Thursday, April 30, 2020

Saturday Night Soup For the Soul (28)

Warm wind to touch the trees colored blue and
Flash the moon to paint blue my heart.
Warm wind to touch the trees colored blue and
Flash the moon to paint blue my heart.

Your silver streak flash
Your silver streak flash
Your silver streak flash
Across the tiny door of my eye
Across the tiny door of my eye.

(Grace)



or my final soup post of this road trip, of this fading spring season, and before this colunm leaves for summer hiatus, we travel to Stonehenge to visit a memorial for young men who died too young practicing the art of warfare.


“The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.” — Sir Edward Grey, British Foreign Secretary, at the beginning of the war.

Perched high upon the edge of a vast plateau made of molten lava, that flowed and solidified millions of years ago are the restless spirits of young men. These men are members of the original generation of Americans sent abroad to fight a war to end war: the Great War: now referred to as World War I.


Fairy castle stark and black in the moonlight
The jingle jangle jester rides his stallion
Seagull flies across my eyes forever
Sadly goes the wind on its way to Hades

Would I, should I, could I be a stranger
I shall walk right by and sigh goodbye
Lucifer calls his legions from the hillside.
Sadly goes the wind on its way to Hades.
(Berts Blues)



This was the first war fueled by the collective military industrial complex of the combatants. This was the first war where invention played a central role devising ever more lethal weapons of mass destruction, allowing for the extermination of massive numbers of soldiers on the battle field. The fruits of this war were most bitter, directly resulting in the deaths of 216,000,000 human souls over this and the subsequent generations. This bitter harvest of calamity continues to this very day.

The first fruit from this tree of war: an entire generation of the world’s finest, handsome, and cherubic young men were decimated and scarred. This generation was physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually crippled beyond repair by the horrors of the battlefield, and by it’s aftermath. The survivors became collectively known as “the lost generation”. They were never the same.

This generation who fought “the war to end war” in fact became the generation of the disillusioned. Their faith and belief in the institutions, and moral underpinnings that had for so long held western civilization together, failed. Dead was the belief that acts of nobility would yield equally noble results. Dead was faith, dead was hope.

"First in war
First in peace
Dead the poison
Dead the beast. "
(T-bird, 1969)


Don't talk of dust and roses
Or should we powder our noses?
Don't live for last year's capers
Give me steel, give me steel, give me pulses unreal
(Big Brother)

On April 10 of 1917, the German government, in a cynical move to knock Russia out of the War, allowed a sealed train filled with a hidden poison to pass through it’s territory to deliver the lethal cargo to the heart of Russia. The name of this deadly poison was Vladimir Lenin . The resulting October 1917 Bolshevik revolution in Russia was a fruit of this war, resulting in the eventual rise of Joseph Stalin, murderous psychotic who possessed life or death power over the citizens of the nations imprisoned in the USSR (a virtual jail house of captive nations) for decades.

The overly vindictive and punitive treaty of Versailles (brought to you by the greedy and grasping gluttons of France) set the stage the weak and fragile Weimar Republic which served as the backdrop for the election of Adolph Hitler (yes, he actually came to power in an election). We know how these fruits of war ended.

In Italy we had rise of the blowhard tin pot wanna-be Caesar, the fascist dictator Benito Mussolini. In 1930’s Spain we had the testing ground for the rapidly approaching battle between Democracy, the Communist International, and Nazism, with fascist dictator Generalissimo Franco (who Richard Nixon loved and admired) ending up as the only winner.
(Note: read the Comments on this post for an update from Ric on Franco and Salazar, dictator who ruled Portugal for decades who also benefited from the aftermath of WW I).

In America, the survivors (the "Doughboys") came home to a brief hero’s welcome. However, as the idealism of the lofty Wilsonian League of Nations was killed by lack of American participation thanks to a corrupt isolationist Republican congress and Wilson’s untimely stroke.

