Interesting People mailing list archives

IP: Bruce Sterling closing CFP Speech


From: Dave Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Mon, 22 Apr 2002 04:41:32 -0400


------ Forwarded Message
From: "Robert J. Berger" <rberger () ultradevices com>
Organization: UltraDevices, Inc
Date: Sun, 21 Apr 2002 17:34:00 -0700
To: Dave Farber <farber () cis upenn edu>
Subject: Bruce Sterling closing CFP Speech

As with many Bruce Sterling speeches, it takes a bit for him to warm up, but
its definitely worth the wait! (Even our own Dave Farber gets mentioned)

Here are a few excerpts followed by the entire transcript.


" At CFP, it's like the plot of every Hollywood Western
you ever saw.  First, they shove the hobbyists off the
tribal lands.  They bring in the railroad and the
telegraph.  The schoolmarm and the newspaper man show up.
Somebody robbed the stagecoach, and every year they bring
in more lawyers in those derby hats, and finally
STATEHOOD!  Hallelujah!"

....

" Ladies and gentlemen, as you well know, I am the least
judgmental of men.  But I have to confess that the Dell
Dude is beginning to creep me out. Especially in the most recent Dell TV ad
campaign. That's the one where Steve is in the fancy car with his
girlfriend, that wardriving 802.11 phreak, or whatever she is.  In this ad,
we see Steve's innate sneaky dishonesty  clearly asserting itself."

....

"This culture war, where crazed
monolith behemoths struggle to cut off each other's market
oxygen!  You innocently stick some legitimately purchased
music CD into your Macintosh, and the evil thing blows up
your RAM BIOS!  It's a suicide-bomber CD, disguised as
Celine Dion!"

....

"The supposed explosion of digital creativity
on a million websites and a thousand channels... Well,
come 2002, it boils down to 95% market share by a single
ruthless feudal empire!  And you wonder where your
excitement's gone?  A thing like Linux...  that isn't a
competitive free-market innovation, that thing is like a
slave revolt.

    But it gets weirder.  The public interest in public-
domain intellectual property freezes dead with the humble
birth of a cartoon mouse on a tabletop in Kansas City. The
Mouse is flash-frozen in legal ice.  He's unrotting.  He's
undying.  He's cryogenically preserved....  In ancient
Rome, folks thought it was pretty decadent when the
Emperor Caligula made his horse into a Senator.  But in
the modern US Senate, there's a Senator who's a cartoon
mouse!"

....

" If Mickey's old enough to be preserved in Jurassic
amber, then how come we human beings, who are still alive,
are so unworthy of Mr. Eisner's creative services?  Maybe
we're no longer a 1920s America, but come on, Mr. Eisner
is certainly no Walt Disney.  It's like that weird tantrum
from Microsoft, when they swore they'd *stop producing*
Windows if the mere Justice Department didn't stop nagging
them."

...

 "Where do you want to go today, Mr. and Mrs. America?"
"Hey, I want to cruise in Steve the Dell Dude's borrowed
convertible, playing borrowed MP3s!"  "But no no NO,
that's not what we meant!  We meant, where do you want to
go today, to GIVE US SOME MONEY."

...

"I can remember, back in the old days, when the cops
and prosecuting lawyers at CFP used to warn us about the
"Four Horsement of the Infocalypse."  Those would be
Terrorists, Mafia, Drug Dealers, and Pornographers.
Supposedly, if computer law and order ever failed us,
these four guys would be all over the Internet.  Well,
here it is, 2002, and Al Qaeda is using Yahoo and hotmail.
They're terrorists.  They're mafia.  They grow poppies and
sell heroin.  They're Drug Dealer Mafia Terrorists.
Obviously there's been a certain amount of industry
consolidation here.

    So far so good -- except the part we didn't get is
that the Taliban are also the cops.  They hang people from
lampposts.  They insist on imposing Koranic Sharia law,
som that makes them the lawyers to boot!  They're a Lawyer
Cop Drug Dealer Terrorist Mafia."
-- 
Robert J. Berger
UltraDevices, Inc.
257 Castro Street, Suite 223 Mt. View CA. 94041
Email: rberger () ultradevices com http://www.ultradevices.com
Voice: 650-237-0334 Fax: 408-490-2868

------ End of Forwarded Message

--- Begin Message --- From: Bruce Sterling <bruces () well com>
Date: 21 Apr 2002 23:54:06 -0000
Key concepts: Computers Freedom and Privacy
conference,  Bollywood actresses, Swiss Army knives, 
Mickey Mouse, email spam, free beer, nuclear terrorism

Attention Conservation Notice: Has practically
nothing to do with the Greenhouse Effect, but
I needed some handy place to archive this rant.


