Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Lamentations 1: The Usual Suspects (Fiction)

 

Lamentations 1: The Usual Suspects 
December 2022


For Sunday baptisms, Jim Gorman had his four standard, well-tested gospel-homily combinations at the ready.  One: Jesus’ own baptism.  “This is my beloved son, with whom I am well pleased.”  Two: “Let the little children come to me.”  Three: Jesus sends the apostles to preach the gospel and baptize.  And four: the meeting with Nicodemus.  

He typically started with a brief lesson.  “A sacrament is an outward sign of an inward grace….Baptism is your child’s birthday inside the Church.”  Especially since some of these couples only showed up for baptisms and weddings, Jim felt the need to do some basic, remedial catechism.  If he happened to gather some details from mingling with the families beforehand, he sprinkled them in throughout the homily.  He would end with his standard charge to be faithful Christians in the world.  In his fifth year as a deacon, he had a comfort and rhythm with this sacrament.  Sometimes, he reminded the couples, in closing, “You’re allowed to come back once in a while, you know.”  Depending on the mental space he was in on a particular Sunday, he delivered that last line with good self-Church-deprecating humor or in real, barely masked frustration—frustration with trends of young people “falling away from the Church.”


Jim spent the second half of the week in Sea Isle.  He and Maria had their own place down the shore.  They bought it about the same time he completed his permanent diaconate studies and about the same time he retired.  Family time together in the summer was special of course, but Jim also relished spending off-season weeks down the shore, alone.  Maria, a third-grade teacher in Council Rock, was in her last year before retirement.  After 20 years at MetLife and, before that, about 20 years at Prudential, Jim was already retired.  Almost every morning, when down there by himself, Jim went to daily mass at Saint Joe’s. He prayed n the pews, with the people—he hadn’t yet volunteered his diaconate services to the shore.  After mass, he would go to the promenade police station for the eight-am flag-raising, Pledge of Allegiance, and recorded “God Bless America.”  (The promenade was what they called Sea Isle’s smaller sort-of boardwalk.). Off-season, with fewer people around, both mass and the flag-raising felt more intimate, Jim felt.  Sometimes, Vin--Vincenzo D’Orazio, his buddy from Villanova--joined him for the morning ritual.  A couple other long-time friends from Prudential, Villanova, and even from Saint Joe’s Prep had places down the shore too--in Sea Isle, Ocean City, Stone Harbor.  Like Jim, they all were retired or nearing retirement.  They had done their time.  

That particular week, he met up with Tom O’Donnell for a morning run on the Ocean City boardwalk, and on Saturday, he and Vin reconnected to fish on Vin’s boat, bayside.  They never really caught much—they didn’t fish to subsist—but it was the camaraderie, the conversation, and just being outside that made it worth it.  Jim pined for his own—the Gormans’ own—boat, too.  He imagined camaraderie with his sons and even his daughter out on their own boat one day.  Maria had thus far delayed and obstructed any boat purchase.

Vin agreed with Maria.  “Get your license and honestly you can use ours whenever you want.  Also, wait to see whether Christie lowers the sales tax on these things.”

When Jim retired about the same time they bought the house in Sea Isle, the kids speculated—worried—that mom and dad might move down there full time.  But when Jim committed as a deacon to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia at the same time, he signaled to the kids and to the wider society that the Gormans, like many good Philadelphia suburbanites, would be a two-house family: one in PA and one down the shore.  The kids certainly would have survived with their parents having one house down the shore--all of them had already moved out—but they appreciated the Jersey-PA straddling of the Delaware.  They would have a place at the shore almost any time, rent-free, with friends and future families, and they still had the home base they grew up in, in Doylestown.  

Patrick, the oldest, worked in finance and lived in up-and-coming Northern Liberties with his wife Megan.  Megan was from Connecticut.  They met at Villanova and were married —by Jim—shortly after graduating.  Northern Liberties, like many other neighborhoods in Philly, was always “up-and-coming,” when Jim and Maria updated their friends on the kids.  “Oh that is a nice part of town now,” the family friend would dutifully reply, with mutual unsaid understandings of other parts of town and other times than “now.” Kimberly was back at NYU for her senior year, after studying in Greece for a semester.  “Or ‘NY Jew,’” as Jim would joke in safe Gentile company, “studying God knows what this week!”  James, Jim’s namesake but adamantly not “Jim,” was a sophomore business major and a faithful fraternity brother at Penn State.  All three schools’ flags hung over the Sea Isle house balcony, like the other house balconies, in the proper mixture of school and social class pride.  