Yet another rotten Republican President succeeded the ailing Democratic Wilson, the infamous Warren G. Harding. (Note: As foul as Harding's administration was, Bush/Cheney have vastly exceeded him in depravity with their treacherous and treasonous "criminal mob posing as a democratically elected" government.) The entire nation retreated into holier-than-thou isolationism, where it stayed until it was rudely awakened by the calamity of December 7th, 1941.

In 1920, Prohibition was passed in America outlawing the manufacture, transport, and sale of alcoholic beverages. The result was a massive rise in consumption, and the criminal enterprises which supplied the now illegal beverage.


"In the room the Dyke Dolls come and go..."

The 1920's, the celebrated "Roaring Twenties": America went on a massive decade long drunken orgy of inebriation, jazz, fast driving, conspicuous consumption, promiscuous sex, smoking, dancing, and credit fueled stock market speculation. Good times were here to stay forever, or at least until the entire "house of cards economy" came crashing down on October, 1929.

In the east, we had the rise of racist and militarist Japan embarking an their reign of mass murder with the rape of Nanking. Starting in December 1937, Imperial Japanese invaders exterminated more than 300,000 Chinese civilians and prisoners of war. During this reign of terror, an estimated 80,000 women and girls were raped; many of them were then mutilated or murdered, which included "the sport" of tossing Chinese babies into the air and bayoneting them to an instant death.

The mountains of 20th century corpses topped with tombstones stretches beyond the most distant horizon that we can see. World War II begat the cold war: Hungary, Korea, Vietnam, mass murderer Mao, wars of extermination across Africa, Central America, the Balkans, Cambodia , the Middle East and Afghanistan, which the expansionist Soviet invaded in 1979. To thwart the USSR designs on the Middle East, the United States armed Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein, and armed the Islamic Mujahideen, where Osama bin Laden has roots. And the fruits of war now continue through out the Middle East in this century in which we live.

Farewell Angelinathe bells on the crown
Are being stolen by bandits
I must follow the sound
The triangle tingles
And the music plays slow
But farewell Angelina
The night is on fire
And I must go

There is use in talking
And there's no need for blame
There is nothing to prove
Everything still is the same
A table stands empty
By the edge of the stream
But farewell Angelina
The sky is changing colors
And I must leave

The jacks and the queens
They foresake the courtyard
Fifty-two gypsies
Now file past the guard
In the space where the deuce
And the ace once ran wild
Farewell Angelina
The sky is folding
I'll see you after a while


See the crosseyed pirates
Sit perched in the sun
Shooting tin cans
With a sawed off shot gun
And the corporals and the neighbors
Clap and cheer with each blast
But farewell Angelina
The sky is trembling
And I must leave fast

King Kong, little elves
And the roof-tops they dance
Valentino-type tangos
While the heroes clean hands
Shut the eyes of the dead
Not to embarass anyone
Farewell Angelina
The sky is flooding over
and I must be gone

The camoflaged parrot
He flutters from fear
When something he doesn't know about
Suddenly appears
What cannot be imitated
Perfect must die
Farewell Angelina
The sky is flooding over
And I must go where it is dry

Machine guns are roaring
The puppets heave rocks
At misunderstood visions
And at the faces of clocks
Call me any name you like
I will never deny it
Farewell Angelina
The sky is erupting
I must go where it's quiet.
(Farewell Angelina)

And so, i drove east to the Pasco, then turned to follow the Yakima river upstream, and crossed the mist and snow covered Cascades, finally returning back home.

In all my travels, I think I saw no place as beautiful and screne as my own garden. A garden of peace, where beloved spirits dwell and rest. Where I shall take my rest someday.

Here is the last bowl of soup until September. Have all you want. There is enough for all of you, and for all of your friends. As usual, there is a subtext to the music that those of you who are perceptive will understand. There is always much, much, much more to the soup than meets the ears. Such is life. The recipe includes:

1. Grace is a wonderful bit of moody psychedelia from from San Francisco band Country Joe and the Fish's 1967 LP Electronic Music for the Mind and Body. Grace is Grace Slick of the Jefferson Airplane. I love this music as it is absolutely unique, and well performed. True art. And captures my mood of the moment. Another selection from this LP appeared in Saturday Night Soup (22).

