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Sunday, May 02, 2004 |
Good news ... from Iraq
The Bush people, from the president to Rummy on down, insist the U.S.
media just aren't relaying all the good news happening outside the
shooting zones in Iraq. To help do my small part, here's a tidbit gleaned from the press office of the Coalition Provisional Authority:
"In support of the national holiday honoring the birthday
of The Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), the Coalition Provisional Authority is
giving more than 950 soccer balls to Iraqi children, schools, and
sports clubs in South Central Iraq." [That soccer pitch in Fallujah
that the natives have turned into a cemetery for people killed during
the current siege is probably off-limits to games right now, though.]
I checked to see whether any of the naysaying mainstream media have
picked up on the prophet's birthday balls. None have, so far as I can
see. But The New York Times was actually ahead of the curve, with a piece
from sports columnist George Vecsey on a Long Island soldier who's
gotten a kid's soccer league together. Vecsey even alludes to the
kill-joy media:
"The smiles. You rarely see smiles like these on the 6 o'clock news or on the front page.
Alex Fyfe gets to see Iraqi children with a happy look on their faces, as they kick soccer balls on the dust and rocks."
11:33:06 PM
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 Happy
anniversaryI missed it yesterday -- National Mission Accomplished Day. Iraq's collection
of ne'er-do-wells -- former regime elements, noncompliant elements,
Saddam loyalists, Baathist bums, foreign fighters and what have you
(don't worry, there are only about two dozen of them in the whole
country, and there's nothing we could do to make
them happy ) -- celebrated by killing at least 11 more U.S.
troops over the weekend. Meanwhile, the rest of Iraq has suspended its
continuous strewing of flowers in our soldiers' paths to tune in Al
Jazeera's
coverage (sorry about all the squiggly writing) of Torturegate.
1:22:57 PM
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 Diary of a jerkTuesday:
I walk up Eighth Street to the Civic Center BART station after work.
Nightmare scenario: I need to buy a ticket, which means I have to stand
in line behind other patrons trying to figure out how the ticket
machines work or who have decided to buy a five-buck ticket by feeding
in nickels. Sure enough, I wind up behind three or four other people.
The first person deliberates over the bewildering array of two or three
choices before purchasing a ticket. Then the next guy approaches the
machine. He feeds in one dollar bill, then another. The machine won't
take the third one. Instead of just buying a $2 ticket and paying
whatever he owes at the other end, he hits cancel, gets his dollar bills
back, then repeats the process. His third bill still won't go in;
exasperated, he looks first to the right, then to the left, for help
that's not there. Then he hits cancel again, gets his bills back, and
feeds them in again. One. Two. No go with the third. He looks right,
then left, hits cancel, and starts to try again. At this point -- I
want to get home, man! -- I lean around the woman waiting in front of
me and say, "Dude, what's the problem?" Except, I don't say "dude" in
the friendly "hey, dude" way; "dude" comes out in a tone that clearly
signals it's a substitute for "moron." He turns toward me. He's a short
guy, maybe 5-6, with neatly trimmed brown hair and beard; he's wearing
a short-sleeved yellow button-down shirt; he's wearing olive green
shorts and dark street shoes and socks that he should wear with
long pants. I recognize him from somewhere. He says, "It won't take my
goddamned dollar." Simultaneously, the woman in front of me -- tall,
5-10, and kind of lumpy in a Joan Cusack way but younger than Joan
Cusack -- turns around and looks at me and says something. I hear,
"Shut up." So I tell the guy he's holding up everyone in line and I ask
the woman, "Who the fuck are you telling to shut up? You shut up." She
says, "I said, 'Chill out.' And you need to." I sputter something
winning; perhaps it was "you chill the fuck out." Meantime, beard guy
has given up his place at the ticket machine and says angrily, "You
guys go ahead." I already have a twenty in my hand and say, "You held
up the line for 10 minutes." "It won't take my money!" "Here's a twenty
-- it'll work. Take it and buy yourself a ticket." But he doesn't take
it; he goes to the back of the ticket line while the "shut up/chill
out" woman is at the machine. She's buying something like a $5.85
ticket, exact change. She dawdles. I resist the temptation to say,
"Hey, look, another rocket scientist." Then it's my turn. Luckily, the
machine takes my twenty on the first try and I get my ticket without
holding anyone else up. Then I go down to the platform, wondering who
among the people on the platform and the train home just witnessed my
little display. I also realize that I recognized the beard guy from
about 20 years ago; his name was John something and he was Kate's
roommate's boyfriend when Kate and I first went out. Same beard and
haircut and everything, though Kate's roommate, Beth, moved on a long
time ago.
Wednesday (pictured): Back to Civic Center BART after work. I've
left work a little early thinking maybe I can get a short bike ride in
before dark. Armed with my dramatically procured ticket from the day
before, I head down to the platform. There's a train waiting -- headed
out to Bay Point, not my line. The Richmond train, to Berkeley, is due
in 7 minutes. But the train at the platform doesn't move, and within a
couple of minutes, there's an announcement that "smoke is emanating
from a train at Embarcadero Station" and all the East Bay-bound trains
are halted for a few minutes. It's about 5:10. More announcements. The
train at Embarcadero has been taken out of service. The train at
Embarcadero had an electrical overload. Or it might have hit something
on the tracks. BART workers are walking the track to see if there's a
problem. The delay lengthens -- 10 minutes, 15, 20, then 30. Finally,
the packed train at Civic Center moves, slowly. Then a Fremont train,
headed south toward San Jose from Oakland, pulls in. Then the Richmond
train I had been waiting for. The operator announces that there's
another train with a problem at Embarcadero; but by 5:45, we get going,
too. I managed to get a seat and fall asleep during a stop-and-go trip
through the Transbay tube. We halt for awhile outside West Oakland
station. The problem is that another train ahead of us has broken down
at the platform there, meaning we have to cross over to the opposite
tracks to get through the station. When we get to West Oakland, I'm
surprised to see that the platform there (that's the picture above) is
filled with nearly no room -- people taken off a train waitng for
another to come in; of course, their problem is that all the
arriving trains are either already filled or using the opposite
platform until everything is straightened out. So those people over
there are as good as stranded. Anyway, my train makes it through, and
after we turn north from downtown Oakland, we get to Berkeley with no
more problems. I get home about 6:50 p.m., so the trip took about three
times as long as usual. Surprisingly, no one complained. People even
laughed when the train operator apologized for "this less than stellar
commute. I guess that's an understatement." This gives me, the
commuting jerk, food for thought.
Friday: On my way into work by way of the casual carpool.
Waiting in the Civic Center line with three people ahead of me, one
behind me. The three in front all get into a Toyota Avalon. So the next
car will take me and the other person. One pulls up to the curb and
honks. It looks like there are already two people in the car (you need
three to take the carpool lane, so they would only need one more
rider), and I'm confused when the woman who's been second in line walks
very confidently to the car, opens the rear passenger door and gets in.
Just a minute! She's the third person. She's taking my spot! I say,
"Hey, I'm sorry, I was ahead of you in line. You need to get out." She
looks up at me, very puzzled, and says, "Yes?" "Yes," I answer. And she
gets out. Then she gets in the front passenger seat, where no one had
been sitting. Um -- I didn't see the front seat was empty! Really I
didn't. Did I feel kind of stupid? No. Very. And also like I must be
cracking up to get into these um, misunderstandings. My
trip home was altercation-free, though.
12:20:53 AM
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© Copyright 2004 Dan Brekke.
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