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I was stoned but didn’t miss it

12 Friday Jul 2024

Posted by spunkybong in Uncategorized

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marijuana, weed

You might remember Ken Kesey from of his 1963 novel ‘One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest’ and its famous film adaptation. By the time the movie was screened in 1971, Kesey was already causing a stir among conservative Americans. 

Kesey was quite a piece of work. He was the kind of guy to whom if something was weird, he would probably try it. He volunteered to be a guinea pig for the testing of a psychotropic drug that was later to be known all over as LSD or just acid. And he just loved the stuff, happy that he got paid to do a fun thing like getting high.

For the tests, Kesey had to be kept under observation in a hospital ward. One night he crept out of his bed, broke the lock of the infirmary and stole as many vials of LSD as he could lay his hands on.

Fortunately there was no inventory list and Kesey’s raid went unnoticed. For the rest of his hospital stay he was perpetually zonked out of his mind and even on days he was not administered the drug, leading the researchers to draw entirely erroneous conclusions.

And Kesey? Yikes, he was hooked. Some say that he put some of his experiences inside that hospital in ‘cuckoo’s nest’.

Ken Kesey became one of the symbols of the counterculture hippie movement which began in the 1960s. By the time I became a part of the counterculture scene, it was no longer that ‘counter’. Hey, I had pot-smoking professors in engineering school. Everyone, including me, was stoned. While I drew the line at an occasional Saturday night pre-movie joint of Trichy weed, the other guys were doing pills like Mandies (Mandrax), Lippies (Lippitone) and Dexies (Dexedrin).

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In 1970s Chennai in southern India, where my engineering school was situated, you could get powerful ‘downers’ and ‘uppers’ over the counter fairly easily. All you had to do was find a bent pharmacist and mumble a phony doctor’s name to him which he made a note of and then charged a rupee a pill. An Indian Rupee, now a little more than a US cent, was huge in those days.

The go-to guy for pills in those days was a pharmacist next to Moore Market, a cavernous building right next to the central rail station, that housed hundreds of tiny stores crammed together, selling second-hand books, household stuff and even stolen goods. The pharmacist himself was a heavy user, stoned out of his mind on Mandies most of the time.

Moore Market doesn’t exist anymore, killed by greed. In 1985, a suspicious fire destroyed it. A tasteless high-rise building occupies the prime spot now.

Mandies and Lippies were very strong sleeping pills and the kick came when you resisted the drowsiness. If you took two of them, they could put you in such a tailspin that when you finally stopped resisting the snooze and let go, you ended up sleeping the next 48 hours, dead to the world. 

I tried a Mandy once but found that when I spoke, the words came out funny. If I wanted to say,’ lets go for a movie, man’, it sounded like, ‘leh wo foah yayy mooo, meeeyain’. After that one time, I decided that those kicks were not for me. Talking like a retard was not my scene.

Dexies on the other hand, kept you awake. I tried Dexies too but just once. Boy, did they keep me awake. I was stark, raving awake. The downhill after the drug wore off, was really downhill. I slept for a whole day and I awoke I walked around like a zombie for another fucking day.

Pills were very much in the scene at college, oh yeah. Guys took Dexies going into class and Mandies and Lippies coming out of class. At any given time of the day, around half the population at engineering school were staggering around, zonked out of their minds.

I didn’t mind getting high on weed occasionally those days, but I had to be in complete control, sitting down in my own dorm room, listening to music. Bands like Jethro Tull, Jefferson Starship, Uriah Heep, Pink Floyd were great music to listen to stoned. I definitely would not venture out in public where I might end up being a jerk.

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Here’s the thing about marijuana, for those who have never tried it – even the crappiest music sounds fantastic. Every tinkle, every note and every beat is embedded into the consciousness through some sort of osmosis. Lyrics sound intelligent and deep. If you are lying down, the bed will seem to float up and tip over after a while. Even the lousiest Sovexport-like movie will seem like an edge of the seat masterpiece.

But here’s the other thing. If you are tired or depressed or you are preoccupied with too many worries when someone is passing around a chillum of Kodaikanal weed, don’t go for it. Just as it enhances the good, weed will amplify the bad too and your trip is quite likely to turn into a nightmare.

Marijuana also makes you hungry as hell. It’s a special kinda hunger, not for a regular meal, but for stuff like potato chips, chocolates and such like. But if those are not available, you’ll want to eat just about anything you can lay your hands on.

And boy oh boy, if someone fishes out a Hustler and you leaf through it, marijuana will make you really horny. If you are with someone and she is stoned too, sex after a joint is just beautiful. You will turn into the world’s greatest lover. Yucky stuff that you wouldn’t dream of doing to her, will seem natural for you to do without even a single cringe. Even cross-eyed, skinny and bad breath will seem sexy to you.

Well, maybe not bad breath but you know what I mean.

The aftermath of a marijuana high isn’t so terrible either. In the end, after the effect of the marijuana wears off, you will fall into a deep restful sleep and if you haven’t had one too many joints, you will wake up quite fresh, without any hangover at all.

But here’s another thing – the long-term effects of marijuana use. There are many who consider marijuana a harmless drug. I do not think so. Besides medical issues such as BP, lung cancer and pulmonary problems like bronchitis, prolonged use also makes you lethargic and unconcerned about your future and at the same time, impractical and unrealistic. It makes you edgy, impulsive and easily excitable. It also plays havoc with your long-term memory. Marijuana is likely to make you a loser in the long run.

These days, I see that how marijuana is becoming more and more socially acceptable and easily available and legislation is being tabled all over North America, to legalize it’s use. Frankly, I do not think that legalizing marijuana is a responsible thing for governments to do.

Take for example, cigarettes. It might sound crazy now, but back in the 1930s, doctors actually recommended smoking ‘to remain fresh and alert’. Even ads seemed to suggest it. It remained this way till the late-80s when cigarette ads were finally banned. The ubiquitous Peter Stuyvesant ad on the back cover of every Time Magazine issue ceased appearing. So did other ads, some very interesting, like the Camel ad showing a doctor recommending Camels and the Virginia Slims ad campaign.

Camels being touted by a doctor in this 1931 ad. Click on the image to read the text (Photo courtesy: Wikimedia)
Virginia Slims –  the ‘You’ve come a long way, baby’ ad campaign

Peter Stuyvesant. This ad appeared on the back cover of every single issue of Time Magazine till 1986 when cigarette ads were finally banned (Photo

Clean and healthy living never had a chance. Having a screen legend and icon like James Dean modelling for Marlboro got millions of teenagers across America hooked.

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Then there was hooch.

Back in the 1970s, the Indian state of Tamil Nadu where my engineering school is situated, was dry. Regular liquor brands were available on the black market but penniless college kids like us couldn’t afford it. Like 1920s America showed us, soon as the prohibition began in 1972, we had our own Al Capones and Dutch Schulzes and a bootleg liquor called Arak began to flow freely.

Just outside the Velacherry gates of my college was a sprawling village that had a hooch den. It was a ten by ten wooden platform in the center of a clearing in the palm trees. On it in one corner sat a massive lady with huge jugs and she had a look that said ‘you get outa line by even a micro-inch and you’ll get your butt kicked out of this joint’. She had a massive drum on the ground by her side, from which she ladled out glassfuls of the stuff to her customers.

Everybody called the woman Amma (mother, in Tamil). She operated the den under a single light bulb that was connected by a long wire that snaked overhead supported by branches and palm fronds to a nearby hut that had electricity. The lamp threw long scary shadows. 

Scrawny, inebriated villagers staggered up to the woman with their hands clasped together in supplication, imploring her for one last slug for the road, signaling that they had run out of cash. For her financial well-being, Amma was mandated to keeping them hooked but she decided who could have one more and who could not.

An arak den in India

Students like us were given the red carpet treatment by Amma. To Amma, we were the elite and she felt legitimized and honored by our presence. Rickety steel chairs were hurriedly arranged for us and we were served the Arak in glasses that had been equally hastily washed in a nearby stream, whose water didn’t exactly originate in a Swiss mountain spring.

Twenty pairs of drunken eyes then watched us spellbound and clapped loudly as we downed the stuff. If one of us made a face like a grimace, there was raucous laughter all around.

The liquor was colorless and if you looked closely, you could see stuff floating and some of the stuff even swimming on their own propulsion. If you were desperate to get high as we sometimes were, then you closed your eyes, took a deep breath and downed it in one shot.

I am lucky to be alive and disease-free, honest.

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But in all this mad scramble to get high, there never was any of the real hard stuff like LSD, crack or heroin going around in our college dorms. At least not in my time there. Thank the Lord or I would have tried that too and who knows, I might have gotten hooked.

Eventually after five short years of bliss, merriment and the occasional stoned groping of girls from Stella Maris in darkened cinema halls (whose narration shall have to wait for another post), I graduated with a bachelors in Mechanical Engineering with honors. I recognized that I had to earn a living and I left all the stuff we got high with, behind. Thereafter I touched only beer occasionally. No, make that every weekend, in generous amounts, untill June 2014, at which point I stopped even the beer. I am now a teetoatlah. Yay.

What made me pull back from the brink of addiction while so many of my classmates succumbed, one even plunging to his death when he climbed out on a 3rd floor window ledge of our dorm completely stoned, lost his footing and fell out head-first? I had had a tumultuous childhood that at times, looked like a train wreck. I had very little time for an ‘upbringing’ like most other kids had. By 12, I was in a harsh boarding school environment, tortured, bullied, victimized and forgotten. If anyone had to rebel and implode, it should have been me.

But I came through. I think that it had a lot to do with my keeping my wits together and the company I kept in college, the circle of friends I had who matured with me through engineering school. Like me, they all experimented, got high but knew when was enough, caught themselves before going overboard and we all made it through.

Like the Virginia Slims girl – I’ve come a long way, baby.

——————————

The title is from “I got stoned and I missed it” , a Dr Hook number and in case youre interested, here’s the YouTube link…

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Getting Older Without Getting Old

09 Tuesday Jul 2024

Posted by spunkybong in Uncategorized

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Tags

agelessness, hayflick limit, longevity, mitosis, senescence

The Hayflick Limit, proposed by Leonard Hayflick in 1961, is an upper boundary of how many times a normal human cell (not a stem cell) can divide before it can no longer divide.
For mice, the number is about 15; humans: 50; and Galapagos turtles: 110.
———————————-

If turtles and lobsters could talk they would turn first-person accounts into fascinating history lessons.

Imagine you are a doddering old turtle off Caen, in Northern France, scoping the shallows for algae, sponges or whatever the fuck turtles eat. Chances are good that in 1588, as a kid swimming alongside your mommy, you watched Sir Francis Drake on his man-o-war, The Revenge, racing with the wind, chasing after the Spanish Armada.