Closing Speech
Computers, Freedom and Privacy 12
San Francisco, April 19, 2002

by Bruce Sterling

    Hello.  The last time I saw you lot was in my home 
town four years ago: CFP in Austin, 1998.  I also closed
that conference: I closed it by inviting everybody over to 
my house for free beer.  If you weren't in Austin in 1998, 
too bad for you.  You should have seen that user response.  
Man, they came out of their seats in a wave!

    I won't pretend to match that performance here. My 
house is half a continent away, and besides, in 1998, that 
was a bubbly, sparkly, cheap-champagne kind of CFP.  
Whereas this is a sober, spooky, post-9/11 CFP, with grave 
political responsibilities.  When you start drinking 
heavily under those conditions, the next stop is the Betty 
Ford Clinic.

    You may well wonder what I've been doing in the past 
four years, after congratulating CFP people on their 
stellar defense of electronic free expression.  Well, I've 
been expressing myself freely by electronic means, that's 
what.  It's kind of the point there.  That's the game 
plan, that's the victory condition.  So, in 2002, I've 
got, like, an active Internet mailing list, and a couple 
or three vanity websites, and I'm conducting a local 
writers' workshop with some Internet aid, and I'm involved 
in diffuse, chatty, epistolary relationships with authors 
on other continents.  I've got a blog -- a weblog, and how 
could I not? -- on infinitematrix.net.  It's on a wide 
range of topics -- an *alarmingly* wide range of topics.

   And of course, being a novelist, I've published some 
novels in the past four years.  So, if you go to the 
little bookstore there outside the hall, where they are 
selling books by CFP attendees and such.... Well, mine are 
the *fiction* books, which have *attractive covers.*  The 
books that are actually *fun to read.*

    If I were to ship you all the free expression I've 
punched up on my quivering keyboard in the past four 
years, I could bury you all alive.  But the final speech 
at an event like this can't be too short.  You've been 
through a lot here.  I have pity.  I have a warm sense of 
human solidarity for your info-burnout, and your glazed 
eyes, and your myopia, and your carpal tunnel.  After 12 
years together, we should know one another well enough.  
We should be frank and confiding now.  We should be crying 
on each other's shoulders here.  We should be 
commiserating, and chucking each other's chins.

    So let me tell you all about my email.  You know, back 
in 1990, at CFP One, I had a freshly minted Internet 
address.  I used to get about five messages off the 
Internet, every day.  They were all from guys with 
engineering degrees.  Guys like Dave Farber.

    But the last time I took my daily look at my daily 
email, which was just before I got on the plane to San 
Francisco, I had 44 pieces of email. A very common ration 
of email for me, 12 years after 1990.  And what were those 
44 emails?

     They were six pieces of spam from Korea.
     Five pieces of spam from mainland China.
     One spam from Hong Kong.
     Two porn spams.
     One marketing spam.
     One job spam.
     One music rave spam.
     One toner cartridge spam.
     One inexplicable message with a missing attachment.
     One message bounce.
     Two items related to my business as an author.
     Fifteen messages from various useful and entertaining 
mailing lists.
     Four messages relating to a list I run myself.
     One weekly digest from a news website run by Indians.
     One issue of the "Daily Corruption," from the NGO, 
Transparency International.
     And, finally, one pleasant personal message from a 
good friend.
 
     Oddly, I got no viruses that day.  I get five or six 
viruses a week.  In 1990, there were fewer than 500 
viruses.  By 2000, they numbered about 50,000.

    So, my email is a decidedly mixed blessing.  I find 
that I'm perfectly happy without it.  I haven't read my 
email all week.  I feel nothing but relief.  You see, at 
CFP One in 1990, I'd already been a published writer for 
12 years.  I wrote my first two novels on manual 
typewriters.  I still own my manual typewriter -- an 
Olympia B-12.  I was tempted to bring it here and sit in 
on the sessions with the thing on my lap.

    I'm sure I would have received many awestruck 
compliments.  From an engineering perspective, an Olympia 
manual is a far, far better-crafted machine than any 
laptop ever made.  You can drop one to the floor from 
waist height and it will rebound undamaged.  However, I 
didn't have a ribbon for my manual typewriter.  
Unsurprisingly.

     Still, the thought of not reading email was so 
liberating that I decided not to bring a computer to 
"Computers, Freedom and Privacy."  Nor did I bring a 
handheld.  Not even a lowly cellphone.  I know this goes 
against the grain of this event.  That was my point.  I 
knew that I had to write the final speech here.  I decided 
to do it with -- *a fountain pen.*  Yes!  It was a 
Waterman "Phileas" Jules Verne memorial fountain pen, for 
you hardware freaks in the audience.

