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Chanticleer Calls
![]() I do not propose to write an ode to dejection, but to brag as lustily as chanticleer in the morning, standing on his roost, if only to wake my neighbors up.
Thoreau, in Walden
Archive of past Chanticleer Calls
IN THIS ISSUE: (October 8, 2002) o Hemingway on Great Writers and Crap DetectorsHEMINGWAY ON GREAT WRITERS AND CRAP DETECTORS In the course of preparing five presentations over the past month, I came across an interesting anecdote in the book, Teaching as a Subversive Activity, written by Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner: In the early 1960s, an interviewer was trying to get Ernest Hemingway to identify the characteristics required for a person to be a "great writer." As the interviewer offered a list of various possibilities, Hemingway disparaged each in sequence. Finally, frustrated, the interviewer asked, "Isn't there any one essential ingredient that you can identify?" Hemingway replied, "Yes, there is. In order to be a great writer a person must have a built-in, shockproof crap detector."What do you think Hemingway meant by that? Do you think he was referring to a person's ability to detect the crap that's "out there," that's going on in the worlds of politics, the media, international relations, domestic policies, interpersonal affairs, the educational system, professional athletics, college athletics, pop culture, et al? Or, do you think he might have been referring to the self-generated crap that great writers can detect and dispense with, before it makes its way into a final draft? Perhaps, as I suspect, both. So with a full awareness of the latter, but with a focus on the former, this issue of Chanticleer Calls looks at various manifestations of what I would label as "crap." USED CARS, OKLAHOMA OCEAN-FRONT PROPERTY, AND LASIK EYE SURGERY THIS ITEM IS TEMPORARILY REMOVED. DICK ARMEY IS NOT PULLING YOUR LEG-EY First, the soon-to-retire House Majority Leader from North Texas, Dick Armey, was in the news for making remarks construed by some to be anti-Semitic. However, as I read his comments, my take is that his comments concerned the Jewish community only as a subset of his broader "Conservatives - GOOD! Liberals - BAD!" political stereotyping. While in Florida on Septemer 20th, campaigning for congressional candidate Katherine Harris, Armey (according to the FWST) refered to "... two Jewish communities in America, liberal and conservative, and said the liberal one was made up of people of "shallow" intellect." The article continued:Armey repeated his frequent criticism of liberals that they are not "bright," a position he has held since college. The majority leader believes that conservatives have a "deeper intellect because they question the consequences of government action."He also stated, as reported by the FWST: "People with occupations in the arts, those are occupations of the heart," Armey said. "They're going to be liberals ... because they want to feel good." But people with "occupations of the brain," such as economists, engineers and scientists, have a deeper intellect and are therefore inclined to be conservatives, the paper (The Bradenton Herald) paraphrased him as saying.a. Pick the word that's out of place among these three: ECONOMIST ... ENGINEER ... SCIENTIST b. That one practices an "occupation of the brain" does not necessarily imply that one actually practices the brain, as the House Majority Leader so vividly illustrates. c. Two questions from a general semantics perspective would've made for an interesting follow-up by the reporter: 1) "What do you mean?"; and 2) "How do you know?" But, Representative Armey is not one to rest on his politically-dogmatic stereotypes. Even as a lame duck, he's still out there swinging on the field of political retribution. Onto a House military construction appropriations bill, Armey tried unsuccessfully to attach an amendment "clearly marked" as an attempt to force Belo Corporation, which owns the Dallas Morning News, WFAA/Channel 8 television, and the Denton Record-Chronicle, to divest the small north Texas daily newspaper. Why? Seems the Dallas Morning News had the nerve to not endorse Armey's son Scott in a spring primary runoff for his Dad's seat - I mean, the seat assigned to the voters of the 26th Congressional District - and the son-of-Armey lost. So this tacky amendment about media consolidation was tacked on to a military construction bill as Armey the Senior's vain attempt to get back at Belo. Lest there be any doubt as to the intention of the amendment, read the particulars as reported by the FWST: (http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/business/4236593.htm)"The amendment says that any media company that owns a network-affiliated TV station; a newspaper with a Sunday circulation of 750,000 or more that doesn't have a competitor with a Sunday circulation exceeding 350,000; and a second daily newspaper with a Sunday circulation of 25,000 or less - all in the same market - would have to divest the smallest property."In other words, Armey wants to force Belo to sell 'his' hometown Denton Record-Chronicle. Armey's spokesman, Terry Holt, denied that political retribution was the motive. "Mr. Armey's main concern is for the people in his constituency. He is sending a signal that we have to be vigilant when there is ony one outlet for information." Chanticleer says that Representative Armey's "signal" is received - as they say in the comm bizness - "5 by." So ... 5 Rolls for the vigilant Representative! A WORD ABOUT GENERAL SEMANTICS: Evaluate Moving on to less messy topics ... Evaluate, within the context of general semantics, refers to our human neuro-physiological processes by which we experience, react to, and form judgments about the world around us. These evaluative processes produce our immediate and automatic reactions, as well as our more deliberate responses. These evaluational reactions may take the form of behaviors we recognize as 'thinking', 'feeling', talking, deciding, judging, concluding, interpreting, describing, etc. We ought to remember that our evaluation of 'what happens' is not the same as 'what happens' ... we each will observe and evaluate 'what happens' differently, to some degree, from anyone else. We can talk about our evaluations as being appropriate to the facts of 'what happens' as we talk about a map being representative of a particular territory; the "map is not the territory," but for it to be useful