Turtles habitually live a healthy 400-plus years. Lobsters and jellyfish live even longer, almost forever. So, imagine you’re a lobster instead and it is 43AD. Instead of Sir Francis and the Spanish Armada, you might actually have seen traffic in the opposite direction – Roman Emperor Claudius’s fleet spread out horizon to horizon, two-tiered arrays of oars rising and falling, chopping up the waters as the galleys crossed over to vanquish the incumbent, barbarian war-lord Caractacus and annexing Britain.

The sea creatures referred above possess negligible senescence – senescence being the scientific term for ageing. They don’t seem to age at all.

Most of us dream of longevity. Some among us are conducting advanced research on immortality. The question on our collective minds is a simple one – Why can’t we be like lobsters or turtles or those giant sequoias and live hundreds of years without growing old and infirm?

Getting old seems like a fact of life. It is a gradual process of wearing out, inevitable for both man-made machines as well as the biological machinery ticking away inside us. However, looking around the animal and plant kingdom, we can see that there is no universal law of biology that mandates ageing.

So, like the intelligent, questioning beings that we are, we have concluded that the above creatures must have something in their biology that we do not. The search is on, into finding and replicating that something.

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Ageing is the single largest cause of human suffering. It might sound counter-intuitive, but it makes sense when you think it through : all of the biggest killers in the modern world, from cancer to heart disease to dementia, affect older people far more often than younger ones. Take Covid-19 as an example. The oldest patients were hundreds of times more likely to die of the disease than children or young adults.

If you add it all up, of the 150,000 deaths that happen every day on Earth, over 100,000 of them are caused by ageing. Deaths from problems like heart disease are preceded by years of physical decline, loss of independence and so on.

And then there’s the problems we don’t list as diseases: the frailty, the forgetfulness, the incontinence… Add all this suffering together, across billions of people, and nothing else comes close.

So, rather than tackle these individual problems one at a time, why not go after the real prize : arresting the ageing process that causes them?

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Longevity used to be a fantasy until 1961, when a young researcher at the UCSF School of Medicine, Leonard Hayflick, found out the exact reason why we don’t live longer.

For his research, Hayflick contracted with nearby abortion clinics to deliver dead fetuses to him, from which he extracted cells. He chose fetuses because their cells were pristine and the least likely to have viruses in them which might blur the study results.

Hayflick found that the cells from his fetal tissue samples multiplied only a finite number of times, before they stopped dividing altogether. Each time a cell undergoes the multiplication (known as mitosis), the telomeres (microscopic genetic features on the ends of each chromosome) shorten slightly. Cell division will cease once telomeres shorten to a critical length.

Hayflick interpreted his discovery to be aging at the cellular level.

Now a well-established fact, the number of cell divisions in the case of humans is 50, while for lobsters and turtles it is far higher.

Hayflick propounded that, if the gene that limits the number of cell divisions can be isolated and modified, then that 50-division limit can be extended, enabling humans to live longer.

Leonard Hayflick, getting off on cells, 1982 (Photo courtesy: nature.com)

Hayflick made another even more remarkable discovery – that if a human cell is frozen below -250˚C after it has already gone through a number of divisions (say, 25), the divisions slow down and as soon as the temperature is raised once again, the multiplication begins where it left off.

In fact, if you increase or decrease the cell temperature with a regulator, you can speed up or slow down the division. Surviving inter-planetary travel through deep freezes is not merely science fiction, but a reality waiting to happen.

The Nostromo crew, waking up in the hypersleep chamber, in Ridley Scott’s “Alien”

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Scientists now refer to that limiting number of cell divisions as the Hayflick limit.

Who or What was responsible for fixing the Hayflick Limit at 50 for humans? God? But if that were so, if God really did decide that human cells should stop at 50 divisions, surely He must have wanted the number to remain sacrosanct. Why then did He give us the ability to figure out how to extend it beyond 50?

But I stopped understanding God a while back. He’s the same guy who gave us a richard and a hard-on and then turned around and then laid down the rules on who, when and how to fuck.

The one thing that definitely is not fixed is our ideas and questions. They seem to grow with every new scientific revelation, drawing us further and further away from the fantasy concept of God. We are already at a stage where Adam and Eve and the serpent and the apple and the jet setting Angel Gabriel have begun to seem absurd.

We are now living through an era when we won’t even get a ticket for breaking nine out of the Ten Commandments. Go ahead and check the penal codes of most modern nations if you don’t believe me.

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Ultimately, aging is a disease – a disease that many top scientists believe can be slowed, stopped, and perhaps even reversed.

Researcher Andrew Steele, in his “Ageless: The New Science Of Getting Older Without Getting Old”, says that the progress in research on arresting senescence is rapid and it is a matter of time before humans will be able to extend life expectancy dramatically.

The search for that elixir which gives eternal life is a frenetic one, its intensity in direct proportion to the number of billionaires in the world.

As I write this, a bunch of billionaires are funding research on agelessness like there’s no tomorrow. Jeff Bezos backs Altos Labs, while Sam Altman funds Retro Bio. Google’s Larry Page is all in with Calico.

The reasons why billionaires are throwing money at longevity research are straightforward. First, they sincerely believe that they are capable of achieving anything with their single-mindedness. To them, obstacles are temporary, fleeting challenges to be swiftly overcome (or bypassed). Second, they can’t take their money with them when they die.

The third reason is the most important one. Longevity is a huge business opportunity, just as obesity and weight loss became when ozempic was born. A joint 2013 study by the London Business School, Oxford and Harvard concluded that extending just one healthy year of life is worth $38 trillion to the global economy and extending healthy life by 10 years could net greater than $300 trillion. 

No other business opportunity even comes close.

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Immortality though has its pros and cons. Among the pros is the exhilarating feeling that you are never going to die. In 3 billion years you’ll watch the Sun bloat so large and red that you could actually reach out and touch it. You would of course be burnt to a crisp but let’s hope immortality brings with it the guarantee of a life free of pain.

A trillion years and you would be part of a dimensionless dot, the universe having collapsed back into a singularity.

And the cons – immortality will give you a cast iron immune system but it won’t save you from accidental harm, like if you step off the sidewalk and get run over by a drunk driver or get crushed under an industrial press like the Terminator. So, whether you are immortal or not, you still have to try not to be a schmuck.

I’ll be 70 in eight months. According to the Canadian Census Bureau, I am expected to live another 13.1 years. With my spartan lifestyle and frequent sex, it could even be twennie years. (They say sex increases life expectancy). That is enough time for the Human Genome Project, stem cell research and nanotechnology to detect my Alzheimer’s or blocked heart valve early and prevent it.

So I am going to keep on eating berries and nuts, drinking wine and fucking excessively.

Amen.

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The right to bare

09 Tuesday Jul 2024

Posted by spunkybong in guns, plattsburgh, stanstead library, Uncategorized

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From where I live, the US border at Plattsburgh, NY, is a mere 40-minute drive. Our neighbor, Vince and his wife, Tricia, shop down there frequently. Oh yeah, everybody over here goes down south of the border to shop. Even for groceries. The last time, Vince and Trish came back with all sorts of stuff. I saw a stalk of broccoli leaning wearily against the rear window of their SUV, looking fatigued like,’ are we home yet?’

South of the border, stuff are dirt cheap as compared to Canada. Right now a CAD is 0.73USD, but the prices down there have always been way below ours, even after currency conversion.

There is a law that has been ready to be tabled at the US Congress since the late 19th century awaiting debate, named the “Canada Annexation Bill of 1866”. It proposes to annex Canada by force as the 51st American state. If the law is taken up and passed, prices in Canada will crash and I will get Kleenex at $1.29, oh yeah. Those depending upon social services would suffer, though. Canada, a welfare state, splurges on the unemployed and the have-nots.

But I digress.

US-Canada border towns like Plattsburgh have the look of boom towns. They exist for one purpose only – catering to Canadian shoppers. At Plattsburgh malls, Canadians are treated much the same way a Las Vegas casino welcomes high-rollers. The same thing plays out at the other border crossings at Burlington, Stanstead and elsewhere.

——————-

Remind me to tell you about Stanstead some time. There’s a public library there that sits across the border, one half in Canada and the other half in the US. The border, a 6-inch wide black strip, runs across the middle of the main floor.

If you are Canadian and walk in from the Canadian side, you are allowed to cross the strip and browse shelves, but not permitted to walk out of the American side if you haven’t got your passport with you.

If you venture out into the US by mistake, its not a big deal unless your first name is ‘Mohammad’ or something. Happened to me. I didn’t have my passport and I simply walked out of the other door, into the US of A.

The uniformed agent in the SUV outside immediately stepped out and on finding I didn’t have my passport, he took my drivers license, got back in the vehicle and returned a moment later. Canada and the US have a uniform identification system, their databases accessible to law enforcement on both sides.

I began apologizing but he smiled and said, “Happens all the time. Just get back in the library and have a great day. Bring your passport the next time.” He handed back my drivers license.

Once again, I digress. Brilliant minds always wander.

————————-

There is a limit to how much each person is allowed to get through Canadian customs without having to pay duty, but there are ingenious ways by which one can show the customs agents their middle finger.

Suppose you have set your eyes on buying a set of new tyres. At Plattsburgh a set of new 16” Toyos is less than half the price in Canada. Now you don’t drive all the way just to get tyres. You buy other stuff as well and before you know it, you’ve crossed your limit.

If you are an idiot, that is.

If you’re smart, when you leave home, you take the ready-to-scrap tyres that your neighbor was anyway throwing away and he helps you put them on.

You go buy the new tires at Plattsburgh and switch them right there with the active connivance of the dealer. They can’t say nothin’ to you at the border. Want an expensive jacket? Just wear it back. As long as you don’t have a beard and aren’t muttering “allah-o-akbar”, you’re cool.

The border agents aren’t stupid of course. Once I remember an agent mentioning to me in a heavily accented southern twang, “How come you ain’t got no noo tyres?”

After I had my new tyres installed, I had nothing else ta do. I ambled around the sprawling Champlain Centre Mall and strolled through the Walmart, Target and Best Buy stores. These are gigantic outfits, each store spread over acres and acres. The Champlain Centre Mall is so huge that you can barely see the roof of the Target store from the Walmart, due to the curvature of the earth.

Kidding. I get carried away and lie all the time when I’m writing my blog. Don’t ever take my words to the bank. But its my blog, so I’ll lie whenever I want ta.

Anyway, there I was, minding my business in the land of the free and the prosperous, the kick-ass surgical strike capital of the world and I was enjoying it. I went into a bar and ordered a beer and a turkey-bacon club with a side order of fries. It was delicious. Costed me peanuts.

I was doing a little more ambling when I passed a Gander Mountain outlet. Leaning against a wooden stand at the display window was a belt-fed Browning machine gun, pretty much like the one you saw Arnold Schwarzneggar pack, in Commando.