2. Bert's Blues is from Donovan's 1966 Sunshine Superman LP. Talk about a great piece of work. This LP is where Donovan came out of the "Dylan wanna-be" folkie shadow, and first expressed his own artistic persona.

This was a voice that mixed folk and medieval music, rock, psychedelic threads, trad jazz, and classical into his own unique sound. He was personal friends with the Beatles, especially Paul McCartney, who appears on Donovan’s Mellow Yellow single providing the whoop-it-up party sounds in the middle.

I have loved this song since early adolescence and it brings back a lot of ancient memories from that period of my life. It still rings true to me, too – providing you swap out the word “Gal” for Guy” in the lyrics. Another selection from this LP appears in Soup (21).

3. Big Brother from David Bowie's too, too fabulous Diamond Dogs. I will write a lot about this LP some other time. I have included this song for all my hidden stealth "fans" in Washington DC.

4. Farewell Angelina -- Unreleased (until it appeared on his bootleg series) Dylan song. You could remove everything in this post, leaving just this song and you'd know what is really going on with me. This is, so to speak, the real man behind the curtain. Do you understand it?

5. Moonlit Mile by the Rolling Stones. This is from Sticky Fingers - a wonderful 1971 LP with the homoerotic cover by Warhol. I included this song -- very nice for the Stones -- because of the words and imagry.

For I'm sleeping under strange strange skies
Just another mad mad day on the road
My dreams are fading down the railway line
I'm just about a moonlight mile down the road...

All of this makes it's way into this week's soup. You can get your bowl of Saturday Night Soul for the Soul by clicking the jukebox.

11 comments:

RIC said...

Are you kidding me?! Are you somehow trying to rewrite History?! ONLY Generalissimo Franco was the winner?! Well, really! I'm shocked.

T-Bird said...

Ricky,

Well, it is my view that Franco was the only one who came out ahead of that conflict. Who else came out ahead? The Spanish people lost by being locked in a a police state for decades. Portugal cannot have been a better place by having Franco in the main house of the Iberian Peninsula (opened the door for your own police state). Liberty and Freedom both lost. The Communist International and the US both lost. Our participation was an all volunteer group called “The Lincoln Brigade” made up of Leftists -- Lincoln refers to Abraham Lincoln. It is quite celebrated in history, unless you are a right wing zealot. Hitler lost as Franco had pre-agreed to intervene should war break out (i.e. WW II) on the side of the axis and specifically allow German troops to enter its territory and to knock out Gibraltar which was a key to British presence in the Mediterranean life line to Egypt where they faced Rommel. Franco reneged on that promise as he somehow sensed it could cost him his job.

So this is where I am coming from.

How do you see it? I am sure you know a lot about this topic and I’d love to read your thoughts. Cheers.

Cat said...

Will:

I'm meditating on your thoughts about the veterans of the Great War The situation echos much of what is going on today. I agree with you on Harding and Bush. Harding's administration set the scene for The Great Depression, and Hoover got most of the blame just for being there when the house of cards collapsed. Our government continues to treat its war veterans with such cold and blatant disregard. The real POW's are the soldiers who return home only to discover that they are unwanted reminders of our collective moral failings. Suicides are at record highs among poor New Orleanians and returning veterans. It's the feeling of utter hopelessness. So much blood is on hands of the people in power, yet they cry for more. And Gitmo is just another word for Gulag, isn't it?

Any light is better than none at all, so I will continue to walk on my path of kindness and compassion. Lately, I have been studying the life and philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi because the path of non-violence and voluntary simplicity is the only sane road left to us. The current path of America can only lead into the dark abyss. There are some wonderful films of the Mahatma available online, and I spent Friday watching some of them so I could hear him speak. This Jewel of India is still shining true and bright.

Thoughtfully,

Cat

T-Bird said...

Cat,

You have understood perfectly why I wrote what I wrote. It is all about Iraq, and Bush, and about where we are today. Every word.