Maria appreciated the straddle, too.  Most of her own friends lived in Bucks or Montgomery counties, and so did her doctors.  She had beaten breast cancer eleven years earlier and felt she needed to stay nearby, just in case, although, she admitted, they could make the regular two-hour drive if needed.  Also, there were tax benefits to remaining full-time PA residents as opposed to New Jersey, Jim would not shy away from adding. 

They had moved to Doylestown from Ardmore, in the early ‘90s, around the same time Jim moved from MetLife’s office in Philly to Prudential in Blue Bell.  This was after Patrick but before Kimberly and James were born.  The tiny Ardmore house—with the higher Delco and Montco property taxes, Jim would add—would not fit all of them.  Well, it would have fit them, but the Doylestown house had much more space: five bedrooms, three full baths on a half-acre-plus in Doylestown township—not Doylestown Borough—in a subdivision off Swamp Road.  The lawns and homes were bigger—and the taxes lower—than those in the Borough.  

Even though Maria was a public school teacher and even though the Central Bucks School District, in which Doylestown lay, was very well resourced, the Gorman kids did their schooling at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic school up through eighth grade.  Then the boys went to LaSalle and Kimberly to Gwynedd, both single-sex Catholic prep schools in Montgomery County.  For years, Jim ushered and lectored at Mount Carmel.  With his accounting and finance background, he served multiple terms on the parish council.  Maria served as a eucharistic minister.  The kids were all altar servers in their days.  “Servers, not altar boys, sorry,” Jim would fake correct himself and fake apologize after his fake controversy joke.  (Kimberly and Maria quickly found the joke tired.)  In high school, Patrick earned small yet easy cash as a sacristan and rectory attendant throughout high school.  Jim actively participated in Mount Carmel’s Knights of Columbus chapter, helping to plan the annual Poker-Smoker and Beef-and-Beer.  He never imagined becoming a deacon, but when Monsignor Fagan asked him one Sunday to consider it, the suggestion flattered him, and he found it difficult to resist flattery.  Mid-mass, mid-homily, he sometimes imagined how he could deliver a good homily--better than Fagan likely, certainly better than wishy-washy Nguyen, the Vietnamese-American assistant pastor—but he never gave the idea serious thought.  

Most Catholic priests spend about a year as ordained deacons before they’re ordained (celibate) priests.  For a semester at Villanova, Jim flirted with the idea of joining the Augustinians, becoming a priest.  But then he met Maria.  In the 1960s though, with the Second Vatican Council, the Church re-established the permanent diaconate.  There were long theological and historical reasons for why it was resurrected, but when asked by outsiders confused about married deacons in the Church, Jim just explained how the Church needed more dedicated (male) servants and that he felt called (and flattered) to do his part.  After part-time studies at Saint Charles Seminary, he underwent his ontological change in the sacrament of holy orders.  Cardinal Rigali “conferred [on Jim] an indelible spiritual character” that could not be “repeated or conferred temporarily” but that “marked him permanently.”  In other words, like marriage or baptism in the one true Church, deaconhood wasn’t something he could casually walk away from       

  

When Jim quipped about waning church attendance in his homilies, he often was thinking of his own kids.  Patrick and Megan went to mass.  Yes, it was a Jesuit church—Old Saint Joe’s in Center City—which Jim wasn’t thrilled about, but at least it was church.  If Jim were to have his own grandkids one day--to play with, to fish with, on his own boat or Vin’s, to baptize--Patrick’s line was the surest bet.  Kimberly and James, less so.  Jim felt embarrassed that, even though he was an ordained deacon—even though he ontologically changed—only one of his kids still went to mass.  

“After all that Catholic schooling too!  All that tuition.”  Jim worried out loud, “What will people think?”

“They don’t think.  Because they don’t care,” Maria reminded him. “Except for Virginia Witowsksi.”  Virginia had good information and bad judgment on everyone. “And she’s kind of a bitch. I mean, witch.  So, who cares what she thinks?”

Young James reportedly had gone to mass his first year, at the Penn State Newman Center.  But, now in his second year and living the frat life, he considered himself “spiritual but not religious,” as he told Jim and Maria, not very confidently, when they came up for a football game and he didn’t have the mass times readily handy.  

“Like everyone his age these days.” Jim said with frustration on the drive home from State College.  “Of course, he’s ‘spiritual but not religious.’  The Paulists at the Newman Center water that shit down because they don’t want to offend anyone.  They end up convincing kids that they don’t need to go to church.  Then the kids don’t go to church.  What do you expect?  I’d almost rather him come out with it already, like his secular theater major sister.  Instead of this ‘spiritual but not religious’ fence-sitting.”  

Maria, no fence-sitter or slouch herself, told him to take it easy. She defended James, her youngest.  “Also, she’s an anthropology major, which you know very well.”

“Might as well be theater.”