Canada too has gun stores. There are in fact three within a block of where I live. But you won’t find stuff that resembles artillery in Canada. Canada is much stricter and doesn’t allow either “conceal carry” or “reveal carry”.

I own a Lapua Magnum with scope but as per Canadian law the gun, along with its .338 ammunition, has to be inside a locked case in my home.

Here’s how strict Canadian laws on firearms are – I am allowed to transport my Lapua out of my home but only inside that locked case and only to and from the shooting range or the designated hunting zone for which I have to show that I have been issued a tag and permit. And I can do the hunt only for the designated game during a season designated for that species of game. Deer season usually starts August, until End-September.

If you are caught outside season by a game warden with a dead deer at the back of your pickup truck, with a bullet hole through its neck, its $5000 plus the cancellation of your hunting license and confiscation of everything related to the killing. That means your beloved gun, your ammo, your dear dear pickup truck, your back-pack, everything.

Right after I got the Lapua, I went hunting with a friend and if you behave I’ll tell you all about it in my blog at some later date, when I feel like it.

So, like I was sayin’ , Canada strictly regulates the use of firearms. I have a firearm license and a hunting license but that does not cover hand guns. For that I need a special waiver. No such rules exist in the US. You can just walk into a Walmart or an outfitter (hunting goods retailer) and walk out with any gun you please. In America, you can buy your son a 9mm Micro Uzi for his 13th birthday and he can fire it as long as he is in the company of an adult above 18.

————————

So, here I was passing the Gander Mountain outlet. Just like every other store there, this one too was massive and at the very end, behind all the outdoor gear, was a narrow section with a long counter on which there were at least 30 handguns of varying caliber and make, lying on their side in a long line. At the far end of the counter there were 10 Uzis and Armalites, also on their sides. I gaped, my mandible dropping to the floor with a crump.

I’m sure these guys can smell a Canadian a mile away. “Lookin’ foah sumpn?” boomed the rotund man behind the counter, looking me straight in the eye and sizing me up in a glance. If you are a gun retailer in the US, you have got to be a good sizer upper of body language, if you don’t want to suddenly gain weight. Lead weight.

“No..I..umm..er..I was just kinda lookin’ around..” I stammered.

“Look all you want, they ain’t goan nowhere.” You have to love the way Americans speak English, kinda rolling the words around before saying them. He was staring down at some receipts, probably doing his taxes or something.

Noting that I was still there, Mr Rotund straightened and moved down the counter to a shelf from which he picked up a handgun, placed it on the counter and gave it a shove. The gun came slipping and sliding across the full length of the counter top and came to rest, bumping against the back of my right hand.

I immediately recoiled at the touch of the cold muzzle.

“Go ahead, pick it up. It ain’t loaded,” said Humpty-Dumpty. I reached out and picked the gun up gingerly. It felt surprisingly light and on close inspection, it didn’t appear metallic at all. I curled my fingers round the grip and snaked my index finger through the trigger guard.

“Glock33. Takes three fifty seven SIG. 9 shots. Tritium illuminated night sight. Semi-automatic.” (Americans don’t say ‘automatic’. It’s ‘awrmaric’).

“Its so light!” I exclaimed in amazement.

“It’s not steel. It’s a special polymer patented by Glock,” he replied. He was leaning against the counter and regarding me with amusement.

“How much is it?”

“Five hundred but I’ll letcha have it faw foah cash, plus a coupla boxes of ammo, seein’ you’re a reg’lar gent and all.”

“Do I need to show you any papers? I’m Canadian.”

“Far as ahm concerned, you could be hooky doo, I doan care. Just a piece of ID shoan you’re over ayeteen, that’s it. No forms, nuthin’. You walk out with this baby, no sweat. ‘Course I can’t say about those dumbasses at the border though.”

“But if I remain here in the US, is it legal for me, a Canadian, to have a Glock?” I was beginning to fill with amazement.

“Shore it is. The law is simple – everybaady, and the guvmint means eeeeverybaaaaady, has the right to bear arms.”

“Thanks, I guess I have seen enough guns for a while. Have a great day.” I straightened up to leave.

“No problem, bud. Just drop in anytime. In fact if you weren’t in a rush, I’d show you this little mother that came off the cumpunee depot just yesterday.” He reached inside a drawer and his right hand came out with a nasty piece of work about a foot long. Shining silver, it had a long long barrel and a rotating breech like those colts you saw in westerns.

“Taurus 357 Magnum, 9-shot semi-awrmaric. You could kill a moose with one shot,” he called after me as I walked out. I kept walking. Aw the poor American moose, they don’t stand a chance.

I was back at the mall parking lot when a blood-red Camaro convertible sighed to stop just next. A blonde got out. Wrapped around the girl’s waist was a holster with a large gun, probably a Smith and Wesson .44 like the one Dirty Harry had. She walked with a thumak-thumak like swagger and disappeared into the Gander Mountain. I wondered whether I should wait to see if she walked out with the Taurus. I felt my richard stir inside my pants as I watched her.

A gun-toting woman is a huge turn-on.

The girl had a bikini on that must have been cut from a Confederate flag. On performing a quick, practiced appraisal, I surmised the bikini must have weighed ten milligrams, give or take a milligram. It had a strap that spiraled up round her neck, like DNA, only the strap had less molecules in it, I swear. Would I lie to ya?

Now that’s more palatable to peaceniks like me – the right to bare….

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Fucking with the 7th Commandment

08 Monday Jul 2024

Posted by spunkybong in extra-marital affairs, Uncategorized

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Tags

Ashley Madison, infidelity, sexual affair, ten commandments

“Thou shall not commit adultery”

(The Ten Commandments, Exodus 20:1-17, 1470 BC edition)

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“Watch it, this is the era of data breaches, Stupid”

(The Ten Commandments, 2024 AD edition)

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Spunkybong Quiz :

Who said, “If I don’t have sex every day, I get a headache” ?

 (Hint : Read this piece through, for the answer)

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I have reached the age of superannuation and therefore crossed that threshold beyond which wives usually don’t even bat their eyelids when men cheat.

“Go ahead, he’s aaaaall yoooores”, accompanied by a snigger, is the worst that can happen.

Once she even dared me. We were sitting at a riverside café and I was checking out a broad who had a skirt that appeared to have been painted on by an artist so hard up that he couldn’t afford enough paint.

My wife followed my gaze and said, “You are shameless and disgusting.”

“If you berate me this way, I’ll cheat on you,” I countered.

“With that?” She pointed at a spot south of my navel and giggled.

I hate it when they giggle.

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I do not believe in living for the moment. Anything that is fleeting, like an orgasm, does not appeal to me anymore. Ashley Madison thinks that we should make ‘the most’ of the time we have on earth.

“Life is short. Have an affair,” says their website. It is a typically western mindset – seeking out and trying different things, making life as exciting as possible. The site is so in-your-face immoral that it is actually intriguing, if not downright attractive, to folks who like life on the edge.

Let’s face it. I completely agree with Al Pacino’s soliloquy in The devil’s advocate. We humans were meant to be neither faithful nor virtuous. Otherwise why the fuck would God make sinning look so attractive? 

Every goddamn thing that we really enjoy doing is sinful. Every sin is a blast that we have a ball committing. We are perpetually stuck in a cusp where the other side is always greener. So is adultery. The other woman might have bad breath and the other man may have a tiny richard and yet they turn us on more.

As far as jurisprudence is concerned, over here in North America, a judge won’t even bother about your dalliances, should you find yourself standing in a courtroom, getting divorced. If you are standing there because you were shtupping someone behind your wife’s back, it means absolutely nothing to a North American judge. You’ll be let off with a $10 fine and that too, only in a handful of Canadian provinces. In the others, adultery is not even in the penal code.

The judge might take notice, if your extra-marital affair affects your kids in any way, but chances of that happening are rare these days. Kids today are hardened and blasé. While they would have preferred to be in a family where the parents were affectionate toward each other, separation and divorce do not bother the average North American kid that much anymore. In fact he sees the bright side pretty quickly – two sets of parents mean two sets of Christmas presents, birthday presents and vacations.

So, go right ahead and get into any North American woman’s pants if she’ll have you in there, Sir. That’s why over here we call pants ‘slacks’.

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Now, let’s go to the hullabaloo about the hacking of the Toronto-based AshleyMadison.Com, a website whose business plan is a niche. It takes your money to blatantly enable your extra-marital affairs. The site reportedly got its name from joining the two most popular baby names in North America, to attract female subscribers.

Now don’t go strait-laced on me. Each one of you wants to fuck the neighbour’s wife or the neighbor himself or the girl in the bus or the stewardess on the plane or the dentist who presses her tits against you while examining your molars. Or Scarlett Johanssen.

About Scarlett Johanssen, you better leave her alone, she’s exclusively mine to fantasize about. Or else I’ll have my contact in the ‘NDrangheta employ unconventional means to deter you. Any outfit whose name starts with an apostrophe, beware of it. As for me, Scarlett and I pass each other microbes and carbon dioxide through our lips on a daily basis.

In July 2015, an unknown person or group calling itself “The Impact Team”announced they had stolen the user data from Ashley Madison’s site. There was huge concern over the damage which the leak could cause, when all the lurid details of it’s clients’ dalliances were exposed.

Wired Magazine termed the leak an ‘unprecedented personal privacy disaster’. Reminds me of the 2014 scandal over the hacking of celebrities’ cell phones and the outing of nude photos which stars like Jennifer Lawrence regularly texted to their boyfriends.

As if meeting up and fucking every evening, sharing tit and dick pics, wasn’t enough.

I mean, what kind of imbecile would want to do stuff that is so prone to hacking? Don’t we know by now that when the technology world touches the real world, there are security risks inherent in the overlap? Don’t we have a constant stream of news stories about security breaches, hacks, leaks and data loss? Doesn’t it inevitably turn into a predictable progression – technology meeting security risk meeting stupid?

Honestly, I am finding it very difficult not to not feel utter scorn for the shmucks who go to places like AshleyMadison.com.

I have no idea what kind of site security Ashley Madison employed, but breaches can happen and they do, all the time. Hacks are so common nowadays that security experts no longer advise companies on ways to stop attacks, since that would be pointless, given the sheer volume of bombardment.

My own employers routinely receive threats to the extent of 1850 to 2500 distinct attacks every day, peaking during vacation periods to as much as 10000 intrusion attempts daily. It is impossible to build a fence that can keep each and every intruder out. Instead, internet security providers devise ways to mitigate the risk of having hackers inside and work on ways to contain a breach.

Then there is the Murphy’s law for cheaters – If you cheat, you must accept that there is a reasonable chance that you will eventually be outed somehow.

AshleyMadison.com claims to have 70 million users, with more than half in the US and Canada. Is your spouse cheating on you? So? Big deal. Get a life and a divorce. That is a typically western thought process. Western society has become immune to infidelity, desensitized and pessimistic about being able to build a happy marriage.