    I'm not a fanatic about my abstinence.  I'm still 
wearing my digital wristwatch.  Kind of a brainy little 
wristwatch.  It has the storage capacity for 30 names and 
addresses.  Of course, I had to replace its dead battery 
last month, so all those names and addresses instantly 
vaporized.  I haven't gotten around to the cruelly 
laborious work of replacing them.  But -- technically 
speaking -- I've got a computer strapped to my wrist.

    So, I went to my hotel room here.  Very nice, 
perfectly acceptable.  It has a bedside digital clock that 
was never reset for daylight savings time.  There's even 
digital media on the hotel TV.   Did anyone else notice 
Channel 19?  It's supposed to be showing a promotional DVD 
for San Francisco tourist sites.  But it's a scratched 
DVD.  So there has been a scratched record, repeating the 
same 5 to 7 seconds of video, around the clock, in this 
hotel, all week.  DVDs really suck.  When they 
malfunction, the visual damage on the screen is just awe-
inspiring.  Why several hundred computer experts at CFP 
never complained to hotel management about this stuck DVD, 
that is beyond me.  I mean, it is a commercial DVD, so 
maybe they were afraid of being prosecuted under the 
Digital Millennium Copyright Act.  But come on!  How long 
has this thing been malfing?  Maybe it's been screwed-up 
ALL YEAR!

    Having no laptop, I was spared a further moment of 
distress when the hotel security guys freaked out over the 
number of laptops at this event.  There are laptops just 
lying in careless heaps, apparently, like stale bread 
slices abandoned to thieving pigeons.  At every event we 
get that customary CFP soundtrack: that dry rattle of 
keyboards in the audience, a sound like a flock of hens 
pecking corn.

    I'm not surprised that CFP people would be so reliant 
on these devices.  Obviously they are of dubious 
usefulness if you are genuinely interested in what the 
speakers are saying.  But at CFP, laptops are like peace 
tokens or protective armor.  At CFP One, twelve years ago, 
computers were the one topic that everyone could talk 
about.  Those were the electronic frontier days, when the 
woods were full of owlhoots, and Comancheros, and 
guntoting sheriffs.  "So, Sheriff, what kinda box you 
packing there?" "Why, it's 256K, son!"  Wow!  And if you 
asked nicely, you could even get the banditos to take you 
up to their crash room and show you a Redbox!  "Look at 
this!  I saved a dollar-seventy-five on long-distance 
phone calls, and I only had to commit three state and 
federal felonies!"  Boy, those were the days, weren't 
they?  They were good people, but they still measured in 
kilobytes.

   So I figured that, armed with my fountain pen, I'd be 
able to offer you guys some bracing historical 
perspective.  I might point out that some extremely fine 
speeches have been written, on the road, with handheld 
writing implements.  Like the Gettysburg Address, for 
instance.  Famously written on a scrap piece of paper -- 
and a good thing, too, because there isn't any writing 
paper in my hotel room.  Not even an envelope.  Not a 
hotel postcard.  There's a Gideon Bible with a few blank 
pages in it, but although I like to cite Abraham Lincoln, 
I'd feel a little funny about trying to out-compose God.

    Besides, after I bought this cheap, one-dollar 
notebook at the neighborhood Japanese grocery, I found out 
that my pen couldn't websurf to Google.  So I couldn't 
find out all the particulars about how Abe Lincoln wrote 
that speech.  I'm sure that you wireless 802.11 Pringles-
can characters can find that out right now, though.  
'Lincoln,' 'Gettysburg,' 'scrap paper,' that ought to 
keyword it.  So, you know, just email among yourselves.

    I've got bigger fish to fry here than Abraham Lincoln.  
Let me mention something rather fishy that I've noticed at 
this CFP.  Since the beginning, people at CFP have worn a 
lot of hats.  They never have just one job.  CFP is always 
about the guy who's a Supreme Court law clerk, and a Linux 
installer, and a Greek History major.  CFP people tend to 
play both sides of every possible fence.  They had to.  
There weren't any fences.  It was all frontier.  

    At CFP, it's like the plot of every Hollywood Western 
you ever saw.  First, they shove the hobbyists off the 
tribal lands.  They bring in the railroad and the 
telegraph.  The schoolmarm and the newspaper man show up.  
Somebody robbed the stagecoach, and every year they bring 
in more lawyers in those derby hats, and finally 
STATEHOOD!  Hallelujah!