It was partly James and Kimberly he had in mind when, on the drive back from Sea Isle, he mentally composed a new homily for the next day’s baptisms—a different one from his four go-to’s.  New material.  While he was at shore, Kimberly sent an email to Maria and him recommending they see Spotlight, “the movie with Michael Keaton about the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal in Boston.”   The email was short.  It was only about the movie.  Why does she do this?  She wrote an email just to say that?  Couldn’t have even included in part of a larger life update email?  “They say it might win Best Picture.  It’s really well done.”  Of course, it will win Best Picture.  Hollywood, the media hate the church.  They actually love when these scandals break.  They make a ton of money stirring up these controversies.  Sickos.  

Another reason he liked going to the shore alone was, without Maria there, he watched much more TV.  In particular, he watched more Fox News.  He flipped through ESPN, History channel, and HGTV, but Fox was the main attraction.  Friday night’s O’Reilly Factor featured some updates on this year’s the war on Christmas.  Jim both loved and hated the war on Christmas battles—hated the groups who created such trouble but loved the spiritual and emotional fervor it gave him.  Maria was no secularist and liked a good public nativity scene, but she disliked the fervor and the unhealthy communion between her husband and O’Reilly.  Without her at the shore then, he got to indulge.  As in previous years’ battles in the war on Christmas—a long war of attrition—people were creating unnecessary stinks over nativity scenes outside town halls.  Cranbury, New Jersey and Middletown, Ohio were two such places this year.  Always the very vocal minoritiesDoes it really bother them? Do those people even have any business at the town hall? Do they ever walk by it and are actually offended?  Do they even live there?  Jim thought in unison with O’Reilly’s asking.  

While fishing, he lamented the war with Vincenzo, who agreed.  Vincenzo hadn’t seen Friday’s Factor, but he was a loyal soldier—and Knight of Columbus at St. Rose’s in North Wales—and thus could be counted on to defend Christmas.  “It’s like this country hates Christians again, like it did when we were growing up.”  

They let that statement’s profundity hang in the air with the smoke from Vin’s cigar.

The waning winter sun caught the diamonds in Vin’s Villanova class ring, as he turned the engine back on.  They had to head back, respectively, to Pennsylvania that afternoon.  “It’s some bullshit.  Scary too, what this country is coming to.”

On the way home, he didn’t remember who the couples and the babies were for tomorrow, but they undoubtedly needed to hear the message.  They needed to hear the Gospel, the good news.


“What name do you give your child?

“What do you ask of God's Church?

“You have asked to have your child baptized. In doing so you are accepting the responsibility of training him in the practice of the faith. It will be your duty to bring him up to keep God's commandments as Christ taught us, by loving God and our neighbor. Do you clearly understand what you are undertaking?

“The Christian community welcomes you with great joy. In its name I claim you for Christ our Savior by the sign of his cross. I now trace the cross on your forehead and invite your parents and godparents to do the same.”

He ended up choosing the baptism of Jesus, one of his go-to’s.  He began the homily with a little summary, highlighting the key parts he had just read.  “With him, I am well pleased.”  He referred back to the blessing he had just done in the rite.  “Today, I made the sign of the cross on Sebastian’s head, on Patrick’s head, on Harper’s head, and on Michael’s head,” he looked at each of the couples.  “It symbolizes their new birth in Christ, that they—and you parents and godparents leading them—will carry on the faith.”  The couples and the grandparents and extended families all nodded.  “And you—they—cannot be afraid.  It is a difficult world out there.”  Here at this juncture, it could have gone any way.  “Difficult world” left open several different paths and conclusions.  They didn’t know Jim and that there was only one path he would take from this point.

“Some years ago, in the Mojave Desert …”  He felt he could not talk about the war on Christmas explicitly.  That would have sounded too obviously straight out of Fox, and people persecuted not just Christmas but Fox too, even some churchgoers.  Instead, he went for a deeper cut.  He remembered a story—a homily even—he had heard ten years earlier.  It was the one that convinced him to join the Knights, to be like their founder Father McGivney in the 1800s and their namesake in 1400s, to not shy away from the cross.  So, Jim told about how, back in the 1930s, a small group of Christians had built a five-foot white cross on a hill in the Mojave Desert to honor the war dead from World War I.  “‘Erected in the memory of the dead in all wars,’ it read.  A simple white cross, for all the dead.  Veterans and supporters had been gathering there for years under God’s sky—and it was God’s sky well before it was federal land. (Pregnant pause) But that was too much for the ACLU, for the Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, and for the other usual suspects. So, they fought through the courts to have it taken down.... They could not stand this cross (he motioned the cross blessing in the air) and what it stood for. What will you stand for?” He couldn’t tell and he couldn’t care how the people in the pews were taking this turn in the homily.  A preacher’s job was to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable after all.  

