, Mr. Hibbert. After 20 years of following Jayne, your readers and I want to know: What was that about? Why did you give Jayne all the knowledge of the Gods, only to have her go back home and forget it all and pretend like none of it happened? Why’d you betray your readers’ trust like that? Why, Mr. Hibbert, why?

MH: Look, you, you come here and ask me to explain things and make things all nice and tidy. I don’t have to explain myself to you. I wrote a few books a while back and here you are and you want your life explained. Nothing I could say about art or books or life would ever mean anything, which is why I have no listed address or license plate. You want a savior? Get your queer ass to church.

That was pretty much the end of our interview, except that I didn’t really let the whole Alaska book go, and, well, I followed him to a bar and we continued to argue and then, well, dear reader, I’m ashamed to say that I ended up killing Mr. Hibbert with a crow bar. It’s not really how I planned the interview to end, but I’ve got to say, it provided a thrilling end to his life and to this article, and if I’m off to jail for the sake of art, so be it.

I hope to be writing my next article for this periodical from a Dade County jail cell, where I’m already starting an epistolary exchange with Tom Wolfe. But I leave you with this last quote from Mason R. Hibbert’s book, “The Diadem of Despair,” in a scene where Jayne Druthers is squaring off against a corrupt judge.

“Don’t be mistaken, judge,” says Jayne, “I’m about to put a couple of dum-dums in your belly. But before I do, I want a kiss.”

“Why?” the judge asks.

“Just to remind me how we’re both corrupt.”

What are we really doing that we don’t put on Twitter?

–*Henry just ate peanut butter. I was too lazy to make an egg.

–*Marcia got up late. Was dreaming of doing the dishes.

–*Joel’s got a bit of a chub. Don’t know why. It’s 9:30 in the morning.

–*William went to work but mostly goofed around watching Internet porn.

–*Harry just got roped into doing one of those things to see who’s searching for me on the Internet. Didn’t work. Feel stupid now.

–*Dean grabbed wife’s boob. She kept reading newspaper.

–*Faye heard a friend start to talk about the stimulus package. I walked away before he and this other guy realized I didn’t know anything about it.

–*Kathy signed a birthday card for somebody I don’t know. Said, “Congratulations.” Feel like a big phony.

–*john killed a bug.

–*Janet just took the most amazing dump.

–*Peter yelled at the Verizon woman until she took a charge off. Feel like a winner.

–*Somebody at work corrected my pronunciation of the word “Montpelier.” I’d like to reach up into his asshole and pull his tongue out backwards.

–*Trying to smile my way through a conversation about the weather with my neighbor. Pinhead.

–*Beatrix got stoned in the park with my friends listening to the symphony. Crushed glasses.

–*Jake is just repeating the same left-wing stuff my dad says. Feel kind of lost without it.

What apocryphal stories about the current health care reform bills in Congress are being floated by opponents in the insurance industry?

–*The current bill will cause nine months of waiting to see your GP

–*It will make all private health insurance illegal.

–*Doctors will be paid from a single payer plan with a fixed fee that will discourage financial incentives for physicians–when in fact, a capitalist system that commoditizes their services and pushes their fees down naturally through market mechanisms is a much more American way for them to go down the toilet.

–*The bill will force seniors to eat each other in a horrible Malthusian game of survival of the fittest.

–*The regional quality of care will shift so that meth labs, which once only exploded in Oklahoma, will now explode everywhere.

–*You will no longer be able to afford stirrups but will have to put your ankles on the OB-GYN’s shoulders.

–*It will give everybody AIDS.

–*Poor people have scabs.

–*The bill has already killed 50,000 people without even being enrolled.

–*The Hindenburg has just crashed! Oh the humanity!

–*The health care bill will make hillbillies play banjo and fuck each other up the ass.

–*It means the French have finally won.

–*Universal health care is only something Japs would do.

–*If this bill passes, I, the executive of a big insurance company, will no longer be made love to by my wife or my favorite whore.

–*If the word “bailout,” “socialism” “jihad” and “cow rape” scare you, well then you should realize that all of those words appear in the health care bill.