What? Don’t look at me like that. I may be Canadian but I am not one of the 70 mill, okay? I belong to the giggle rousers’ group, remember? Besides, I heard somewhere that affairs might give you a fractured penis. I am terrified of an L-shaped organ which would make me have to thrust sideways to achieve penetration, thank you.

Europe is not very far behind, more specifically – France. When the French President Francois Hollande was outed, zipping away on a scooter in the middle of the night, to see his mistress, his approval rating, instead of going further south, actually went up. The French celebrate adultery exuberantly.

I read somewhere that the Ashley Madison hackers are not evangelical crusaders who wish to combat the spread of sexual sin by closing down the site, but disgruntled employees.

Whatever their real motive, the hackers can gain consolation by the fact that Jesus would almost certainly have approved the hack, although his modus operandi might have been a bit different – maybe more ‘Biblical’……

Jesus might have cursed Toronto with a flood or maybe tornados, even a higher pollen count or UV Index, having Gaby the Archangel paint a cross on the doors of the virtuous, with goats’ blood.

Ulp! Anybody have JC’s number? I have to tell him there are no goats in Canada.

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Answer to the Spunkybong Quiz:

John F. Kennedy

——————————————-

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The Cretaceous–Paleogene Extinction Event – Episode : 5 – 10 years after Impact

25 Tuesday Jun 2024

Posted by spunkybong in Asteroid Chicxulub, Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction, Cretaceous-Paleogene xetinction, Dinosaur Extinction, ecological disaster, environmental catastrophe, K-Pg extinction, natural selection, Uncategorized

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Tags

asteroid, Chicxulub, dinosaurs, extinction level event, impact crater, K-Pg boundary

The furry Ectoconus and its young, post-apocalypse, 10 years after impact. They have emerged from their underground hideouts and now roam free. Suddenly those predators with teeth larger than steak knives have disappeared.

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Gandhinagar, Gujarat, India

10 Years After Impact

Shocking as the immediate aftereffects of the impact had been, the devastation is not total. There are a few places, on the other end of the earth, where the hardy have made it through. That includes present day Gandhinagar in the Indian state of Gujarat, 9500 miles from impact.

Even at the impact site, although the Chicxulub asteroid buried itself deep into bedrock, outside the outer ring of the crater even a thin layer of soil was enough to protect creatures that had their living rooms burrowed underground.

Soil is an excellent insulator. Wet soil, even more so. Incessant rains had been the norm prior to impact, ensuring a 10-metre thick layer of wet earth everywhere. Even at their most intense (450°C), the worldwide Paleocene fires have not been able to reach deeper than a few inches under.

It is almost as if Providence had prepared the little creatures that lived beneath the soil, for survival.

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The Ectoconus has always been an accomplished digger. Prior to impact, her burrow had been at the edge of an Edmontosaurus hatchery and hatching season was like a month-long thanksgiving dinner. She had been born here in this burrow, one of the many pups of the reddish-white, dappled, furry, wolf-sized mammals.

Unlike most mammals up to this time, she hadn’t been born from an egg. She had developed inside her mother alongside ten other siblings and had emerged through her mother’s vulva at birth. She and her brothers and sisters had immediately started suckling from pinhole-sized openings in their mom’s tummy.

The togetherness with her siblings during the time she had spent inside her mom’s womb, the furry warmth of her mom’s body now snoozing next to her, the cuddling…… it had felt heady, it had soothed, made her feel secure.

The Ectoconus didn’t know it then, as she lay cuddled up against her mom and her siblings, but she would feel a new emotion that went deeper than raw survival – intimacy – affection, in its paleogenic format.

It is entirely possible that cuddling gave mammals an evolutionary edge. The experience of the shared warmth helped the Ectoconus become a mindful parent, more secure than the great carnivorous reptiles who could never get off the savage “eat or be eaten” bandwagon, trigger-happy lizards who murdered their offspring over a greater portion of lunch and then ate them too. To the great reptiles the word “mindfulness” would forever remain alien.

In the new world, 10 years from impact, intimacy and survival are now intertwined.

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She and her siblings didn’t stick around with their Mom for long, though. When they grew swift and sturdy enough to be able to catch their own food, their Mom drove them out of the burrow, just as she had done with her previous litters.

There were no hard feelings. Evolution has taught them to strike out on their own, gain their own sexual partners, sometimes from other families that looked a bit different, their genes intermingling and mutating through generations.

As a teen, prior to impact, the Ectoconus recalls stealing up on the Edmontosaurus hatchery with her siblings at night and making off with an egg, pushing, rolling it the short distance to the burrow. The egg was delicious. Just one was enough to last a few days of fine dining.

The last egg-snatching foray had been wildly traumatic though, when her bro got squished beneath the feet of a herd of unwary hadrosaurs.

Her brother’s passing has done nothing to her psyche. It is still early for the new sensation of affection that she has developed toward her siblings to completely trump survival at all costs, a maxim that has stood her in good stead so far. It will be millions of years before her kind develops into a domesticated canine that is able to feel love, loss, emotions that we recognize. Her brother’s passing was just one of those things she has learned to live with, an occupational hazard, the loss of a foraging partner and nothing more.

It has been a while since the Ectoconus and her litter have had a taste of those Edmontosaurus eggs. Where the fuck were they gone to? She doesn’t know that non-avian dinosaurs like the Edmontosaurus are now all but extinct. Oh well, life goes on, we’ll find something else, she sighs.

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Meanwhile, the cold is very gradually loosening its grip on the planet. The dust has settled. Years of darkness from the airborne soot are now a thing of the past. Finally, sunlight is shining through once again.

The once fire-scarred landscape has been transformed. Those tall mesocyparis (ancestors of conifers) and giant ferns, charred skeletons after impact, have blended into the blackened soil and are no longer recognizable. It is as if they had never existed.

9500 miles from impact, Gandhinagar is no longer the steaming hot rain forest. Plants that had learned to live in low-light conditions, prior to impact, are blossoming everywhere. They are the plants that had lived, pre-impact, in the perpetual shade of the giant ficus benghalensis.

66 million years a from now, a genetic descendant of the ficus, the great banyan tree, will be revered and held sacred in India. The purple Hindu God, Krishna, will wax eloquent on how each leaf of the banyan is a hymn from the vedas. The founder of Buddhism, Gautama Buddha will spend years meditating and finally find enlightenment under it.

Obviously under such divine backing of multiple gods and religions, the ficus will survive the ravages of evolution and grow into sturdy behemoths that will live hundreds of years. Those plants that will disappear forever are the large angiosperms, huge flowering plants with gaudy flowers that had petals a metre in length, vegetation props from some dystopian sci-fi movie set.

The Ficus Benghalensis (great banyan tree). This one, in Bodh Gaya, a village in the Indian province of Bihar, is thought to be 500+ years old.

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Even the ferns are smaller now, little plants, plush green, swaying in the breeze. Suddenly a fluttering feathered creature brushes past one of the ferns, sprinkling dew over its plumage.

It is a bird. Not one of those huge grotesque creatures whose wing-spans were metres long. Pre-impact, they had terrorized and now they were gone forever. This one eats food that is small in size – seeds, berries and insects. Evolution recognized that teeth are now redundant. It installed a gizzard and reshaped the bird’s mouth into a beak.

This bird is a 10-inch long feathered avian dinosaur, one of a few that have survived. It has no idea what saved it from the impact and its aftermath. Just 10 years prior, it had been an insignificant member of a much larger avian world with the terrifyingly vicious 40-ft wing-span Quetzalcoatlus on top of the avian food-chain.

Hoots, squawks, squeaks, tweets and gurgles had rung in this feathered little creature’s ears, a veritable orchestra of cacophony, for millions of years. And now, those familiar sounds are gone.

An omnivore, surviving on insects and bugs, as well as seeds that it swallows and then grinds in its gizzard, the bird had been a misfit in the pre-impact world. The larger, more grotesque avian dinosaurs, now gone, had hunted, attacked, clawed, bitten, chewed and ripped their way through life, while this tiny thing had stayed hidden under rocky overhangs and burrows.

Look who is laughing now? Feathered birds are the greatest success story of evolution, one with the humblest of beginnings, like this little creature that had lived like an afterthought, pre-impact. It will have a name – 66 million years from now – when a strange, highly intelligent mammal that will somehow walk on it’s two hind legs and find out how to fly on giant machines, will give it a name -> the Archaeopteryx.

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Of the great reptiles all that remain a decade after impact are bits of charred bones, with little pieces of shredded dry skin still clinging on to them. Their innards, soft tissue, are long gone, disintegrated and dissolved into the soil. Under water, the humongous plesiosaurs have been replaced by smaller, 10-ft long reptiles, ancestors of crocodiles.

The Compsemys, a foot-long ancestor of the turtle, is a sluggish and dim-witted herbivore that minds its own business, but it has survived. At the time of impact, it had dived down and stayed down for 40 minutes without having to rise for oxygen. In fact it stayed submerged longer than that, the cloaca in its rear having special blood vessels that absorb oxygen from the water and replenish its oxygen supply, extending its ability to remain under water for an hour more, precious time that has saved its way of life.

Another hardy survivor is the caterpillar. Yeah, the tiny little Lepidopteran, the only genus that begins with an egg and gradually transforms into a winged insect, developing along the way into a larva(caterpillar), then a pupa(chrysalis) and finally the adult insect. It lives on a salads-only diet – green leaves. Time to time, it will be snapped up by the beak of an avian dinosaur and swallowed whole, but its sheer numbers will ensure its survival. In 66 millions years, it will be a member of genus that forms over 15% of all living creatures on earth.

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If there is one clear message sent through fossils dug up, it is that our existence is due to sheer accident and not religious mumbo jumbo. Happenstance provides the raw material for natural selection to choose a certain direction, to decide which species will survive and which won’t.

The next time an evangelist of any faith waxes eloquent on how God created us, don’t forget to tell him he is full of shit.

You and I are here by sheer chance. 66 million years ago, a 10 trillion-ton rock, one of millions of such rocks that form a swirling cocoon around the Solar System called the Oort Cloud, began an erratic, blundering, drunken journey in a completely random direction, intermittently pushed and pulled by planets, moons and other space debris in its way. 

While passing Jupiter, the tug-of-war between the Sun and the large planet broke the rock into several pieces. The largest piece, a 2.5 trillion ton 7-mile wide iridium-rich rock, continued on until it just happened to slam into the earth.

The rock had travelled 10 trillion miles and taken 1500 years to reach its destination. The non-avian dinosaurs, who had been around for 185 million years when the rock struck, perished, ceding further evolution of life on earth to the mammals and the birds.

We, the Homo Sapiens, have been around for just 300000 years. That is 0.16% of the time that the dinosaurs spent on earth. In that short period of time, we have transformed into the lords, completely dominating over every other living creature.