“The cross had been there for seventy years and now these groups”—he was disciplined enough to not say “ACLJew” as he might joke with Vincenzo—“are offended by the cross?  Well, parents, godparents, children, my friends, you must not be afraid to offend.  That’s why we are here today.  To say yes to the cross.  To say yes to the Church, for your sons and daughters.  To come back to us regularly, if you have strayed.  The world might hate you, but remember, ‘with you, God is well pleased.’”

Jim sat down.  He closed his eyes contemplatively for close to a minute, to let the words sink in with the couples and to fall over the babies.  But he did not feel contemplative.  He was wound up.  One of the mothers and two of the godfathers, he felt, were not paying attention.  In them, he saw James.  Less so Kimberly.  She was probably long gone, maybe even there with the ACLU in spirit.  James, though, was in that liminal space: not one to carry the mantle of secular humanism himself but distracted and indifferent enough to be led to the slaughter and not even know it.  

Jim did the water.  He led the profession of faith and the rejection of Satan.  He made the sign of the cross with the holy chrism on the babies.  He lit the candles.  He said the prayer over their mouths and ears.  He gave the final blessing.  He said goodbye to the families.  He cleaned up, locked up the church, and drove home.  But, he did not complete these rites mindfully.  He was still caught up in the homily.  He was still in the Mojave Desert.  He was still at the Cranbury, New Jersey and Middleton, Ohio town hall nativity scenes, fighting the good fight.  He always wondered whether he was doing enough, in the struggle, for the kingdom.  He wondered when his time would come, when he would be tested.  He thought maybe this was his time. Was God well pleased with him?

The Eagles played at four.  They beat the Cowboys soundly to secure a spot in the playoffs.  Patrick and Kelly came over to watch the game.  Jim drank several Yuenglings, Patrick a couple IPA’s.  Maria made a lasagna, which they ate during the fourth quarter.  The battle, the persecutions would continue, and exile might come for him, and them and his to-be-born grandchildren.  But the Eagles win, the beer, and the lasagna on a cold night all assured him.  He had run the race that day.  He fought well.  He fell asleep by ten.  On Wednesday, he headed back down the shore to fish.  Like the disciples did.  


Pivot to Peace and Solidarity: War with China is not inevitable

 Flohri, Emil. "And, after all, the Philippines are only the stepping-stone to China." Judge Magazine, 1902
 


In 2001, the question of “what to do with China” filled cable news shows, college dorm rooms, navy wardrooms, ROTC leadership forums, and political science lecture halls with much excitement.  Would-be officers, amateur philosophers, armchair classicists, and professional pundits debated “Thucydides’s trap”: Is China’s rise a threat to the US?  “Yes” was almost invariably implied.  

With 9/11 and the “global war on terror,” the China talk took a back seat.  But now, it is front and center again.  Russia is a mere sideshow.  The war industry, war media, and war academe are salivating.


1. It is right to criticize Chinese state power when it oppresses.  In skepticism towards US imperialism, we should not reflexively defend other states or other imperialisms.  With Tiananmen, Tibet, the Uighurs, Hong Kong, and the recent COVID crackdowns, there is plenty to criticize. 

A.  Intercepted: Inside China’s Growing Surveillance State (theintercept.com)  

B.  Why China is building islands in the South China Sea - Vox

C.  Socialists Should Support the Popular Resistance in China - The Call (socialistcall.com)

D. Some really good, consistent anti-imperialist theory: The Specificity of Imperialism - Viewpoint Magazine

E. However, as the historical record shows, the US government, often at the behest of US capital, has criticized, or ignored, or even abetted Chinese human rights abuses, as it has seen fit, to its material convenience. 

F. “Whataboutism” in bad faith can deflect from real crimes, but at its best, it simply calls for a consistent ethic to be applied.  In fact, it is often the charge of whataboutism, rather than the asking “What about ___?” that tries to avoid the serious, longer conversations: Is “Whataboutism” Always a Bad Thing? ❧ Current Affairs

i. Seriously, what about Palestine, Yemen, Iraq, or the hundreds of other places where we commit or enable war crimes and human rights abuses?

 

2. Most Americans are unfamiliar with how the US, with the European powers, have long encircled, antagonized, and carved up China.