    Well, this was the CFP where people started sidling 
over and telling me about their tie-ins with security and 
intelligence.  "Well, Bruce, I don't exactly approve of 
the Attorney General's rash actions, but I am on this, uh, 
telecommunications security policy network thinktank...."   
And I heard about Richard Clarke, the cyber-security czar.  
When exactly did it become the custom to refer to this guy 
as "Dick" Clarke?  Is he the host of "American Bandstand"?  
Is "Dick" that swell a guy?  He sure seems to be making a 
lot of friends.

    I'm rather unsurprised to see CFP people drifting in 
this direction because, really, who the hell else is there 
to do it?  Every network activist does seem to take on a 
mild flavor of spy, after a while.  It's pretty well 
beyond a mild flavor at CFP 12.  I would have to describe 
this as the chile pequeno flavor of spy.

    Even the Indymedia guys...  I mean, like, even the 
hairiest Indymedia guys, with tatts and piercings and 
Circle-A sweatshirts...  When you really look at their 
cool, alternative set-up, aren't they kinda running this 
vast, independent, global, surveillance and tattletale 
machine?  

    I'm clicking on the ol' Indymedia site there, and it's 
kind of hard to miss, isn't it?  "Here's the latest 
RealPlayer videos of the cops in Genoa beating the crap 
out of us...  It's part of a 30-part series...  Lots of 
digital photos here, every speech, every spray of 
peppergas..."  Big Brother, c'est moi!

   It saddens me that most Americans, Joe Sixpack, Jane 
Winecooler, they still watch that capitalist slave media.  
They miss out on the bracing spectacle of European 
peaceniks sleeping on bulldozed rubble in Jerusalem.  The 
only hacktivist that American TV consumers know is the 
domesticated, mediatized, corporate sell-out, G-rated 
version of a hacktivist.

    And that would be -- Steven the Dell Dude.  "Dude, 
you're getting a Dell."  This guy has become the public 
face of the computer consumer.  Steven has got the facade 
of being a knowledgeable computer user... but he certainly 
never says anything challenging or complicated.  For 
instance, he never tells you how to get the lingering 
venereal curse of a Microsoft Outlook virus out of your 
Dell.

    Ladies and gentlemen, as you well know, I am the least 
judgmental of men.  But I have to confess that the Dell 
Dude is beginning to creep me out.

    Especially in the most recent Dell TV ad campaign.  
That's the one where Steve is in the fancy car with his 
girlfriend, that wardriving 802.11 phreak, or whatever she 
is.  In this ad, we see Steve's innate sneaky dishonesty 
clearly asserting itself.

    "Steven... isn't this your father's car?"

     But Steven the Dell Dude is trying to deceive his 
nubile girlfriend into granting him some sexual favors, 
who he replies "Uh.... No?"

    To hell with Dad's convertible!  What is Steven doing 
with his *Dell*?  That's the operative question here.  
That mischievous look on his mug, that augurs very poorly.

     "Steven... isn't that *Mr Eisner's movie* on your 
Dell?"  "Uh...  No?"

      Steven... isn't your hard disk crammed with other 
people's MP3s?  Oh yeah!  You bet it is!  And is our 
Steven an academic musicologist?  Are those the complete 
road bootlegs of Michael Tilson Thomas's classical 
performances in there?  I find myself doubting that.

     Who wants to bet that what Steven has in his Dell are 
the exact items that will make his girlfriend beam on him 
approvingly?  Would that be vi and emacs?  RedHat Linux?  
Stochastic analysis programs for Yugoslavian war crimes?  
Why no!
  
    Steven has mysteriously acquired the commercial 
products of Britney Spears, Pink, the Backstreet Boys and 
NSync... the very items his girlfriend no longer has to 
buy from Wherehouse Music!  Now she can have them from 
Steven for -- let's be charitable here -- for a hug.

    Is Steven, our Dell Dude expert, going to buy himself 
an audio set of ProTools, so that he can create and 
distribute his own, original, digital music?  Uh... No? 
Steve could also mow enough lawns so that he could buy his 
dad's convertible.  But why would he?

     What's the upshot here?  One would idealistically 
hope for a vast Internet ocean of cool free music created 
by the Stevens of the world.  I live in a town crowded 
with Stevens, many of them the children of Dell employees.  
They're cool guys fresh out of high school, guys who love 
music so much that they're sacrificing every hope of a 
bourgeois life, waiting tables and hoping they can be Kurt 
Cobain.  Kurt at least could sell his records and buy 
himself some heroin.  But these poor guys live in 2002, 
not 1990.  