The fact that we are the lords is a fluke – the accidental extinction of non-avian dinosaurs, from the accidental impact of a rock. There is absolutely nothing divine about it. If there is an entity called God who had created us, then surely he is also the one who has provided us with the intellect to delve far into the distant past and figure out most of everything that has happened so far. Why would he equip us thus? And having given us our intellect, surely he would also make it easy for us to find other intelligent forms of alien life?

Most puzzling of all, why would God make a rock amble through space for 1500 years and then crash into our planet so we could evolve through the next 66 million years into what we are today, when all he had to do was say it?

Why would God create a thousand million oxymorons???

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While walking to lunch with colleagues, discussing the possibility of there being intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, Enrico Fermi, the Italian-American physicist and Nobel Laureate, is reported to have blurted out, “But where is everybody?” 

If there is intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, where is it? Where are the damn aliens? If evolution of intelligent life was so easy, surely they would have come calling by now? History however has repeatedly shown us that nothing at all is impossible.

A great practician of logic, Fermi also acknowledged that purely on a statistical basis, the chances that there are advanced extra-terrestrial life forms out there are very high. This is the Fermi Paradox, the duel between the lack of conclusive evidence of advanced extraterrestrial life and the apparently high likelihood of its existence.

But I think we are unique, one of a kind created by sheer chance, by rock hitting rock in a distant past. Just because there are an unimaginable number of star systems in the universe, that does not necessarily mean that there must be other intelligent beings elsewhere.

We are unique in more ways than one. Most star systems are binary star systems (ie : two stars orbiting each other). Except our’s.

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The Chicxulub asteroid impact was like nothing that had come before or has come since. Had that rock missed the earth altogether or maybe just grazed it, our planet’s history would surely have been spectacularly different. We may never have evolved at all. Maybe new strains of monster dinosaurs would be strutting around right this minute, killing on a whim anything that crossed their path.

Our continued survival therefore is not assured. We are hardy little critters but we have to learn to live like there will be no tomorrow.

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E Pluribus Multis

18 Tuesday Jun 2024

Posted by spunkybong in Uncategorized

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“Most people believe that good governance leads to harmony. It may, but only temporarily. In the end, good governance always lays itself bare to conflict.” – Noccolò Machiavelli

SPQR – Senatus Populus Que Romanus (The Senate and the People of Rome). If you were living in ancient Rome, you would find this acronym everywhere – on triumphal arches, battle standards, coins, ceremonial banners, you name it and they had it there. It was their version of a Coat of Arms. As to the words, for the Romans it was natural to use Latin.

E PLURIBUS UNUM (Out of many, one). This gobbledygook is found everywhere in America.

Both the above standards depict an eagle, the universal symbol of a predator. Now check out the two Latin phrases above…..

The ancient Roman one, Senatus Populus Que Romanus, is simply an announcement of identification.

The real Roman motto is festina lente [make haste, slowly], used by Augustus, the first Roman Emperor, on his standards and coins. Throughout his long reign Augustus had this one motto. He emphasized it to his generals and thought it so important that he had coins minted with an image symbolizing it. “The fastest way to get something done is to do it right the first time. Especially when you’re feeling the crunch, take your time”, he exhorted.

To defeat the combined militaries of Cleopatra and Mark Anthony, Augustus waited patiently for the right moment to invade and annex Egypt and finish the two lovers off.

Augustus’s advice is backed up by today’s science. In “Thinking Fast and Slow”, Daniel Kahneman, the Nobel Prize-winning psychologist, described two schools for thought. School-1 is fast and emotional and relies on stereotypes. School-2 is slow and difficult and relies on calculation. The more you hurry – and even more importantly, the more you feel that you are hurried – the more you rely on School-1. There are situations when you need to do that, but most of the time, you’ll be far better served taking your time, thinking your way through a crisis than letting your emotions govern your decisions.

Festina lente is both, paradoxical and an oxymoron. How can we make haste slowly? How can we go faster by going slower? Many of the deep human realities at first do seem counterintuitive and this is one of them. We have all heard that the greatest person will be the servant of all, and that those who humble themselves will be exalted and those who exalt themselves will be humbled, or that pride goes before a fall, etc, etc, etc.

All in all, the Roman motto has weight.

A section of an ancient Roman bas relief, c 50AD

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The other motto, the American one, E pluribus unum [Out of many, one] is a pompous piece introduced in the late 18th Century, hundreds of years after Latin had receded into obscurity.

What the fuck is wrong with saying it in plain English?? Why not simply say something like, “Prosperity in unity” or some other similar crap? But no, it has to be in Latin, a faux effort to sound profound. In today’s context, when billionaires control 70% of America’s wealth, it sounds phony as hell too.

One can’t blame the Americans alone for being pretentious. Look at my land of birth, India’s motto, Satyameva Jayate [Truth alone triumphs], delivered in Sanskrit, a language so obsolete that the Last Supper was actually centuries into the future when it was in vogue. The last time any Indian man-on-the street spoke Sanskrit as a matter of course was around 600AD.

The dash of Sanskrit in the Indian motto is meant to make it appear deep and profound, when in reality it is just another pompous piece of schlep to be regurgitated on occasions like the Independence Day, very very far from any desire for truth, in a country hijacked by a cabal of rich businessmen and organized crime capo-turned politicians, pandering to a barely literate tea shop owner living out his right-wing fantasies.

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Let’s leave India and get back to Rome…..

When it came into existence – circa 800BC – it was just a small town that was little more than a village, population 150, by the banks of a river that was little more than a stream that one could easily wade across, somewhere in middle Italy.

The village didn’t begin with any grand plans of being an empire, but in the course of a thousand years, it would stretch through three continents and secure within its borders the lives of roughly 100 million free citizens and 30 million slaves.

And the stream never imagined that resourcefulness and engineering would divert nearby streams to join its flow, turning it into what is today the turbulent Tiber.

By the time it grew to it’s mightiest in 200AD, the Roman Empire would be constantly fighting wars of conquest and quelling rebellion in it’s distant outposts, expending in today’s dollars – trillions, in order to sustain it’s hegemony.

And all the while that the Roman legions were conquering distant lands, back home tax collectors, judges, senators, policemen, firefighters, medicine men, carpenters, builders, farmers, accountants, poets and historians – they would be going about their orderly lives, free Roman citizens, blissfully comfortable in the thought that those wars could never touch them. This should sound familiar to any American.

It wasn’t really a picture of harmony though – by today’s standards. Ancient Rome was in a state of ‘controlled barbarism’. Rich businessmen sponsored ‘Munera’, reality shows held live in vast amphitheaters where on weekends, citizens brought their wives (and some even their children) to watch hand-picked slaves slash, bludgeon and stomp each other to death.

A vastly different version of morality reigned in 1st Century AD Rome. If you were a Roman housewife, you could have your domestic Nubian slave bludgeoned to death for the slightest of infractions. If you didn’t like the looks of your new born female child, you could say it had a curse that had to be exterminated. And then, you proceeded to smash her head against the stable door and threw her little corpse into the rubbish heap, no questions asked.

If you were a plebeian (commoner) and to your dismay your friendly neighborhood quaestor (Senator) took a fancy to your nubile teenage daughter, you had a choice – to either let him take her away, never to be seen again, in exchange for a tip of ten talents and a job in his stables or to face the prospect of hard labor in the arsenic-laced gold mines outside town.

Your daughter got raped either way.

That was civilization 1.0, oh yeah.

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While the citizens within the walls of Rome lived their lives in that quasi-barbaric state of peace, it was quite another world outside. Around the fringes of the Empire was a very violent environment of treacherous mini-empires and rogue city states that were perpetually squabbling and then forming alliances with the intention of marching on Rome and burning it down to the ground.

Invasions and conquests in those days were quite ‘comprehensive’, designed to ensure that the invader wouldn’t get any more trouble from the invaded. If you were a Roman legionnaire, you didn’t just put an arrow through the invaded guy and loot his livestock. You wiped him off the face of the earth. You burned his cities and temples down. You raped his women and then killed them. You threw his children into large burning pits. You took the able-bodied as slaves and worked them to their deaths building your monuments and aqueducts.

For the leaders of the conquered lands who refused to fall in line, you reserved the worst possible fate – you had hot molten lead poured down their throats……alive.

Oh yeah, it was a brutal world. The bloodshed – if it were to happen today – would leave every man, woman and child in the conquered territories with Stage-5 PTSD, while turning most of them into paranoid schizophrenics. And in turn, those invading troops would be suicidal wrecks suffering from acute moral injury.

It speaks to the adaptability of the human psyche that that hasn’t happened. Rome still exists, at the heart of a mediocre but stable European nation, in the midst of a continent of stable, prosperous democracies, none of whom suffer from any consequences of two thousand years of invasions.

Amazing how things haven’t gone south long term, no?

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The analogies between ancient Rome and present day America are startling. Just for fun, let’s compare the two at the height of their hegemony – Rome in 200AD : An empire that stretched from The Azores(east Atlantic) in the west to the mouth of the Tigris(Iraq) in the east and Scotland in the north to Nubia(Sudan) in the south, with 20% of the world’s population as its subjects. And America in the present day, virtually unchallenged, 800 military bases grasping the earth in a stranglehold……

The similarities between the two are striking. Rome started in the 9th Century BC as a lawless haven for the indigents and the unwanted from nearby Carthago, Neapolis and Syracusa. Likewise, America began with the puritans and exiles who came over because they were universally considered assholes and unwanted in Britain. Both started with the dregs, disenfranchised jetsam and flotsam.

Romans went about their daily lives in Rome, oblivious to the suffering their militaries caused in distant lands and so do Americans today.

————————-

Even the mysteries behind the rise of Rome and America mirror each other. How did a small village in central Italy manage to grow into a 4-million square mile empire, bigger in area than Europe? Likewise, how did a little village named Jamestown on the banks of the Powhatan, Virginia (which in fact marked the start of the British Empire) ultimately grow into the world’s most powerful nation? Exactly what is it that set the two apart from the rest?

Romans and Americans have always had an overblown, almost cringeworthy, sense of nationalism. Like Americans today, Romans thought that the sun rose and set with them and that they had a God-given right to dominate and rule over the rest of the world. Philosopher-Emperor, Marcus Aurelius, once exhorted his citizens thus……, “When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious privilege it is to be alive as a Roman – to breathe, to think, to enjoy, to love and to conquer, as a Roman.”

If you are American, you’ll hear similar bullshit from every American President – “Shining city on a hill”, “Greatest nation on earth”, etc. Every balcony, in every small town, must fly the Stars and Stripes. Every school child must memorize the ‘oath of allegiance’ at least once a day. Every speech must end with “God bless America”.

If you are an American, at least once in your lifetime, you’ll hear an American leader deliver shitty eulogies that include the words… “those brave men and women in uniform who are fighting all around the world to keep Americans safe…”.