A. Encirclement has long been the policy of western powers.  The US military intervened over thirty times between 1820 and 1949 at the behest of US capital interests,

i. No doubt these actions contributed to Maoist/communist resentment and blowback, and the eventual “loss of China” in 1949

B. Much of our understanding of “Taiwan vs. China” rests on misremembering of the US’s role in the Chinese civil war and the US’s role in Korea, both prior to the standard (conveniently given) June 1950 start date of the Korean war and after.  The ten-part season 3 “Blowback” fills in some crucial gaps: Blowback



3. We currently encircle China. We currently provoke China. If We Want Humanity to Survive, We Must Cooperate With China (chomsky.info)  

A. Some practice of cognitive empathy (which is different than emotional empathy) might help us see how China views Taiwan and views us: China and the Challenge of Cognitive Empathy (substack.com)

B. My own trivial experience with a Chinese sub: An Elegy for Ted McGrath: Russian Bears and Chinese Subs

C. Wtf was Nancy Pelosi doing in Taiwan? Amidst Uproar Over Nancy Pelosi’s Visit to Taiwan, Media Ignores Aggressive U.S. Maritime Action in South China Sea | CovertAction Magazine

D. Several months ago, the US just completed its annual RIMPAC exercise, which among other things antagonizes China and devastates the environment.  For some years, it actually included China, which while still problematic and militaristic (and environmentally destructive) was at least less provocative: Abby Martin at RIMPAC War Games: The Inside Story [PREVIEW] - YouTube

 

4. We can and should stand in solidarity with Ukrainians resisting Russian aggression, We must not practice the "anti-imperialism of idiots": A letter to the Western Left from Kyiv | openDemocracy.  But, some of our current posturing towards China builds on selective remembering of our role in the thirty years prior to the Russian invasion of Ukraine: How cognitive empathy could have prevented the Ukraine crisis (substack.com) 

A. While we should practice solidarity with Ukraine, that doesn’t necessarily mean we automatically (without serious debate) should flood that war with billions of dollars of weapons, especially at the risk of escalating it to nuclear war: The Democrats are Now the War Party (substack.com) 

B. That also doesn’t necessarily mean the US supports Ukraine out of some love for “democracy”: An Elegy for Ted McGrath: “This, this is living History. Everything we are doing and saying is thrilling—it will be read by a thousand generations, think of that! Why I would not be out of this glorious delicious war for anything the world could give me.”

C. Also what about?  Or rather, imagine if the same sympathy for and solidarity with the Ukraine we see in the US was extended towards Palestinians, Iraqis, Afghans, Vietnamese, or Laotians (and the list goes on)?


5. Our current posturing towards China —holding ourselves up as the beacon of freedom and democracy against Chinese unfreedom—rests on some major U.S.-in-WW2 mythology.  Are we more free and democratic than China?  Yes, I believe so.  Do we really care about freedom and democracy elsewhere?  On our own terms, only when it suits our interests.  

A. Some longer thoughts on (liberal) foreign policy hypocrisy: An Elegy for Ted McGrath: Lexus trumps olive tree: The limitations of a "good liberal" (Part 5: "You can't go from Saddam to Switzerland without getting stuck in Hobbes")

B. Yes, we helped defeat Nazi Germany.  But, the US was very forgiving and then very eager to employ Nazis and other fascists against communism in the Cold War: US did not defeat fascism in WWII (newagebd.net)

C.  Just like we were very forgiving of Japanese nationalist extremists, also after WW2, when we employed them in our own anti-communist designs on Korea and China. 

D. Other US in WW2 destructive myths. “Romanticized stories about the Second World War are at the heart of American exceptionalism.”: Destructive Myths - Dissent Magazine

E. Tangent: Catholic anti-communism makes bedfellows with fascism: Catholic Anticommunism with Giuliana Chamedes · The Dig (thedigradio.com)


6. Our corporate media, the big think tanks, and much of the academy give us the impression that we have free inquiry.  But our spectrum of debate is extremely limited, and for the most part, those dominant entities “manufacture consent,” often towards war.  US propaganda is much more subtle and sophisticated than Chinese propaganda 

A. Truth Killers: The Corporate Media and the Military Industrial Complex  

B. Think tanks push for war.  We are talking Ivy League PhD suits not just the jingoist Trump Fox brutes.  The Think-Tank Military Industrial Complex: Shilling for the Merchants of Death 

C. How To Avoid Swallowing War Propaganda ❧ Current Affairs

D. Excellent film recs on this role of the corporate media and war: 

i. Weapons of Mass Deception

ii. Outfoxed 

iii. Peace, Propaganda, and the Promised Land 

iv. Control Room

v. And of course, Manufacturing Consent (but more so the book by Chomsky and Herman)


7.  Ways out, ways forward 

A. Practice internationalism

i. (How) Should Class War Go Global? Building an Anti-Corporate Left Internationalism ❧ Current Affairs

ii. Left Internationalism in the Heart of Empire - Dissent Magazine

B. Practice solidarity.  For example:

i. International trade unions federations try to unite people across borders, to fight U.S. capitalism and that peculiar blend of Chinese Communist Party capitalism: Freedom Report 2022: Unions Building Peace - International Trade Union Confederation (ituc-csi.org)

ii. Veterans for Peace China Working Group: China Working Group | Veterans For Peace

iii. Amnesty International (western human rights groups sometimes overlook US and US client states crimes, or are late to the game in decrying them, but nevertheless, they often do great work). 