    So they have to make their music in this shell-torn 
commercial crossfire!  This culture war, where crazed 
monolith behemoths struggle to cut off each other's market 
oxygen!  You innocently stick some legitimately purchased 
music CD into your Macintosh, and the evil thing blows up 
your RAM BIOS!  It's a suicide-bomber CD, disguised as 
Celine Dion!  There's this anguished invisible scream from 
the whirring guts of your Ono-Sendai Cyberspace Seven, as 
the Black Ice takes hold of your system!  Oh my God!  It's 
a hellish security nightmare!

    But it could be worse!  You could be one of those 
trusting suckers who innocently bought a federally-backed 
digital HDTV.  Too bad there's no product for it.  It's a 
giant *television* that's gonna die like the Clipper Chip.  
And for the same reason... because corporations and 
content owners won't go there.

    It's the Wintel Gates OS versus Hollywood and the 
music industry, and as elephants fight, the grass is 
trampled.  This is one of those *new* kinds of war, where 
the soldiers are perfectly safe and the *consumers* supply 
all the casualties.  The hallowed halls of Best Buy and 
Circuit City are strewn with broken glass and broken 
promises.... The supposed explosion of digital creativity 
on a million websites and a thousand channels... Well, 
come 2002, it boils down to 95% market share by a single 
ruthless feudal empire!  And you wonder where your 
excitement's gone?  A thing like Linux...  that isn't a 
competitive free-market innovation, that thing is like a 
slave revolt.

    But it gets weirder.  The public interest in public-
domain intellectual property freezes dead with the humble 
birth of a cartoon mouse on a tabletop in Kansas City. The 
Mouse is flash-frozen in legal ice.  He's unrotting.  He's 
undying.  He's cryogenically preserved....  In ancient 
Rome, folks thought it was pretty decadent when the 
Emperor Caligula made his horse into a Senator.  But in 
the modern US Senate, there's a Senator who's a cartoon 
mouse!

     I have to say I felt deeply moved when Mr. Eisner of 
Disney-ABC complained that the rampant digital piracy of 
his products was debasing the morals of the American 
population.  The gentleman has a point.  The situation as 
it stands only allows behavior that is squalid, and 
unworthy of a free people.  It *is* corrupting.  It's 
devious.  It's disingenuous and cynical.  What really 
bothered me was Mr. Eisner's obvious and growing anxiety 
to punish the public at large for the failure of his own 
political tools.

    If Mickey's old enough to be preserved in Jurassic 
amber, then how come we human beings, who are still alive, 
are so unworthy of Mr. Eisner's creative services?  Maybe 
we're no longer a 1920s America, but come on, Mr. Eisner 
is certainly no Walt Disney.  It's like that weird tantrum 
from Microsoft, when they swore they'd *stop producing* 
Windows if the mere Justice Department didn't stop nagging 
them.

    These people are supposed to be our captains of 
industry.  How on earth did it come to this?  It's a 
corporate lockout policy, where the entire American 
population is pitched outside the factory gates of 
Hollywood and Redmond.  Our wealthy and powerful moguls 
are fed up with the behavior of the voters!  They're 
anxious to teach us a lesson.

    "Where do you want to go today, Mr. and Mrs. America?" 
"Hey, I want to cruise in Steve the Dell Dude's borrowed 
convertible, playing borrowed MP3s!"  "But no no NO, 
that's not what we meant!  We meant, where do you want to 
go today, to GIVE US SOME MONEY."

    Since I'm an artist who spends a lot of my time 
dangerously flirting with digital media, I suppose I ought 
to say something tiresome and obligatory about the growing 
likelihood of my starving to death.  But since so many of 
you guys are lawyers, let me put this in a more 
complicated way. When "creative acts are not 
incentivized," there are some pecular and painful 
consequences on the structure of media.

   Case in point.  I can see a thoroughly corrupt popular 
media system in my own neighborhood. No, it's not FOX 
News.  It is the local Indian grocery, which is an 
absolute, decadent, Mom 'n' Pop hotbed of street-level 
media piracy.

   Here we have a fine example of a movie production 
system in which almost every sin that Mr. Eisner thinks is 
terrible happened decades ago.  In Bombay, movies somehow 
do get made.  Sometimes they are even made relatively 
honestly.  But quite often, the finances for these movies 
are supplied by swinging, with-it, murderously violent 
Bollywood gangsters.  They are Muslim minority gangsters, 
actually.  They spend a lot of their time offshore in the 
Gulf States, especially Dubai, where they are intimately 
involved in the money-laundering systems that were so 
intensely useful to Al Qaeda.  Really, you guys with the 
wireless laptops out there, you could look that up.  You 
could Google it.  'Bollywood,' 'mafia,' 'Dubai,' give that 
a try.