God, how I despise those phoney words!!! Question what those brave men and women are doing all around the world and exactly how that keeps Americans safe and you will be labelled “Un-American”.

Then, when those brave Americans return home to civilian life, despairing husks, left to fend for themselves, trying desperately to survive PTSD, you will treat them like pariahs.

——————————-

Will America too fade away like Rome and barely exist, a shadow of its former self, another mediocre developed nation, struggling to stay economically afloat?

Quite possibly yes, because American leaders do not believe in Augustus’ festina lente. For America, everything must happen on steroids.

Remember Britain and “Rule, Britannia, rule the waves, Britons shall never be slaves”???? That Britain now has a per capita GDP less than that America’s poorest state, Louisiana.

————————-

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The Cretaceous–Paleogene Extinction Event – Episode : 4 – The Day After

07 Friday Jun 2024

Posted by spunkybong in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Frenchman River Valley, Saskatchewan, Canada

66,050,000 BC (+/-500,000)

The day after impact

————————-

There was no dawn this morning. Since last night, a black shroud has covered Frenchman River Valley, as microscopic silica dust from pulverized rock hangs in the air, along with soot from the planet wide conflagration that even the usually fire-retardant plants cannot withstand.

It is a world you wouldn’t want to live in. Giant carcasses are strewn everywhere. The shaking, the 200 mph winds, those have died down. There is a roar but it is not the roar of those huge carnivores. They are all dead. The noise is from the fires.

It is the morning after the impact and it is the officially recognized end of the Mesozoic Era of the great reptiles and the beginning of the Cenozoic Era, a.k.a the Age of the Mammals.

As of this moment we are living in the Cenozoic Era.

All over the world, there are fallen trees everywhere, burnt to charcoal. Massive dinosaur carcasses are strewn around, carnivores and herbivores, not squabbling, no longer fighting for dominance, finally at peace with each other in death, the flesh beneath their scales burnt beyond recognition.

Death had rained down yesterday, in the form of ejecta debris that had been thrown up by the impact into the mesosphere, the very edge of the atmosphere 60 miles up. The debris had re-entered the atmosphere, hurtling back at the speed of a bullet, big school bus-sized chunks of molten, burning rock that together made the air itself catch fire, let alone the vegetation. In hours the whole surface of the earth was engulfed in flames.

Today those flames are still relentless, still burning, even after 24 hours. Anything and everything, no matter how wet or how fire retardant it is, is burning with an intensity that has no precedent. The temperature of the ambient, all around, is 350°C and rising.

The only species that seem to have a chance of survival are the mammals and the birds, who have always lived and bred in shelters underground or hidden under rocky overhangs, away from the elements, hidden from predators.

——————————-

The impact has released over a million tons of fine black soot in the atmosphere which will block out the sun completely for the next 2 years, halting photosynthesis.

Research suggests that ecosystems can recover after a period of darkness of up to 150 days. However, after over 200 days, some species will start going extinct. A darkness interval of 650 to 700 days, will wipe out 80% of all species. 2 years and we are looking at a near total extinction level.

Next, the oceans will start chilling due to the lack of the sun’s heat, by 10°C every six months. The oceans will gradually freeze and over the next 100 years, a full-blown ice-age will set in, but it will be gradual, allowing some of the still living species to adapt to the cold and wiping out the remaining life forms that could not make the transition, like the dinosaurs.

The species that will adapt and will do so spectacularly, are the furry mammals and birds. Yeah, the same hardy little furry beasts that survived the impact. They will manage to survive the extreme cold. It is almost as if they had foreseen the future and have deliberately grown fur coats for exactly this eventuality!

Like the mammals and the birds, the other survivors of this catastrophe will be those that, by sheer accident, have the traits, the DNA that will allow them to survive. They are not the largest nor are they the deadliest. Many of them are commonplace, mundane little animals found almost everywhere.

It is an irony that the tiniest and the most defenceless living beings will get through this calamity, not the ones on top of the food chain – the massive reptiles who liked to live and roam out on the open ground, arrogant, unafraid. Now, all over the surface of the earth, that open ground is nothing but a mess of dry skeletal remains of vegetation turned to charcoal, sizzling and burning at 400°C.

Whoever coined the aphorism, “the meek shall inherit the earth” certainly didn’t have dinosaur extinction on his mind. It is true however. It is true not only this time but has also been true in all four previous extinction events.

Isn’t evolution amazing? It makes one almost begin to believe that there might be a divine design behind all this.

Unlike the other Extinction Level Events (ELEs) that came before, where the destruction was gradual, the last one spread over a million years give or take, this one is a catastrophe compressed into one day. In the blink of an eye, it is exit stage left for the dinosaurs and entry stage right for the furry mammals and birds.

As much as we love dinosaurs, enshrining them in museums, bringing them back to life in films, reading about them in comic books as children, holding them in awe, we know that we exist only because they ceded the evolutionary centre stage to our ancestors.

We owe them a debt.

———————————

There are few questions that grip us as breathtakingly as the story of us, as a civilization and as a species. How did the earth come to be? How did it evolve and change over time?

In a recurring dream, I see myself walking down the aisle of a gigantic cosmic library. As I walk, I run my fingers over the rows of books chronicling the history of the universe.

The rows of books and the number of volumes in them stretch on and on into infinity and I seem to possess eternal life. Millenia pass as I walk the aisles, my fingers brushing against each book.

After what seems like eons, at the very last shelf, my hand slaps against one book that appears to jut out just a wee bit. It is in a forgotten, dusty corner that few visit.

In my dream, I pause, pull the book out and go sit at a table and begin reading. The first chapter is about our solar system’s birth, the next on the collision with another smaller object that produced the moon. The next few chapters are about how the earth cools and life emerges.

I eventually come upon the chapter on the emergence of humanity. If each chapter represents 100 million years, we humans don’t appear until Chapter 45. In the final page of that chapter, we progress from hunter-gatherers to intelligent beings capable of complicated analysis.

In that last page of Chapter 45, we develop science, art and culture; war, unrest and famine; organized settlements, organized agriculture and organized government; religion, oppression, bigotry and migration and finally, our own morality, truth and deceit.

The rest of the pages of this book of earth are blank, yet to be written. The story has finally reached us here; today; now.

When I try to turn the first blank page, the dream ends and I am awake, but I realize that the story will not end here. There should be another 10 chapters still waiting to be written, another 1 billion years, before all life on earth ceases to exist, incinerated by a depleted, bloating sun that is inexorably turning red, growing more and more massive.

Throughout recorded history, our Sun has nurtured us, given us the will to live and prosper and now it is turning against us. Sudden flares are shooting out unannounced, penetrating what is left of our mesosphere. The Sun has already gobbled up Mercury and Venus, it’s surface now so close that had there been a self-nourishing, heat resistant survivor looking up at the sky, 80% of his sight will be blocked by the flaming giant.

This will be the final Extinction Level Event.

The story of the earth will not end even then. There will still be 40 chapters left to the book, another 4 billion years before our earth, now an arid, lifeless, smouldering rock, ceases to exist, completely engulfed by a red giant sun, vaporized and ionized, shredded into the very fragments it had been built from.

Start to finish is an estimated time frame of 10 billion years, of which 4.5 billion years are already in the past and life has blossomed on earth for 3.7 of those 4.5 billion years.

After life appeared on earth, there have probably been many ELEs but current research has recorded with certainty only two so far where 95% of all species disappeared – the first was the Permian-Triassic Event, 252 million years ago, triggered by a chain of super volcanos in what is now Siberia. And the second was the one this series is all about – the Cretaceous-Paleogene Event, 66 million years back, caused by the impact with a killer asteroid.

Assuming that a future 95% extinction ELE will probably wipe us humans out, how many more ELEs do we have in the future, before we face the one with our doom in it? How will the remaining chapters be written? How will it all end?

Or will we be among the lucky 5%, progressing, multiplying and evolving if not on earth, then on another planet, in another solar system?

———————————-

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The Cretaceous–Paleogene Extinction Event – Episode : 3 – Impact

06 Thursday Jun 2024

Posted by spunkybong in Asteroid Chicxulub, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

asteroid, Chicxulub, dinosaurs, extinction level event, impact crater

Artist’s impression of the Chicxulub crater

—————————-

Frenchman River Valley, Saskatchewan, Canada

66,050,000 BC (+\-500,000)

If a main battle tank were to suddenly come alive, one could mistake it for an Ankylosaurus. Rows of segmented armour plates (scutes) cover her back. Hard spikes point outward from the sides of her belly and at the very end of her tail is a bony knob that acts like a sledgehammer, to smash the skull of a T-Rex should it mistake her for lunch. Even her eyelids are armored.

Including her tail, the Ankylosaurus is 40ft long and weighs 15 tons, fully grown. Because of her great bulk, she can run at a max speed of 6 mph only but that is hardly a disadvantage, given that other dinosaurs (including Scotty, the T-Rex) don’t like to mess with her.

A T-Rex loses teeth as its head gets a battering from an Ankylosaurus’ tail knob. Ankylosaurus is “fused lizard” in Greek. Apt, because she is a distant ancestor of the crocodile.

———————-

The Ankylosaurus has sensed that something is very wrong. Her unease isn’t caused by the approach of a hungry predator. All of a sudden, the ground is rumbling and shifting, like at any moment she might be yanked off her hoofed feet.

Moments earlier the beast had stooped to drink from the edge of a lake, her feet firmly planted on a huge slab of rock that had slanted into the water, like a boat ramp. Dinosaurs know enough not to wade into the water. The lake has no bottom, only a thick ooze of quicksand that swallows anything that falls in to it.

The rock is covered with slippery moss and now it is moving and shuddering, leaving the Ankylosaurus trying desperately to back up. Slipping and sliding she barely makes it out, hooded eyes staring up skyward. “What the fuck just happened?” they seem to say.

Behind the Ankylosaurus, a sudden rush of wind joins the heaving ground to set the trees swaying, performing a macabre dance. A giant Metasequoia leans drunkenly forward at an angle, causing a roosting pterosaur to scramble to take to the sky, squawking in annoyance, its 20ft wings grasping at the air, desperately seeking lift. For a moment it looks as if the huge bird won’t make it but it eventually does.

Then, suddenly the shaking stops. The metasequoia comes back up almost to its original erect bearing and everything goes still, eerily quiet. It is as if nothing at all had been amiss.

The Ankylosaurus freezes, unable to make anything out of what just happened. Nothing in the past 20 years that she has been alive has prepared her for this. She stands stock still and waits. The fact, that 2000 miles to the south a rock has slammed into the earth, is a scenario totally alien, completely incomprehensible, to her.

Frenchman River Valley used to be a noisy place, filled with hoots, squawks, roars, hisses and the thumping of huge hooves, but now there is complete silence. All the inhabitants of French River Valley, the herbivores, the carnivores, the mammals and the reptiles, have frozen in place. Every living being is holding its breath.