New York, NY (API) Sheldon Wainwright III, 80-year-old wealthy scion of a large industrial-logistics fortune and vehement opponent of the so-called “death tax,” said Friday that he’s leaving his entire net worth, valued at $130 million, to multiple charities, the Episcopal Church, a stripper and his dog, and not to his “worthless” children his attorneys reported.

“The estate tax is an abomination,” Wainwright is reported to have said in a statement made through his attorneys. “It’s taxing a person’s dollar of earnings twice as it tries to circulate. It’s just wrong.

“But don’t get me wrong: I’m not giving those little bastards, my children Reginald, Littleton, Brooks, Mercedes and Reese, one cent of my money because they are all ingrates and s***-for-brains who have squandered their trusts and my good name in various displays of profligate dissolution.”

“They’re disinherited,” he said. “Screw ’em.”

Littleton said his father had been a staunch estate tax opponent all his life.

“Dad said that a person’s wealth should be a legacy for his children … or, if you don’t like your children, for the bimbo at the strip club outside Houston.”

Wainwright said that the most basic tenet of wealth preservation was that people save and invest so they can pass money on. “The estate tax penalizes such good people and robs them of those incentives for small business investment and other things that are their legacy to the world,” he said.

“But let’s be clear. Most of the money you give to your ingrate children they squander because they never developed the god damned discipline of a may fly,” Wainwright spat as he started to foam at the mouth. “Everybody knows that your personal business barely survives a first-generation transfer much less a second-generation transfer. Children who just get their money for free stay children forever, which is why my stupid kids have all turned into drug addicts, perverts and members of the Ringling Brothers circus. Every time you give your money to your children, it mostly just ends up going to one of their crack-addict ex-wives. I’m looking your way, Littleton.”

“Dad’s got very profound, deeply held convictions,” said Mercedes, who, now that she’s disinherited, lives in a “Gray Gardens” type mansion overgrown with weeds and teeming with jaundiced cats. “He never liked my first, second, third or fourth husbands, all of whom are now living in houses he indirectly paid for. So I guess he thinks he’s done enough for me. But let’s be clear. He doesn’t want the government to get any of his money either. I think if he could he’d rather just have it all buried with him in a big vault of gold bars like Tutankhamun.”

“I’m quite sick from morphine addiction,” she added.

Psychologist Dana Hiller with the University of Rochester, said that it’s often the case that old money families try to get their children involved in philanthropy and not give them too much money early in their lives without letting them know what it’s like to work.

“But that idea seems to have completely slipped by this family,” said Hiller. “Sounds like the old guy is just a bit pennywise and pound foolish. Frankly, I’d just give the money to the feds and not get an ulcer over it. He’s going to make himself sick.”

Reese Secord, often considered the most level-headed of the Wainwright children for her relatively minimal number of ex-husbands, asked her father repeatedly if she could leave something in the codicil of the will for her daughter Rebecca.

“No way,” said Wainwright in a letter faxed to his attorney. “I’m giving it to Bunny at the Bare Elegance cabaret lounge. I love my 12-year-old granddaughter Rebecca, but I’d rather see her rot in hell then Reese get one red cent of my money.”

“Damn Obama trying to take my money,” Wainwright said through an oxygen mask. “That money’s mine. And Bunny’s. Damn socialists.”

Philosopher Karl Popper said that for an assertion to be scientific, it must be “falsifiable.” In other words, some evidence could appear at some point to prove the assertion untrue. When someone says that Diet Coke erases your memory, it might be stupid gossip, but it’s at least falsifiable, which is why those kinds of arguments tend to die quickly.

On the other hand, when someone makes the kind of argument that can’t be proved or disproved, they’re not simply being dishonest but their assertion tends to spread like cancer among those who can’t employ simple insight to stop it.