the map must appropriately reflect the structure of and relationships within the territory. No matter whether our reactions and responses are labeled as "thoughts" or "feelings," whether they are automatic or deliberate, in general semantics we refer to these as evaluations, or evaluative reactions. What we try to do by applying the various formulations and techniques of GS is to more fully develop our capabilities to delay our evaluations, to become more deliberate, less knee-jerk, more questioning, less know-it-all, thereby responding more appropriately to 'what happens.' And, we take responsibility for our own evaluations by remembering that we can qualify just about every one of our observations, assumptions, descriptions, 'thoughts' or 'feelings' with "to me." So, lest it go unsaid, I take full responsibility for my (and Chanticleer's) evaluations with respect to the awarding of the aforementioned Rolls - based on what I've read and the information that's available to me as of this date, I've made the evaluations and reached the conclusions that I have. I realize that your own evaluative mileage may vary. A JEW AND A PALESTINIAN CO-EXIST ON A NON-VERBAL LEVEL The Associated Press reported on September 23rd that Yasmin Abu Ramila, a 7-year old Palestinian girl, received a transplated kidney from Jonathan Jesner, a 19-year old Jewish seminary student from Scotland, who died from injuries sustained from a Palestinian suicide bombing on a bus in Tel Aviv the previous week. Ari Jesner, the donor's older brother, said the most important thing "is that life was given to another human being. I think it's unimportant what religion, what nationality." What maturity. So it would appear that there's nothing physiological that would prevent Jews and Palestinians from, literally, living with each other .... as long as the words, and the bombs, don't get in the way. "YA (DON'T) GOTTA HAVE HEART" Medieval metaphysical metaphorists will cringe, but the family of Tom Christerson in Central City, Kentucky, is elated that on September 13th (a Friday, no less), Christerson celebrated the one-year anniversary of his AbioCor artificial heart pump. The Associated Press' Bruce Schreiner describes it as a "softball-sized pump, made of plastic and titanium, powered by batteries." Christerson is the last survivor of seven who received the mechanical pump; another recipient, James Quinn, died in August from a stroke after living 10 months with the AbioCor 'heart'. Perhaps it's time to upgrade our vocabulary, and our attitudes, to reflect the 21st century instead of the 1st. We can talk about "courage" and "character" and "determination" and "desire" and all the other terms in the motivational speakers' lexicon, but let's NOT allocate those traits to the ancient notion of the "heart." In Tom Christerson's case - literally - they ain't there ... but they're 'somewhere.' MUM'S NOT THE WORD Credit the Student Council at Arlington's Martin High School with recognizing a symbol as a symbol and replacing it with another more appropriate symbol. Applying what they learned from Houston-area schools at a summer leadership conference, this year they initiated a change to a long-standing Homecoming tradition. As an alternative to the often-times excessive Homecoming mums, the Council sold "Miracle Mums" - modest "blue ribbon style" 'mums' for $25 each with proceeds going to the Make-A-Wish Foundation. (http://www.wish.org/) Next year they plan to offer the "Miracle Mums" exclusively. The 17-year old vice president of the Student Council, Jeff Jeffrey, noted that the traditional mums, some of which have been custom-designed at costs upwards of $300, "have become obnoxious and distracting in class. They've become a status symbol, but we wanted to move beyond that." Good move, Jeff. SIGNS SEEN ALONG THE ROAD In Little Rock, Arkansas, there's an exit for "Confederate Blvd." Nothing earth-shaking about that, but I think it's interesting that, given all the flaps over the past few years about the Confederate flag as a 'negative' symbol, there wouldn't be similar flaps about having major thoroughfares named "Confederate." Not that I'm trying to start anything, but I think it's interesting that, apparently, for some people it's easier to 'see' a flag as a symbol, whereas it's harder to 'see' the 'same' word-symbol as a symbol. In West Virginia, heading east on I-64 out of Morgantown, Exit 10 is for: CHEAT LAKE, FAIR CHANCE ROAD. There's a Negro Mountain in western Maryland. How did it get's name? http://www.sailor.lib.md.us/docs/af_am/garr.html A bumper sticker on an old car driving way too slow in the left lane during pre-afternoon rush hour in east Dallas: WE'RE PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN. QUOTES I DIDN'T MAKE UP
To honor two pioneering and persevering time-binders - Mary Morain and Charlotte Read - I've created an Excel database containing a "Master Table of Contents" for every issue of ETC: A Review of General Semantics, from its inception in August 1943. The database includes 4,600 records and is searchable by author, article title, book that's reviewed, book author, reviewer name, etc. For now, the database is current and complete, but as time goes on I'll be updating, correcting, and making modifications to make it less voluminous and easier to work with. For instance, I'll be separating the articles from the book reviews from the editorials from the poetry in order to make it easier to search. Whatever I have completed will be accessible from this page: http://www.dfwcgs.net/etc/etc_mtc.html . The current file is 783KB. Oct 22 - DFWCGS free 90-minute introductory seminar, "Untangle the Tangled Webs You (verbally) Weave," sign up at: http://dfwcgs.net/free.html. Nov 8 – The Institute of General Semantics hosts its annual Alfred Korzybski Memorial Lecture at the Yale Club in New York City. The speaker this year is J. Allan Hobson, M.D., Director of the Harvard Medical School’s Laboratory of Neurophysiology. A Harvard Magazine profile of Dr. Hobson and his work is available online at: http://www.harvard-magazine.com/issues/mj98/dream.html . For more information about the dinner/lecture, contact: institute@time-binding.org . The impressive list of previous AKML speakers going back to 1952 can be read at: http://dfwcgs.net/gs/akml.html . Nov 19 – DFWCGS free 90-minute introductory seminar, "Untangle the Tangled Webs You (verbally) Weave," sign up at: http://dfwcgs.net/free.html.
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