    Bollywood itself even makes movies about this.  Like 
the recent release "Company," directed by Ramgopal Varma.  
That Varma guy is a rather gifted movie director.  I'd 
love to see what he could do with the budget of Disney or 
DreamWorks, but I hardly see how he'll ever get the 
chance.  Mr. Varma's talent and dedication are beside the 
point, because his production system is corrupt and 
dysfunctional.  I have a tender conscience.  When I watch 
Bollywood cinema, my natural feelings of enjoyment are 
muddied with guilt and dread.  It's spoiling my joy as a 
patron of the Bollywood arts.

   Indulge me for a minute here.  Let me, as a working 
American artist, make my disquiet more fully known to you.  
Let's take, for instance, the compelling topic of my 
favorite Bollywood actress, Kajol Devgan.  And who is 
that?  

   You see, India boasts about 500 million women.  You 
techies in the audience: imagine that you do this 
stochastic winnowing of this huge database of women, with 
maybe some Bayesian analysis.  You find the cutest and 
most endearing one.  That would be Kajol.  She's the star 
of numerous Bollywood blockbuster superhits.

   I don't believe that a single dime I've ever spent on 
Bollywood vehicles -- and they cost about a dime, because 
they're pirated -- has ever reached the mehndi-patterned 
mitts of Kajol Devgan.  I feel genuinely offended by this.  
Really, I do.  Because of a fundamentally dishonest, badly 
maintained, commercial media system, against my own will, 
I have been coopted into a conspiracy to exploit this 
woman and harm her interests.  Now, if this were Fox, or 
AOL Time Warner, or ABC Disney, or some other universally 
loathed and feared corporate arm of American cultural 
imperialism, really, the urge to rip them off would speak 
for itself.  I scorn to do such a thing, but I understand 
the impulse.  But people: I'm am American fan of Bollywood 
movies who is ripping off artists who live IN BOMBAY!  In 
Mumbai, where whole families sleep on the pavement!  We're 
moving into the realm of blood diamonds and sweatshop 
sports shoes here.  It's unethical.  It's creepy.  I feel 
soiled by it.

   Now, Kajol isn't perishing of a vitamin deficiency.  
She's a movie star, so unless she's shot by the mafia, 
she's probably going to live.  But I have to say -- as a 
fan of a major actress -- this offends my sense of 
masculine gallantry.  Practically speaking, what am I 
supposed to do about this?  PayPal?  Should I fly to 
Mumbai, knock on her mansion door and slip her a nice 
crisp fifty?  How come I know her, and her art, and her 
actions, so well -- yet our economic relationship is so 
crazy? It's bad!

    Then I read, in my favorite tell-all Bollywood gossip 
website, that Kajol's disgruntled chauffeur has looted her 
house and driven off in her car!  This poor woman must be 
experiencing some genuine sense of Spenglerian cultural 
decline!

    I'm pulling for you, Kajol, okay?  I get it about the 
problem.  I'm complaining aloud to informed people who 
should take a coherent interest.  I hope you're ego-
surfing the web.

    Now, it's easy to say that India is a crooked country 
with deep, endemic corruption.  I lived there once, and 
yes, it definitely is.  You don't need personal, local 
experience to tell you these things.  You can read them 
every day in the global headlines from the "Daily 
Corruption," from Transparency International, the German 
NGO.  I read that e-publication with great interest.  I 
recommend it highly.

   But!  As a necessary consequence of globalization, 
Bollywood is finding a growing audience inside the USA.  
I'm one of them.  Nothing odd about that -- it's like my 
wife's fondness for Hong Kong costume dramas, or my 
daughter's ferocious need for anime cartoons.  The 
question is: as we globalize, is India Westernizing, or is 
America Indianizing?

   Just maybe, you live in a nation of arrogant maharajas, 
sinister influence peddlers, dubious elections and corrupt 
accountants.  With big software industries, and alarming 
gaps between the privileged and the underclass.  Where 
multi-generational political dynasties reign over 
Congress, in a center of government bedevilled by Moslem 
terrorists.  Is that your country?  Really, pick any two.

   So.  After having expressed my partial sympathy for Mr. 
Eisner's point of view, I'd like to add to your cognitive 
dissonance by saying some warm and supportive things about 
the Bush Administration.  Because, like a lot of CFP 
people, I too have been hanging out in Washington with 
spooks, lately.  I've been covering the war.  I saw the 
Pentagon.  I saw Ground Zero.  By my nature,  I'm a 
whimsical, paradoxical sort of fellow.  Those two sights 
didn't make me a happier guy.