a. Re China: Everything you need to know about human rights in China - Amnesty International Amnesty International

b. Re US: Everything you need to know about human rights in United States of America - Amnesty International Amnesty International

iv. Study more, study deeply on China. Turn off the tv.  

a.  China and the US with Tobita Chow and Jake Werner · The Dig (thedigradio.com)

b. How China Escaped Shock Therapy w/ Isabella Weber · The Dig (thedigradio.com)

c. China Boom w/ Ho-fung Hung · The Dig (thedigradio.com)


Sunday, May 15, 2022

"Let's save our troubles for another day. Come go with me, we've got it made."*





I felt bad for him.  I don’t think he wanted me or any of us to feel bad for him.  He was the captain.  

The Voith Schneider Propellers on our little minehunter had gotten us from Ingleside, Texas to Panama City, Florida as planned.  That was a big feat for the USS Pelican.  Since being back from Bahrain, that was our crew’s first real venture and port visit.  But then, one of the propellers gave out in port.  The required repairs were beyond our on-ship sailor-engineers’ expertise.  The civilian port engineers and Voith Schneider specialists from Norfolk had to fly in to help us fix it.  With that, we ended up stuck in Panama City for well over a week.  That wasn’t altogether bad, with the beaches, the bars, and being 23.  But, we were only supposed to be there for four days.  After that, it was day-to-day.  We couldn’t necessarily plan or feel totally at ease.  The broken engine made the captain stressed, which in turn made us all stressed.  Such was life in the Global War on Terror.

The MWR team (morale, welfare, and recreation) therefore planned a little mandatory fun.  “Let’s enjoy ourselves while we’re here and together.”  Sailors usually grumble about the mandatory part, but they often end up having fun.  We were not a big crew.  There were only about 65 of us.  The plan was for softball, a cookout, and, as long as you didn’t have duty, beer.  We even arranged the watch/duty section to allow the whole crew to rotate through.  A number of us started really talking up the softball game.  A few took up talking trash.  It would be an inter-departmental game.  The captain especially talked it up.  I wasn’t a very good naval officer, but I was decent at softball.  I didn’t have duty, and I was looking forward to it.

When that afternoon arrived and it was time for the big match, we ended up playing only several innings.  I don’t recall which team won--Engineering/Ops or Deck/Supply--but whoever it was, I think it was a blowout.  Some sloppy fielding spiraled out of control.  Once pickup softball becomes a blowout, it’s hard to keep people’s interest.  It’s hard to come back.  With the heat, the frustration, and the buzzed giggling while running the bases, the game gets sloppy and therefore less interesting.  It’s also not like pickup basketball—you typically don’t just reset and play another round.  So, most of the crew shifted to football, despite the heat, which then evolved into some playing ultimate frisbee and others just drinking beer.  For the record, personally, I wanted to continue playing softball.

The captain arrived later to the rec area than he had anticipated in his base rental Chrysler.  He had been caught up on the ship with the engineers and on the phone updating his superiors in Ingleside.  He had his own glove, and remarkably, he was wearing softball/baseball pants.  I had my own glove too—I traveled with it, even by sea—but baseball pants?  They must have made his sea bag packing list, or he just kept them in his stateroom, "condition one," at the ready.  They were tight on him but not tighter than baseball pants usually are.  He also wore a three-quarters sleeve t-shirt, with white base and black sleeves.  When it registered that we were not playing softball, he scrunched his nose up towards his eyes, instinctively.  He asked if we wanted to play softball, if the game was still on.  Perhaps he thought we had been saving softball as the main event, waiting for his arrival.  In hindsight, maybe we should have saved it. 

“Yeah sir, we played a couple innings but then everyone wanted to play football,” said QM1 Haynes, flippantly, catching his breath on the sideline with a cigarette, not grasping the severity of this moment, not even looking at the captain.  QM1 had not noticed the captain’s nose squeeze towards his eyes again—to block the sun? the rage? the sadness?  Even if he did, Haynes probably wouldn’t have cared.  I still contend that I cared, for what it's worth.  

Was the captain going to order us back onto the softball field?  I suppose he could have.  Was he going to yell at us?  I cringed at the possibility.  His voice, by the UCMJ, was legally commanding, but auditorily, it was petulant and grating.  Ordering us onto the field would have made for one terrible, awkward game.  It would have taken “mandatory fun” to the next level.  As part of the MWR team, as a junior officer, I could have suggested, “Hey guys, why don’t we play a couple more innings?”  But, that might have been patronizing, and if they agreed, would the captain then have targeted me because they listened to my soft power and not the threat of his hard power?  In the end, we did not return to softball.

