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Dear San Francisco,


Hunter S. Thompson’s obituary for the American Dream was required reading for modern bohemians. I had always hated him for saying what he said and dooming me and my whole generation to a dreamless workaday life because he was on a few hits of cheap acid when all he had been asked to do was to report about a motorcycle race. But instead he chose to condemn us all to a slow death in a boring world. Had I really hoped that it was still alive? Had I really thought that I would come to San Fran, drop my bags down, and pick up on the ancient powerful feelings which drove my heros mad? Well it wasn’t there.

A breeze was coming off the bay and reminding me of the War in its own special and peculiar way. The only place I had ever felt an ocean breeze was in that camp over the sea. I had come to resent those breezes and all of Poseidon’s whispers of freedom. The ocean mocks us. “Come back” it calls out to us always… and if it weren’t for these things we have to do.

All I could see through my glasses was people with money. Skinny and beautiful bodies draped gaudily in thousands of dollars in accessories. Fake people as far as the eye can see. I breathed in dismay. This would be just another city.

I stayed in the Sir Francis Drake Hotel near Union Square. The room was a surreal Victorian setup with bands of green alternating between light and dark on the walls. After establishing my weekends emo nest and smoking a joint in the bed I went out into “It”.

The mythological charm of San Francisco that I had carried with me was suffering assault. Cars and vapid pedestrians bustled every way and if you weren’t walking up a calf shredding hill there would be nothing to visually distinguish it from any other American city. Busy. Loud. Hectic with commerce. Dappled with homeless ghosts haunting dirty streets. Nothing new.

I walked. I had money for a change, but by now I am familiarized with non-financial participation and I’ve gotten comfortable with walking around cities to see what they have to say about themselves. It isn’t until you have walked down all a cities streets with your head strung out around ten thousand hard to explain ideas and your eyes taking in the story written in the shimmering sidewalk. That is how you learn a city. So I walked.

I walked in the Mission and I found there that Hipsters are Hipsters everywhere just like Wal-Mart and McDonalds. If you’ve known one you’ve known them all. Bodega’s and impossibly small Chinese restaurants where small women yell at everyone and liquor stores and gated doors, shady street people and wide eyed bench mystics. The same stories. I kept walking.

Had a sharp thing in my head. Still pissed off about the lies. Still wondering why the fuck I was in San Francisco. Still hated myself for whining about the same old shit. Still sad our species is as fucked up as it is. Still sick of feeling tired and old and mourning the death of the dream I once had about this place. This too had been a lie told to me. About the spirit of this place. And that lie had been as fundamental in my decision making process as all the lies that we’d been told about the terrorists of Camps one, two, three and four. I had believed in Jack Kerouac’s San Francisco and I wanted to go to that place but it is gone now and that too caused me a great deal of sadness.

I walked by City Lights with my head hung low and deep in anxious thought, a cigarette burned out at my knuckles. How had this come to be? Is the only thing left this tomb of the dream? Is our only last true occupation to be to succumb to domination and then death? Should I just get a job? Is the poetry dead? What more could be said?

The next morning I was in front of cameras again. The professor who was conducting the interview told me that his project was aimed at future generations. He told me that for now people don’t want to know about what has happened and that they probably couldn’t process it if they did because their brains would defend themselves. This was for the future. So they could see what we did.

So I told them what I did.

And when I left another room in smoldering rubble and the fumes of my psychosis are being extinguished by my better judgement the professor’s wife turned to me and told me that I take what happened in Guantanamo Bay harder than any of the detainees and any of the guards and that I blame myself more than anyone else. I looked her in the eyes and told her that that was my job. Somebody has to feel that past. For all of us. And I do. I feel it always. And I do hate myself for it and I do think that I deserve it.

I went for a longer walk then. I walked along the pier stoned just like everybody else. I felt so angry. I felt so alien. Why do I have to be this forever? I wasted all that beautiful pier swallowed in self loathing.

That night I saw Eddy Falcone. We talked about the memories we had and the death of our cult. His anarchist house was having a big discussion about these French men who wrote some book about destroying things and then a train was destroyed and they said that they had done it. Then they were put in jail. The anarchists called them martyrs and I made a martyr out of myself for my own stupid cause by explaining that these were white people problems. There were thousands of Muslims locked up for far less than that, experiencing far worst than that. I have no pity for these idiots who ruined a perfectly good train. I thought trains were good… right? Anyway. Fuck them.

The next day I met with Stephen Funk. We sat in my hotel while I smoked cigarettes and talked about art and how we intended to use it and who our group of artists really was.

Later I walked with Justine and told her how my life had been since our interview. I poked a few jokes about her book and how she had ratted me out for being a whore and I think she took them seriously. At a bar later with her friends I suddenly felt like I could not be around people anymore so I went back to the hotel.

On the bed, naked and stoned again, the TV said BREAKING NEWS. For the rest of the night I laughed as I watched our psychotic nation again waving its flags in the same way they had after 9/11. I heard them say that Guantanamo had been a success even though the information had been “extracted” over six years ago. I heard them praise all of our efforts in making this multi-billion dollar assassination attempt FINALLY come to a close. Fuck this.