The second tremor is far stronger. The slab that the Ankylosaurus had backed up on lifts up suddenly with such massive force that the great beast is flung 50ft into the air like a rag doll. Since the slab had slanted into the lake, the beast does a parabolic arc through the air and plunges into the water with a mighty splash. She flails around with her powerful tail and the more she thrashes about, the faster the quicksand swallows her. She tries desperately, right up until her head disappears under.

The tremors – seismic waves – are now coming in pulses, each stronger than its predecessor, showing no signs of tapering off. All around, giant conifers have been flattened. The nearby inland lake has breached, flooding an area the size of New York State. In 66 million years, all that will remain of the lake is the Frenchman River.

The Chicxulub ELE has claimed its first Canadian victim, 2000 miles to the north, in what is today, Saskatchewan.

—————————-

Across the expanse of water now known as the Atlantic Ocean, far to the north-east is an archipelago in the North Sea. 66 million years from now, it will form a part of the European mainland and be known as Norway. It will no longer be hot, dank and fetid and the marshy flatlands will turn into breathtaking snowbound fjords, swept by icy chill winds.

But today it is just a chain of islands, 360 miles north of present-day Russia and the Russian mainland is currently separated from Europe by a vast 150-mile wide shallow sea that is at places only 50 fathoms deep.

Under the waters, away from the oppressive heat, a gigantic Pliosaurus is steadily rising upward to the surface to catch a gulp of air. Like Scotty, the T-Rex, this beast too is an equal-opportunity predator. It devours anything alive that is dumb enough to swim by. Just an hour back, it had grabbed a passing 1-ton, 14-foot plesiosaur, a Morturneria, by its neck and gorged on its thighs.

Sated for the moment, the Pliosauraus powers his way up until his neck breaks surface. Sheets of water cascade from the enormous head down its neck. Rippling waves spread out like as if a ballistic missile SSBN has surfaced. The sun is low over the horizon, a dim ball of light, glowing red.

All of a sudden something plops into the water, something really hot, because it causes hissing steam to rise immediately. The strike causes a mini-waterspout, so fast was the object’s velocity. The ripple hasn’t died down when another hits. Then another and another, until the waters around the pliosaurus’ head are sizzling and churning, as an acrid smoke begins to choke his breathing and block his sense of smell.

Soon it is raining red hot lumps all around, turning the sea into a hissy, choppy cauldron of death.

One thing dinosaurs aren’t is smart. Instead of diving, the Pliosaurus treads water, transfixed, a deer caught in the headlights. It is a matter of time, before one refrigerator-sized lump hits him square between the large mirthless grey eyes. The effect is spectacular. One minute there is a head attached to a neck and the next, the air is saturated with red-white vapour, millions of tiny pieces of brain, bone and tissue.

The headless Plesiosaur floats away, bobbing furiously in the violently churning waters. By now the ambient water temperature has escalated from 39°C to 52°C. The air has turned into a haze of steam, visibility down to near zero. The sun, still above the horizon, is no longer visible, except for a diffused patch of light in the west.

The Chicxulub ELE has claimed its first Eurasian victim, in another continent, 6000 miles from ground zero.

——————————-

No two impacts produce exactly the same damage. The impactor’s size and speed, the angle of incidence at which it hits, the environment it strikes, all these decide the extent of damage an asteroid can cause.

The Chicxulub asteroid had the worst of all the above circumstances. It came in at 72000 miles per hour, a streak of glowing red light, too fast for the eye to comprehend. It wasn’t a vertical impact. The 7-mile wide rock rammed home, slanted at 45°. One moment everything was as it had always been and the next, this spot on the earth’s skin burst open like a popped pimple.

The force of the impact was so great that quantifying it, giving it a value in teratonnes and zettajoules would border on the ridiculous. There is simply no way anyone can imagine the sheer magnitude of the strike. Not since the formation of the early earth had there been an impact like this one-in-a-million random event, this culmination of a series of random events.

The asteroid hit the earth’s crust, in the shallow continental shelf of what is now the Gulf of Mexico, it’s force driving it 12 miles deep melting and vaporizing stone and rock and ejecting the debris 70 miles into the upper layers of the atmosphere. Like a water droplet hitting the surface of a still pond, the rock created a circular ridge which fell back, creating a middle peak at the centre of the strike spot. And then, the middle peak collapsed, leaving a bowl shaped crater 186 miles in diameter.

All this, within the first 5 minutes.

All that force had to go somewhere and it did, in the form of repeated waves of shock, inadvertently announcing the arrival of the rock to the world. Several hours passed, as repeated 300ft-high super tsunami waves hit the Yucatan coastline, tossing huge dinosaurs around like little plastic toy figures.

————————————-

All through the billions of years of its existence, the earth has been the target of numerous asteroid impacts. The large number of impact craters (some easily recognizable by sight and others through imaging techniques) stand testament to this.

Of all the direct hits that the earth received, the Chicxulub crater in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula is estimated to be the largest and most devastating, at a whopping 186 miles in diameter.

There have been near-misses too. In 2013, the 30-metre wide Duende passed within 17240 miles of us, far closer than some geostationary satellites. It it had hit, it would have delivered a forced equal to that of a 4.8-Megaton atom bomb. That would be the equivalent of 320 Hiroshima detonations all at once and it could have taken out, not only Hiroshima, but also Tokyo and all the other big cities in the 88000 sq.mile Honshu Island, had it been a direct hit.

—————————-

Among identified asteroids that will either actually hit or be really close is Apophis, a 370-metre diameter chunk of rock that is still 180 million miles from us, right now somewhere in the constellation of Taurus.

In 2029, while bypassing the earth, Apophis will go through what is known as a gravitational keyhole, which in layman’s terms is a narrow window created by the earth’s gravitation that deflects the path of an asteroid just enough to ensure that it will hit the earth the next time it comes around the sun. For Apophis, this window is just 500 miles wide.

Then, in 2036, Apophis will be back and this time, as per present calculations, slam into us with the force of a 37-Megaton thermo-nuclear bomb. It will not be an Extinction Level Event (ELE) but wherever it strikes it will instantly wipe out everything within a 1000-mile radius.

My son – and millions of sons and daughters – will be 36 in 2036.

———————————

Fortunately, no ELEs are expected for the next 100 years. Whenever a future extinction level event does become certain, I wonder what life will be like, in the months before impact…..

Since there will be no place of safety to escape to – other than the ISS, which itself will be a short respite – will humans realize the futility of maintaining societal structures, laws, norms, ethics, etiquette, morality, virtue? Will they turn into animals and simply do what they feel like? Would I be able to make Scarlett Johanssen say yes? Will organized religion cease to exist? Will the Abbess cry out to the Bishop, “To hell with Jesus, fuck me anywhere, holy father!”

I’ll probably be dead long before any abbess says those words but I’d still like to know, dammit.

Or…..

Would governments ensure citizens are blissfully unaware untill the moment they see the enormous flash turn night into day and stare at the 200-metre high tsunami bearing down on them at 150 mph?

I think so, yes, most definitely. Government(s) have a good argument for not divulging this type of information. The panic, rioting and general breakdown of society as we know it will hinder any plans that are in place to protect what, if anything, can be protected and that includes a list of people I am most likely not going to be on.

One way to absolutely ensure that I am prepared for the end is to treat every day as if it is my last. Sooner or later it will happen anyway, ELE or no ELE.

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Jamai Shashti

24 Friday May 2024

Posted by spunkybong in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

“I can’t eat anything that has a mother” – Fred Rogers(1928-2003), of “Mister Rogers’ neighborhood”, on being asked by a reporter why he chose to be a vegetarian.


If you are married to a Bengali woman then in just a couple of weeks, you are in for the time of your life. 8th June is “Jamai Shashti”, the day when sons-in-law are feted and feasted. You get invited to your in-laws’ and they mollycoddle you and stuff you with sweetmeats and you come back home loaded with presents.

In a horrendously patriarchal society, the Jamai (Bengali for ‘son-in-law’) is like God on earth.

With me, Jamai Shashti has been different. If I said anything about Jamai Shashti to my mum-in-law, she wouldn’t know what the hell I was talking about. She’s Iranian, a dear woman who brought up a small army, five kids, one of whom was lassoed and reeled in by this Bengali cowboy – yours truly. At the time of writing this, she remains lassoed proper.

On WhatsApp, weekends, my mum-in-law chatters away, bubbling with news and repeatedly asking after my welfare.

“Salaam, jan!! Holé shomo khubé?” (Hello dear, how are you?).

“Mèrci, mamanjan, man khubam. Shomo khubee? Aghajan khubé?” (Thank you, Maman, I’m fine. How are you and father?)

That’s where my Farsi begins showing cracks in it’s foundations and while Maman chatters on, I look around helplessly for Farah and wait for her to come over and translate. While I’m waiting, I catch some familiar snatches like ‘love you very much’, ‘waiting to see you in Iran’, ‘look after your health’, ‘don’t work too hard’. Its the sort of thing that parents say to you.

After our son was born back in 2000, Maman came over to India to lend a hand. She stayed a month and we have no idea what we would have done without her.

All the while that she was there, my Maman never once asked to be taken out sight seeing, go shopping or anything else. Neither did I make an effort to spend time with her, find out if she needed anything. It was as if spending thousands, travelling thousands of miles, leaving her own family behind for a month and coming only to cook, scrub, wash and clean, morning, noon and night ….it was as if that was a duty, something that had been expected of her.

The baby, the grandson, for whom Maman had come to toil that hot summer in 2000, that baby is today a man, a loving, affectionate, dutiful son that a father wouldn’t expect in his wildest dreams.

——————————

On the day Maman left, I accompanied her in the Deccan Queen Express to Mumbai for her Iran Air flight back, while Farah stayed home with our baby son.

We boarded, she huddled at a window seat, with the tip of her nose touching the window glass. She stared out the window at the countryside rolling by and I sat next to her with an issue of Time Magazine that I’d picked up at the AH Wheeler’s and listlessly leafed through it.

There was this sudden realization of an enormous vacuum within me. That morning even Joel Stein’s irreverently funny column, which was on the Tech bubble, couldn’t make me burst into laughter and I wasn’t even an investor.

Soon the DQ cleared the Lonavala station, clattered over multiple track changes and finally settled on one as we ran lickety split into the Western Ghats.

At one point, the coach suddenly swayed a bit more vehemently than normal. My shoulder bumped into Maman’s. Turning to apologize, I saw she was quietly crying. I reached around and held her gently by her tiny shoulders. She turned, sighed and rested her head on my arm, the tears now rolling down both cheeks.

“Thank you for everything, Maman,” I said to her softly. Even though she doesn’t speak a word of English, she nodded.

Maman’s head was still nestled on my shoulder when the DQ sallied into Dadar Central. We took a cab to Sahar, reaching there just when they were announcing check-in and security for the Iran Air flight. It was on time.