I too am pushing myself to grow the peace of Gandhi within me, and thus to radiate it out. I have a long way to go but am getting better every day.

Cheers!

T-Bird said...

Ric provided this great update on what occurred in Portugal during the 20th century. I did not know ANY of this. Thank you Ric for the history lesson.

===========================
Salazar first became important in 1926, after a military coup d'etat. Soon after he was Finance minister, and became prime minister in 1932. So what I mean is that political developments in Portugal and in Spain have very little in common during both dictatorships. Franco didn't trust Salazar, and Salazar didn't trust him either. When Franco first came to power in 1939 and made all those well-known arrangements with Hitler, Salazar was long in power already.

After WW2, Salazar kept his job only because the USA administration helped him! All they cared about was the agreement about Lajes airbase. And still care, just by the way… It's strategically located half the way to the Middle East, Iraq and oil! They didn't give a f*ck about both dictatorships in south-western Europe, since they were sure that both Franco and Salazar would always help them fight communism. So Salazar came out ahead as well! The Spanish lost, true. What about us?! Only because we're not more than 10 million we aren't entitled to historical fairness?! Please!!!

Both dictatorships went through time until the 70s and nobody in the western world could care less! This is the truth! The first serious discussions in the UNO on the Portuguese political situation only started in the 60s due to the colonial war that had just started in Africa.

In the end, Franco did a lot more for the Spanish people than Salazar ever did for the Portuguese. Just consider where Spain and Portugal stand these days, and you'll understand the huge difference between both countries. For historical reasons, we've been living back to back, and Salazar took advantage of that irrational fear Franco might want to invade Portugal and finally unite the peninsula under the Castilian boot.

So, dear Will, these are the main aspects I consider you should also take into account in your assessment of that period of the 20.th century. As to the other elements you bring forward, I agree with you.

T-Bird said...

Ricky, I did not know ANY of the things you mention. I really have no idea as to the history of Portugal. I will put a footnote in.

The link on the word "Chairman Mao" in this post is a fascinating site evaluating mega-deaths and the tyrants who caused them. One of the pages has Salazar on the list of second tier monsters and gives him a death toll.


Bush/Cheney/Rummy will make it onto this list. Iraq is all about 1) Oil and greedy fat ass American life style, 2) Jewish neo-con frauds wanting to prop up Israel, 3) psychotic cult Christians wanting to bring on the rapture and end of times (they all need to go commit suicide and rid the world of their warped presence), and 4) fu*king malevolent corporations making BILLIONS of bux off war and killing. If I have guts, I’ll post this paragraph as a comment on my blog.

I have rarely strayed into politics on this blog, and thought I would today as a commentor on my own post.

RIC said...

Thank you so very much, dear Will, for your concern and thoughtfulness.
I just thought I should add a few more topics related to such an important period of World History.
Off theme: have you heard of that «thing» of a gay bomb? Unbelievable! The odd ways they're spending your money!...

d.K. said...

Will,
I'm certain you're a great storyteller -- it's a lost art.

When you start Soup up after haitus, you should tell the same story of the 20th century, but this time talk about penicillin, and Jonas Salk, and the pill and drug cocktails, etc., and then add up the lives that were saved and prolonged thanks to the 20th century -- it would make a good juxtaposition to this fascinating post... Just a thought. Happy summer :)

T-Bird said...

Oh the gay bomb. How insane. I thought of an idea for a novel where it escapes from a lab, backfires, and switches everyone so that all the fuc*ing a$$holes become gay, and the gays become a persecuted straight minority

RIC said...

Thank you very much for the link to Wikipedia!
Instead of wrting that text in the heat of a reaction, that's exactly what I should have done in the first place: telling you about that link!
Some times I trully feel as a moron... Is Bush inflencing me somehow?... I wonder!... Lol!
Greetings! :-)

T-Bird said...

Oh your words are much better. You told me things that are not resourced anywhere.

I like Wikipedia as it is a peoples resource for an by people and shows where info is disputed.