The captain pretended not to care.  He sat down, in his tight softball pants, and took a swig of beer.  He did care, though.  His prominent Adam’s apple was a tell of his pride swallowed, not for the first or last time.

*

The captain had survived an earlier mutiny.  I didn’t think it was actually a mutiny, but as I learned from the XO years later, the captain definitely saw it as one.  I had taken a small part in it.  After months of the captain bullying around Lieutenant Castro, the chief engineer, the latter started collecting statements against the former of similar incidents against other members of the crew.  Castro submitted the letters, unbeknownst to the captain and XO, to the inspector general of the navy.  I didn’t have one specific legal complaint, and in hindsight, maybe I shouldn’t have partook.  He just was an annoying asshole, and I did not like him.  One could definitely argue that that was how life was supposed to be in the military--i.e assholes make the system run--and maybe we were just being a bunch of snowflakes.  

To have command of a ship as an O-4/Lieutenant Commander was not insignificant.  Professionally speaking, the captain was going places.  Nautically speaking, the captain was very good, and he knew he was very good.  More, bigger commands and higher leadership lay in his future.  Psychologically speaking, however, the captain exuded insecurity.  He had orders to make that broken minesweeper go.  It wasn’t going, that did not help his insecurity, and he took it out on us.  Castro’s rebellion had died down, the captain got a slap on the wrist from his superiors, Castro eventually timed out to his next rotation, and life sort of went on on the Pelican.  The captain had to swallow his pride during and after the Castro-initiated “command climate” investigations.  He could not openly retaliate against any of us mutineers.  That would have gotten him in more trouble.  


*

Apparently, after the abbreviated softball game, many in the crew kept on drinking, including the captain.  That was not necessarily a problem until, according to some sailors, the captain got into his car visibly intoxicated.  He drove the 15-mph 1000 yards back to the ship without incident.  If he hadn’t been so widely loathed, if he did not have the legal “non-judicial punishment” power to bust sailors for alcohol-related misconduct, no one would have cared.  But, especially the guys who had been busted for alcohol—they took note.  Petty Officer Wilkes, who several months earlier had been nailed for driving 125 mph drunk down South Padre Island Drive in Corpus, miraculously not killing anyone, saw the captain’s offense as equivalent to his if not worse.  The next day, the crew grumbled and murmured to a degree that pressured us junior officers to say something to the captain.  What would we say, though?  “Sir, you shouldn’t have done that. I wasn’t there to corroborate, but the crew is talking. Can you apologize?  We need to restore good faith and leadership…(even though we know they don’t want you to apologize--they just want you gone)”?  This task fell to our Ops officer.  Ops had only been aboard the Pelican for a couple months.  Therefore, his hands were not sullied by Castro’s rebellion.  Ops was very competent.  He was the golden boy, from southern California, a true believer, “living the dream,” he would proclaim regularly, non-ironically.  His eyes glistened when we lowered the American flag at sunset.  He had played football at the Naval Academy.  He had done Campus Crusade for Christ alternative spring breaks in college, convincing fornicators and underage drinkers not to fornicate and drink.  Knowing Ops and those Christ-like thousand-yard-stare eyes, I bet he converted a few.  He went to church with his blonde southern California wife on Sundays.  He convinced a couple crewmembers to go with them.  His jaw, his biceps could crush the glass-reinforced plastic the Pelican was made of, if the nation needed him to.  He would likely surpass the captain in naval/maritime acumen some time in the future.  Nautically speaking, he was also good.  The captain sensed that.  Ops worked hard, but things came easy to him, including softball.  He didn’t wear the pants or bring his own glove, but he crushed the ball--much farther than I could, for the record (that son of a bitch).  I presume he was the student body president and prom king at his high school.  Maybe valedictorian, too. And psychologically speaking, unlike the captain, he exuded security.  Ops would have to deliver the news, then.  Coming from him might devastate the captain, but he was the one with the moral credibility.  The rest of us would still have to sit there awkwardly.

“Why do I get the feeling that you all hate me?  Like there is a target on my back?” the captain asked.  He almost cried, but he didn’t.  I looked across the table at Mike, who back in Texas would call the base chaplain regularly asking for the captain to be fired.  (The chaplain did not have that authority.)  Captains shouldn’t really care whether sailors really hate them or not.  At the least, they shouldn’t openly ask that question.  Even golden boy Ops was against him now, he likely thought, trying to surpass him already, a couple years ahead of schedule.  That must have been the moment, there in the crowded sweaty wardroom--more than softball the day before--when the captain drew his line in the sand and saw that he was alone on his side of the line.  