   So:  John Ashcroft.  Yes, I know that Attorney General 
Ashcroft is our designated Beast of the Apocalypse.  But 
people: it is one of the oldest rules in politics to 
distribute rewards yourself and punishments through a 
subordinate.  Complaining about John Ashcroft is like 
biting the whip.  John Ashcroft is the lightning rod for 
American popular discontent.  He's the designated heavy of 
this Administration.  

   I get it that Ashcroft, as a bogey, is useful for 
partisan maneuvers on both sides.  But really, do we at 
CFP have to get all bent out of shape about this guy?  
That's like hissing uncontrollably when the melodrama 
villain parades on stage.  I've got no stomach for it. 
People with a serious interest in governance shouldn't be 
reduced to this behavior.  It's sappy.  It's naive.

    Let me level with you here.  John Ashcroft didn't have 
to cover himself with villain's greasepaint just so the 
likes of Cheney and Condi Rice can look moderate.  He's 
doing it because he has no genuine political base of his 
own, because he lost an election to a corpse.  He could 
have gone home to some trailer park to eat banana chips 
and watch Bollywood movies.  Instead, he decided to be the 
heavy Enforcer inside the Beltway, most likely because he 
was asked by the President, and he thinks it's his duty.  
He's gonna go to his own grave as this hissable villain 
figure for the Left, this arrow-riddled scarecrow.... His 
real problem is that the US Senate, where he used to work 
and have some dignity, is harassed by vicious anthrax 
mailers and he, John Ashcroft, can't find them.  Now 
*that* -- that is a genuine problem.

    Now, without particular enthusiasm, let me say a few 
kindly and supportive words about the Bush Cabinet.  It's 
true that their behavior often seems secretive, erratic, 
and peculiar.  It's easy to read sinister overtones into 
this.

    My belief is that there is a central motivation in the 
Bush Cabinet.  It doesn't get much press play, but this is 
the enlightening, analytical key to most of the vagaries 
of their behavior.  The key is that the Bush Cabinet does 
not want to get killed.

    You see, there are marked peculiarities in America's 
New Kind of War.  It's a war whose center is nowhere and 
whose circumference is everywhere.  If you are going to 
wound a superpower in a war without battlefronts, you 
might as well shoot it in the head.

    To attack the military nerve center in a nation's 
capital shows a distinct taste for decapitation.  Al Qaeda 
has had enough of killing diplomats and sailors.  The Bush 
Cabinet expects Al Qaeda to try to kill the American 
command structure.  In other words, them.  If they were Al 
Qaeda, that's certainly what they would do:  they would 
bunker-bust.  If they, the Bush Cabinet, have to take out 
Iran, Iraq, and North Korea, that's certainly what they 
will do.  They're redesigning nuclear missiles to bust 
government headquarters bunkers right now.

    This is what the Cheney "undisclosed location" 
business is all about.  This is what the Cheney "secret 
government" is all about.  I don't know where all those 
midranking officials are going, with their toothbrushes 
and their pyjamas, but I can promise you one thing: it's 
out of nuclear blast range of downtown Washington DC.

   This is what the "Axis of Evil" is about.  Of course 
they're not actual allies.  North Korea isn't a radical 
Moslem state.  Iran and Iraq hate each other's guts.  What 
these nations have in common is nuclear ambitions and the 
fact that they manufacture Scud missiles in large numbers.

   They don't have to imagine a way to destroy Washington 
and its imperial ruling class.  They can read Donald 
Rumsfeld's own pronouncements in his "Commission to Assess 
the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States."  You 
put the Scud inside a tramp freighter -- probably hiding 
it under several convenient tons of heroin -- and you park 
it in international waters.  You launch a nuclear-tipped 
warhead into Washington.  In the resultant horror and 
confusion, you act just as surprised as everyone else.

    That is the source of the Bush Cabinet's discontent 
with the Axis of Evil.  They don't want to be killed en 
masse with surreptitious, cheap, covert, untraceable, 
weapons of mass destruction.

    They're not making a big public deal over this 
likelihood of Washington DC getting incinerated.  That 
would definitely put a crimp in tourist visits to the 
cherry blossoms.  But add up what we've seen in the past 
year.  Congress subjected to a biowar attack.  The 
Pentagon blown up.  In India, Moslem carbombers raided the 
national Parliament and did their level best to kill every 
lawmaker they could find.

   The decapitation scenario is a hard thing to keep a 
level head about.  Once you've gotten it about this, and 
internalized it as a likely enemy initiative, it makes 
everyone else seem quite childish, and very poorly-
informed.  The Bush clan are paternalistic, noblesse 
oblige, right-wing aristocrats with an intelligence 
background.  They think they know more about global 
realpolitik than the American public can face.  That's why 
they treat us like idiots.  They expect us to panic.  They 
are trying to spare us that.