But where was the body? After they killed Saddam we watched that fuckers body hang for days. The clip was played every two minutes on every news channel in the media fleet. Now, for the most wanted man in the world they won’t even produce a photograph?

I hate this place. I hate these people. I will never try to change anyones mind again. Let them wave their polyester flags and I will wave mine and we’ll see who’s American Dream is dead.

Love,

Otis

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Dirty Dog or How the Greyhound People Came to Be


I am not willing to debate some things about the nature of life. Some of the things I believe in run contradictory to reason and I am OK accepting that. I’m alright with life being a collage of contradictions in which you place huge wagers on ridiculous bets. As long as you know the game. And one of the things I’ve come to know about the game is that when a good wind blows you open your wings and fly because that is true freedom. One must trust the giver of winds sometimes with the whole of their life. Fine. Game on.

Well a good wind blew on a sunny day at the Sanctuary while I was suturing a large sheet of combat paper with broken mirror into a canvas with Eli. I breathed the air in to test its contents because I am a professional and my computers showed that the air was composed of pure artistic possibility. So I packed my bags with whiskey and weed, hunched my shoulders against my bony frame which I willed to be strong and I left the house for the first time in the last few weeks.

Gonna travel this land over…. again.

It was a hot day in New York when Mike and Jen dropped me off at the Greyhound station. I had my blue fake leather suitcase (which was full mostly of drugs) a backpack and a pillow in my instant professional suit coat and sunglasses which snap me into an alternative mode of being. When I feel that positively cool and in charge of things I am reminded of the personality I made to deal with the military. Funny, smart, mean. My three guns. And I kept them close.

I like that me.

On a five hour lay over to Buffalo I stopped in the bar to get a drink. The bartender turned out to be some form of witch. She read my palms and told me that I would some day get famous for using pastels violently. I laughed in her face. Had she seen the pastel paint on my pants? She told me to beware Kansas. Then she poured me a tall shot.

It was the first of many.

After the bar closed I went to sleep in the station until the bus came. I knew that I wasn’t going to want to make any buddies this trip. No part time friends. No new acquaintances. I didn’t want any more gaudy stories about the troublesome lives that make us what we are. Greyhound people. I no longer want to share that thing with them.

I am done being a Greyhound person. That’s what they all say as their bus leaves the station.

Greyhound does what it wants to do and this Greyhound wanted to break down to try to break me down and it damn near worked. There was a K-Mart there so I took a shit in a real bathroom and rolled a joint while we waited for a mechanic. I did the math. I had a few hours to spare… but this could easily take more than a few hours.

Well, good winds are lucky winds so I swallowed my anger and sure as shit the mechanic comes with not a fucking minute to spare and off we go.

I make my connection to the train in Chicago. I was waiting for the moment of relief when the train would pull forward when the fat attendant that had told me which seat to sit in walked up and fatly observed that I was not in that seat. I had chosen a more remote seat by the window in lieu of the painful seat he’d wanted me to sit in with everyone going all the way to San Francisco clumped in the front of the car. Just short of telling him to fuck himself I explained that I was a veteran with personality issues and that I’d just gotten off of a 24 hour Greyhound ride and I could use a few moments to myself. I continued to explain, pretty angrily, that I was a “full grown adult” and that I could work out my own seating arrangements and that there had been a precedent of seat selection that had drawn me to make this very lengthy decision in the first place.

Well he didn’t take kindly to my attitude so he said “You’re throwing a lot at me here. You’re a veteran… you’re an adult… so, are you going to have, like, problems? Being on the train?”

At this point I decided I didn’t want to talk to him anymore so I turned away from him to let him know that our conversation was done. I said “No, Sir. We will not have any problems. I promise I will move if a family needs a seat. Thank you. Goodbye.” He stared at me for a few minutes and then didn’t talk to me again for the next 55 hours.

Which is precisely how long the ride takes.

Amtrak tortures smokers in many ways. By forcing us into an environment which is naturally stress inducing, which naturally causes a man to sneak booze onto the train and drink it with his coffee, which naturally causes a man to have a powerful need for a cigarette. But you can only smoke in predetermined cities. The schedule is on the wall. For some stretches we weren’t allowed to smoke but once in an entire state. Can you believe that? How can I be expected to only smoke one cigarette in Nebraska? Even thinking of Nebraska now I am troubled with so much anxiety that I could smoke half a pack of cigarettes in one sitting.

Well I endured. Drunkenly. And when I could I smoked grass. But the chance of being left in some bum-fuck town where you might very well be forcibly fucked by bums loomed everywhere and I could feel in my soul a deep understanding of how terrible I would feel if I were to be left here because I had wandered off to get high and now I was in the middle of nowhere with no phone and little money in my fancy coat and sunglasses and stoned. No… too dangerous.