Those days, if you were seeing someone off at Mumbai’s Sahar International Airport, you couldn’t go in. The entrance tickets for visitors had been cancelled. You had to say your goodbyes from behind a barrier at the entrance to the departures area.

Maman had come to India with just one small bag. This she loaded o nto a trolley and started toward the Iran Air counters. I don’t usually do this but I tarried. I craned my neck to catch a last glimpse of the small, dear, scarfed woman as she disappeared round the corner of the hall with a pause and a wave.

This is a grateful Jamai’s tribute to that most precious lady…….

“Mamanjan, shomo doos daram!”

 

 

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Charlie-Class

23 Thursday May 2024

Posted by spunkybong in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

INS Chakra

—————-

The Strait of Malacca

*****************

February, 1988

*****************  

For even a seasoned nuclear submariner, navigating the Sea of Japan is a scary experience. These are the busiest waters of the world’s oceans.

Busy, with regard to submarine traffic.

To a sonar technician hunched over his console, headphones glued to his ears, this part of the Pacific Ocean feels like a blue-water version of Times Square in New York, if one could draw an analogy.

Aside from the Russians, the Chinese, the Koreans and the Japanese (who have the right to be there since it is their backyard), this part of the world’s oceans plays host also to US subs of all types, from Los Angeles-Class nuclear attack subs to 19000-ton Ohio-Class ballistic missile SSBNs, under the US’s Submarine Force Pacific (SUBPAC).

The ‘traffic congestion’ has steadily gotten worse. You can find every class of sub there is. Ballistic missile subs, hunter-killer attack subs, cruise missile subs, diesel-electric subs, you name it and the Sea of Japan has it snooping around somewhere in its murky depths, armed to the teeth.  

The combined firepower under the surface is frightening and the chances of a sleep-deprived sonar technician bungling distances inside that opaque soup, are hair-trigger. If you are just passing through in peace, you will need to make a lot of noise so everybody knows exactly who and where you are and leave you alone. Switch off your active sonar and you are asking for trouble.

Besides the possibility of collisions with other subs, there is always the danger of hitting “seamounts”, undersea mountains that rise up many thousands of feet from the ocean floor.

———————-

Tonight there is another prowler, a 6000-ton nuclear ballistic missile sub that had begun its service life in the Soviet nuclear fleet 20 years prior. At that time it had a no-frills name, ‘K-43’.

K-43 now has new name – INS Chakra – on a 3-year lease to India.

India is not actively engaged in the Sea of Japan and therefore the sub is making damned sure it isn’t deliberately quiet. It is doing a steady 22 knots, occasionally rising to periscope depth, to take a quick look-see and then diving back into the surreal haze.

Somewhere along, a Chinese Jin-Class SSBN had latched on and doggedly kept pace at 1500 meters, joined a day later on the surface by a North Korean OSA-1 missile frigate. Every time the Chakra came up to periscope depth, so did the Chinese.

It looked as though the roadside romeos were out eyeballing the new bride, while she was being carried in her palki through their mohalla.

The Indians could have taken evasive action of course, just to test the Chinese’s nerves, they could have dove deeper, maybe right down to the sub’s test depth, to see how far he would dare, but they didn’t take any chances.

———————-

Let me explain the diving depths on a sub. Depth ratings are the measure of a submarine’s ability to operate underwater, limited only by the strength of it’s hull. The pressure of the water outside increases by around one atmosphere, when you go down every ten meters. The deeper you plan to go, the stronger your hull must be.

The Test Depth – approximately 500 meters – is the maximum depth at which a submarine is permitted to operate under normal peacetime conditions and is roughly 80% of the Design depth. Your next-of-kin can sue the manufacturer or your country’s Navy if the sub implodes above the test depth.

The Design Depth – usually around 600 meters – is the maximum depth listed in the submarine designer’s manual, where it says that the designer cannot be held responsible for any hull implosions below this depth.

The Never-Exceed Depth – 700 meters, give or take – is the maximum depth beyond which a submarine is not allowed to operate under any circumstances. Beyond this depth, the hull’s integrity begins to be compromised. The welds start to give very very gradually, in microscopic increments, unknown and unseen.

The never-exceed depth is the very edge of the safe depth for the sub, beyond which you might have just enough time to recite the Lord’s prayer if you happen to know it by heart. Beyond this depth, you might but you are not likely to survive.

The Crush Depth – roughly 800 meters – is the depth at which it is certain that a submarine’s hull will collapse due to excessive pressure. Being a calculated depth, the crush depth is not always accurate. Submarines have been known to have survived even deeper and have risen, unscathed. But you don’t want to go there unless you are losing ballast and the torpedo tube hatches are breached or you are just plain suicidal.

The crush depth is also the point at which you start wishing you were a whale…….

A whale can withstand pressures of 200 atmospheres or more, easily. That is because its body is flexible, it’s ribs bound by loose, bendable cartilage, which allows the rib cage to collapse under pressure. The whale’s lungs too collapse safely as it dives. When it’s lungs collapse in a controlled manner, the air inside them is compressed, thus maintaining a balance between the inside and outside pressure. Sperm whales have been seen diving up to 2200 meters without breaking into a sweat. They have to go down to those depths to get at those yummy giant squid who live there.

The depth figures quoted above are approximate and refer to 6000-ton Charlie Class nuclear subs like the Chakra. If you dive and implode at 400 meters, I shall not be held responsible. The Soviets were never great at quality control.

If the sub does implode under the pressure, you will die, no question about it. Even though the human body itself is essentially water and virtually incompressible, it has too many cavities that won’t stand the pressure. The water will crush your rib cage and squish out your lungs and all the veins and arteries inside your body. Your bones will swiftly develop aseptic bone necrosis and your capillaries will fail. If the water is gradually breaching the vessel, one bulkhead at a time, the pressure on you will build up over 15 to 20 seconds. They say that your eyes will recede, the sockets having turned literally inside out after 7 seconds. A second or two later, your ear drums will implode. Air at sixty atmospheres will force its way through your rectum into your intestines stretching and blowing them apart, leaving a mess within that resembles fruit salad with papaya in it.

All in all, it will be a horrible way to die.

————————-

Soon after the Chakra exited the Sea of Japan and sailed into the South China Sea, the North Korean melted away, but the Chinese SSBN hung on. Two days from the Strait of Malacca, a Vietnamese Sigma-class corvette fell in but winked off after a while. Ten hours after it finally exited the strait and entered the Andaman Sea, the INS Dunagiri appeared over the western horizon, took a wide circle and joined escort for the home stretch to Vizag (Visakhapatnam, Indian Navy’s submarine home base).

A constant fixture whenever the Chakra rose to periscope depth was a P3-Orion, flying high above, in figures of eight. Alternating between its outer and inner engines, the 4-engined turbo-prop driven P3 can remain in the air for over 18 hours at a stretch, filming, eves-dropping, jamming and generally snooping around. And if its tanks are topped up by a KC-135 Stratotanker and has a relief crew, it can fly on non-stop for 36 hours, covering over 20000 kms.

Anyway, P3 or no P3, it was calm and sunny on the surface and the Indian Captain gave the order to surface again. Ventilation, even inside a snazzy new nuclear-powered sub, sucks. After a week you’ll be smelling nothing but dirty socks and farts. The chance to open the hatch and take a stroll outside is gold-plated. Everybody trooped up in turns, including Sasha Karimov and his crew.

Instead of utilizing the time stretching their legs, the Russians took turns jumping up and down, showing the large reconnaissance plane their middle fingers, while Karimov looked on indulgently and laughed. The ever-frisky reactor room technician, Senior Matrose, Ilya Suslov, even pulled his pants down and waved his sizable broggly at the plane. At 10000ft, the high-res cameras on the P3 must have recognized an adult commie penis being brandished at it.

The P3 stayed a long while. The Indians assumed it was an American out of the US military base in Subic Bay, Philippines(¹). Later on, the Dunagiri confirmed that the Orion had actually been an Australian from their TUDM Butterworth air base, off Penang.

The dogged pursuit from the Chinese SSGN and the tenacious shadowing of the P-3 were quite understandable. India’s acquiring a nuclear powered submarine was indeed a game-changing event and deserving of the attention. It was not surprising at all, considering the fact that never before had one nation leased out, not only a nuclear-powered submarine but also the technology, to another nation, with very few strings attached.

As a result of this trust, India is now only the sixth nation after the US, UK, Russia, China and France, to indigenously build nuclear submarines. At the time of writing this, it has already commissioned two of these subs and a third is on its sea trials – the Arihant Class nuclear ballistic missile submarine (SSBN).

—————————

Some nations see nuclear-powered submarines as their sole private reserve. India’s acquiring the Chakra was seen with alarm by them. It is a matter of record that the US President, Ronald Reagan, tried his damnedest to scupper the lease deal.

The US objections arose at a time of glasnost and perestroika, when it was becoming apparent that the Soviet Union was going to implode. There were many in high places at the Kremlin who were already busy putting spit and polish on their democratic credentials and checking on interest rates at banks on Cayman Islands and Zurich. At one point Kremlin seemed ready to back out and even barred the Indian naval personnel from boarding the sub.

That’s when India’s Rajiv Gandhi proved he had more than a bit of his mother, Indira Gandhi, in him. He personally moved Mikhail Gorbachev to re-engage and India finally got the Chakra.

Once the lease was a go, the international media began calling India “an emerging superpower”, “the new oriental bully”, “dark horse to watch” and so on.

That was perhaps the first time that India’s middle finger was up and waving saucily. Boy, did I feel proud.

—————————-

As the Chakra entered the Bay of Bengal, the Captain received an eyes only burst transmission from an IAF Beriev A-50 that had appeared four hours prior and was patiently circling overhead, at 41000ft (The P3 had realized it was by now too far from base and had turned back). The Beriev is basically a modified Russian IL-76 with Israeli Early Warning and Control Technology installed in it. The transmission was patched through by the Dunagiri.

A burst transmission is a spit of an encrypted digital recording that has been speeded up till it is only a fraction of a second long, like when you fast forward a video cassette. Instead of a two-hour long movie, the fast forwarded video tape zips through in around fifteen seconds. A burst transmission is more than a thousand times faster than even that.

At the other end, the receiving sub sends up a buoy with a receptor which catches the transmission and relays it down to the sub, where it is slowed down and decoded. The buoy is necessary because normal radio transmissions don’t travel easily through good conductors like salt water, unless they are very low frequency.

The message said that brass would be there at Vizag, to greet the sub. C-in-C, FOC-in-C East, FOCEF, the Soviet ambassador, Victor Isakov and submarine chief, Commodore Rajaram (Rambo) Desai – COMCOS(E). And the Minister of Defence, the honorable K.C.Pant. And the Prime Minister, the right honorable Rajiv Gandhi.

———————————

(¹) The Americans relinquished Subic Bay in 1992

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