The main thing is to avoid the arguments by calling bullshit on whoever uses them. So steer clear of anybody who ever says stuff like this:

–*The current economic crisis was caused by homosexuality and abortion

–*Human wickedness, particularly sex and violence on television, caused 9/11

–*The ice caps are melting because we offended God by not honoring Him daily*

–*Our whole synagogue is being punished because somebody dropped the Torah*

–*Nazism was caused by all of us being less Christian

–*The Rodney King riots were caused by the legalization of abortion

–*The Kennedys are cursed because their family patriarch made his money dishonestly

–*The United States is a fascist theocracy

–*9/11 was a conspiracy

–*JFK’s murder was a conspiracy involving lots of people who are now dead and who can’t confirm it, so we just have to assume it’s true

–*Strawberry Shortcake is a demon from hell*

–*Tinky Winky is gay

*With the exception of those things in asterisks (which I got from literature or from flight of fancy) all of these things I have plucked right out of the media by various dunderheads, blockheads and mouth-breathers. Most, but not all, are right wingers, natch.

It’s a small accomplishment, but Stephanie and I have been trying to get “The Retributioners” onto the Internet Movie Database for some time, and now we’ve finally done it. You can see our page here.

Of course, we need to flesh it out a bit, but mostly we’re happy just to have it up. The IMDb has very high standards and they make you jump through a few hoops before they’ll allow you to put your film work up. Yet again, we feel validated by the God-like Web powers that be.

In other news, I’m also fleshing out the WordPress version of my blog Beauty Is Imperfection with some snazzier layouts, and lately, I’ve been routing people here rather than linking them to the MySpace version of my blog. Eventually, faithful reader, I’m going to ask if you’ll take this journey with me and move to WordPress. I haven’t decided whether to continue cross-posting my blogs on MySpace, now that I’m using the site less and less. I still have a fondness for MySpace, because I found a lot of friends on it and it got me into social networking in the first place. Also, it’s still the only place where you can find my rarefied and solipsistic musical work with all its cultish appeal. But having said that, MySpace has been very difficult to use for a long time. The security there is ass, and its junk apps seem to somehow slow down my very powerful computer to Commodore 64 speed. Furthermore, I’m thinking of using this blog as a way to keep fresh daily content on “The Retributioners” main site, and I don’t know if it is necessary to keep my ramblings in three places.

Let me know what you think. Fran? Mel? Gene? Jen? Lori? Nat? Gummo? Squeaky? If I go to WordPress, will you follow?

A new Yahoo! article says that in today’s competitive environment, job hunters need to avoid routine, hackneyed and cliched language in their resumes, especially phrases that show you to be uninspired and “vocabulary challenged.”

What are some declasse phrases you should avoid in your resume?

–*”Proven track record”

–*”Team player”

–*”Leverage my people skills”

–*”Leverage other people’s skills”

–*”Communicate with extreme prejudice”

–*”Machiavellian instincts”

–*”Ethics minded”

–*”Take much umbrage”

–*”Ethics obsessed”

–*”A friend to dogs and squirrels”

–*”Enjoy worker’s compensation lawsuits”

–*”Never learned to read”

–*”Stupid is as stupid does”

–*”Kill the hostages”

–*”Got a gun aimed at your belly”

–*”Inflexible dedication to ethics”

–*”Got my eye on the prize”

–*”Would you like happy ending?”

–*”I dissolve easily in lipids”

–*”I kill frogs”

–*”Won’t move unless inspired”

–*”Borderline personality disorder-type inflexible dedication to ethics”

–*”Cleavage”

–*”Gash”

–*”Dirty Sanchez”

–*”Donkey punch”

–*”I’d like to thank the academy”

–*”Filching fiend”

–*”Two girls one cup”

–*”Kill unethical people”

–*”Antichrist”

–*”Satan”

–*”Organized company picnic”

–*”Enjoy extracurricular activities such as piano”

–*”Work is everything”

–*”Work is not everything”

–*”Work well with others”

–*”Works well with ‘The Other'”

–*”Don’t have to explain myself to anyone”

–*”I don’t have to explain myself to you

–*”Lick this resume, see what happens”

–*”I was sent here from the workfare office. Please do not really give me this job.”