Smoking int he bathrooms also proved hazardous because they WILL kick you off of that train ANYWHERE. Yes. So I only smoked a few hits of hash in the bathroom independent of one another but wasted most of the high being trapped in the tiny bathroom with the faint smell of weed and a very intense paranoia. Whatever high did make it back up to the viewing car was usually so high strung that it didn’t help the general euphoria of what I was seeing at all.

I could go into a biblical sermon about those mountains which never end from Denver to the dead ship yards outside of Emeryville but I will not. In fact almost anything that I could say about the beauty of that stretch of land would be pointless. Language is too dumb and ugly a thing to describe them. I simply tell you this: Make it your personal duty as an American to see that stretch of land. It is the most majestic thing which time and patience and raw force had ever put together and one cannot help but contemplate the nature and the idealogies of God and how fantastically trivial we are in contrast to these rock formations which are pure and beautiful in a way that we will never be.

But I warn you, take plenty of whiskey.

This concludes the “To San Fran” portion of this three part adventure. Tune in next time I get stoned to hear the juicy details of a bleary eyed three day San Francisco blow out.

Otis, over and out.

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i told you so…


I knew it all along… but how do you explain knowing about something like that when they all treat you like a child? Like you are too small and too insignificant to understand the grandeur of their manly, adult plan. But I knew. They were telling themselves lies. It was all broken and we are going to Hell for what we did and they were all innocent anyway. You have called me a faggot and a liar and a pussy and a traitor and it is all because I finally told the truth. We were wrong.

Now we finally have to admit that. The facts have been released. We are free of the pending conclusions and now we can deal earnestly with our guilt. This is our mistake.

You know, when you pass an officer in Camp Delta and you happen to be one of the poor saps “working the blocks” it is your obligation to salute and to ejaculate “HONOR BOUND, SIR” (while secretly gritting your teeth against saying something like “FUCK YOUR STUPID FACE YOU ASSHOLE SWINE! STOP WALKING AROUND LIKE AN IDIOT AND DO SOME FUCKING WORK!”) to which they will respond by saying “DEFEND THE FREEDOM, HOO AH”. And you both walk away from each other feeling like assholes. It is a unique and flavorful bond with many unsaid implications.

So were we really “DEFENDING THE FREEDOM” sirs? Or did we just have a get out of jail free card to act like violent racists? Did you ever really believe what we were saying and doing or were you just playing your part in the whole thing?

Anyways, these questions are inconsequential. As of today we know that we are guilty of terrible sins.

We spit on them. Called them sand niggers and towel heads and camel jockies until we got tired and just resigned to sluggishly calling them “them.” We punched them when they surrendered and we pepper sprayed them as they lay on the floor. We even peed in their holy book. But it wasn’t all just we… was it?

I sent them to interrogations. Sometimes I got lazy and I left them in there longer than I should have because I didn’t want to inconvenience the tired soldiers who hated me. Sometimes I forgot about them and they missed meals and prayer hours while shackled to the floor. One time I guided an innocent man’s head into a pole and heard an awful sound and then the laughing from my fat escort partner. I refused requests because I didn’t want to get things. I fell asleep on the stairs and almost let one die.

And we… I… did it all for a lie.

I always knew it was a lie… even during the punches and the pepper spray and the awful sounds… and I still did it. We all still did it.

But now we can see it together thanks to the internet.

I wish I would have been the one to send those files but I never saw those files of course. I only knew the Internment Security Numbers… I was so pleased to find that I still knew them as I poured over the long list of numbers. I used to have a book with a baseball card for every number that I would give to the escort teams as they left to pick up the “package” and deliver “it” to “gold building.”

The cards for the frequent fliers would become worn and cut up and smeared in little nasty things that soldiers would try to write on the laminated sides… fake mustaches abounded, drawn ridiculously on top of real mustaches.

That was the real secret that you were so scared we would tell. That it was a lie. You didn’t want us to let them know. You tried to make us think that if Al Qaeda got a hold of this information the whole base would come under attack  but we all knew damn well that no Taliban was coming to Guantanamo Bay, and if they were to try they would find there a bay swarming with bored sailors with guns and then a concertina wire cage surrounded by land mines and defended by Marines and Army infantry. Bullshit. We knew that would never happen. You didn’t want us to let the people know that it was a lie.

Well, you fucking failed. I’m sorry it wasn’t me. I’m sorry my voice was not enough to bring out the truth, but now it is out there anyway and I hope all of you miserable fuckers (and I mean mostly you Command Sergeant Major Mendez) put guns in your mouths and blow your brains out to speed your voyage to Hell. One last waltz Camp Commandant.

The policy was always broken. It is broken all the way through, not just in Camp Delta. It is broken in all of the camps. It was broken when Hitler tried it and it is still broken.

Jesus Christ, the things we have done and said and hoped for.

The night that we left from home we were in formation as our families gathered around us and our Platoon Sergeant yelled “Lets go down there and KILL those MOTHER FUCKERS so we can be back here next month!” And we all cheered. I cheered but I didn’t really mean it.

Those “mother fuckers” were innocent men. I am glad that we didn’t kill them.

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