    Here is the proof of their sincerity.  The Bush 
Administration has a secret, back-up government, in case 
they get killed.  It's parked outside Washington, with a 
spare-tire Vice President to run it when and if the 
President is turned to glassy slag.  Does AOL Time Warner 
have that?  Or Disney, or Microsoft?  How about you?  Does 
your law firm have a strategic action plan for what to do 
when the Supreme Court is turned to ashes?  How about you 
NGO activists?  Who's the first guy you plan to email when 
you hear that Washington has had a nuclear, biological, or 
chemical strike?  *Can* you email them, without routing 
the traffic through Washington?

    The Bush Cabinet isn't afraid about the danger.  
Rumsfeld is not a jittery guy.  Wolfowitz is a little 
pocket Bismarck.  Condi Rice is scary.  Colin Powell is a 
general, and he's the softie of the group.  Bush himself 
is ticked-off.  He's personally insulted.  He's got a dead 
cop's badge in his desk drawer and he looks at it every 
damn day.  Their courage is not the problem here.  The 
problem is that they consider the rest of us to be 
children.  Like the Congress, for instance.  The Congress 
are children.  Today, I noticed that the Congress is 
getting around to building themselves a backup Congress.  
Saw it on the news just this morning.

    I don't consider myself a child.  I've got my own 
children.  When I'm at CFP, I tend to be in my journalist 
mode.  That means I'm in the Danny Pearl contingent.  If 
Al Qaeda had any idea who I was or what I most enjoyed 
doing, they'd be eager to cut my head off. I'm a major 
league Salman Rushdie fan.  You ever read that novel, 
SATANIC VERSES?  You should go home and read that book 
right away. That's a much better book than you think.

    I can remember, back in the old days, when the cops 
and prosecuting lawyers at CFP used to warn us about the 
"Four Horsement of the Infocalypse."  Those would be 
Terrorists, Mafia, Drug Dealers, and Pornographers.  
Supposedly, if computer law and order ever failed us, 
these four guys would be all over the Internet.  Well, 
here it is, 2002, and Al Qaeda is using Yahoo and hotmail.  
They're terrorists.  They're mafia.  They grow poppies and 
sell heroin.  They're Drug Dealer Mafia Terrorists.  
Obviously there's been a certain amount of industry 
consolidation here.

    So far so good -- except the part we didn't get is 
that the Taliban are also the cops.  They hang people from 
lampposts.  They insist on imposing Koranic Sharia law, 
som that makes them the lawyers to boot!  They're a Lawyer 
Cop Drug Dealer Terrorist Mafia.
  
    I finally got that figured -- but what's in it for me? 
That's my question.  Well, I kinda like Bollywood 
actresses.  I admire and appreciate women. I encourage 
women to shed those stifling burqa robes and take a public 
role in public life.  So, I'm probably a pornographer. I'm 
glad we've got ourselves an order of battle here.  If this 
is netwar, bring the noise.

    Let me tell you what bothers me most.  It's when we're 
in a war, and the government does childish things.  Pretty 
soon, this speech of mine will be over.  I'll be going 
home, to face my 900 pieces of email.  I'll be seeing my 
abandoned computer, and I'm not going to be falling on it 
with glad cries of glee, because I have to work there.  
You know what I'm really missing right now?  I'm missing 
what everybody here is missing, except maybe the native 
San Franciscans.

   I"m missing my Swiss Army Knife.

    What's that about?  They're banning a 3-inch length of 
edged steel?  That's eyewash.  It's hokum.  It's banal and 
stupid.  It's got nothing to do with our security.  Nobody 
is every going to hijack an aircraft with tiny knives, 
ever again.  They used that stunt up. It's over.  Why am I 
deprived of a corkscrew and a nailfile?

    I can live at CFP without a computer.  Look, the gig 
is over, I did it.  I had a pretty good time here.  I 
wrote you a speech.  But your speaker has brushed teeth, 
combed hair, and ragged, dirty fingernails!  I'm an 
inkstained wretch because I wrote with a fountain pen, but 
really, is there any affront more intimate than the tips 
of your own fingers?  The same must be true of conferences 
all over America!

    Cruise missiles, we got.  Daisy-cutters, we got.  Nail 
files, we don't have.

   Our security people are going nuts over kids' toys.  
Could we shape up and be a little less juvenile, please?

   I'm going home now.  Thanks for listening.  Have a safe 
flight.  Long live Victorinox.  And long live the Net.

O=c=O O=c=O
KABHI KHUSHI,
KABHIE GHAM
O=c=O O=c=O



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