*

The work schedule became much more demanding.  Reporting times moved earlier.  Departing times shifted later.  The drills increased.  The verbal thrashings multiplied.  The targeted harassment intensified.  Zoomed out, however, it seemed more bizarre than harsh: we were this tiny ship tied to the pier in Ingleside, Texas that most of the rest of the navy knew nothing about.  We were not the “tip of the spear,” despite what the Squadron’s emblem said.   At the same time, the captain would also have his manic days, when he was uncomfortably positive and nice.  If I got stuck alone with him or with one other and him at mealtime on those days, I almost wished for him to be a dickhead instead.  We were used to dickhead.  

When he would have the wardroom over for dinner at his house with his family, it was uncomfortable and a little surreal, especially after the mutiny.  We would be eating, laughing, and drinking, but he knew that we essentially tried to get him fired and we knew he knew and resented us.  We didn't bring it up, but it was the subtext.  Mike, who had called the chaplain during the week to complain about the captain, would be there comparing his concealed-carry pistol to the captain’s at the grill—the both of them all smiles.  It was very cordial.  Surely, they wouldn’t turn the pistols on each other, in front of the kids, right?  Sometimes, I would see the captain and his family at Sunday mass.  During the sign of peace, I’d wave across the church to them.  At the end of mass, I would try to leave by the side door so as not to get caught in an awkward conversation with them on the way out or get invited to IHOP.

One night, we held a hail-and-farewell for some outgoing and incoming officers and chiefs at this Texas version of Chuck E. Cheese.  I sat across from the captain’s wife and made small talk.  She seemed like a real person, and that night, he seemed like a real person, too.  The times he did not seem like a real person--like when he named his five kids by numbers or expressed pride in missing their births or talked about guns or made a joke about gays--those times actually seemed put on.  Like he had to say those things.  That night, he appeared at ease, genuine.  Some people brought their kids.  They played in the arcade and the ball pit.  There was small talk, jokes, light drinking.  The captain’s wife gently corrected me when I confidently said “Escapade,” playing above, was by Paula Abdul.  “Janet Jackson, you mean.”  “Yes, of course, Janet Jackson.”  She knew. I was grateful for the correction.  We would later reference that night as the “last supper.”  

The next day on the ship, we heard four bells on the 1MC announcing the arrival of the squadron commander, our captain’s boss.  That was unusual, as he didn’t come aboard very often.  About twenty minutes later, the officer-of-the-deck called the crew to the fantail.  The captain was not present.  The squadron commander announced to us that he had just relieved the captain of command.  That is, he fired him from the Pelican.  Then, he dismissed us back to work.  

We didn’t know how to respond.  Most of us were in shock.  Some of us had been rooting for this day.  Mike called Ted, who had transferred months ago and who had been a main target of the captain’s vitriol, to celebrate.  Many of us, myself included, weren’t sure what we were rooting for or if we should be rooting at all.  In the ensuing weeks, there were unsubstantiated rumors about how the captain left the ship crying, how the base police had to go to his house first and warn his wife and help her clear out all of their guns quickly before he came home and how maybe he was suicidal or homicidal.  Other people said they saw him months later sheepishly pushing paper up at the squadron.  Presumably, he did not command another ship, but presumably he finished out or is finishing out his time in the navy until retirement.  As long as he is content with a nice safety net and family life, he will be fine.   

*                    

Texas has been a second chance for me….  It has been a chance for not only land and riches but also to be a different man and, I hope, a better one.  There have been many ideas brought forth in the past few months of what Texas is and what it should become….  We are not all in agreement but I’d like to ask each of you what it is you value so highly that you are willing to fight and possibly die for?  We will call that Texas…..If anyone wishes to depart under the white flag of surrender, you may do so now, you have that right….  But, if you wish to stay here with me, in the Alamo, we will sell our lives dearly.  


That is William Travis’ dramatized speech in The Alamo (2004).  According to legend, Travis took out his sword, drew a line in the sand, and offered the people two choices: surrender or fight to the end.   All but one Anglo Texan crossed the line to join Travis.  In the ensuing battle, they all died, except that one (I presume?), who survived to spread the word:  “Remember the Alamo.”  The Texans would remember the Alamo, they would defeat Santa Ana/Mexico at the battle of San Jacinto, and they would win their freedom and independence.  Then nine years later, they gladly gave up their independence to join the United States.




 The captain—himself from Texas, one typically learned within a minute of meeting him—wished he could have given that speech.  That is, if we had a real mission and if the ship worked.  He wished he could have inspired us to sell our lives dearly in the name of freedom, to rid the world of the terrorists and the weapons of mass destruction.  He had memorized part of Travis’ actual (not fictional) famous letter from the Alamo.  He loved Texas.  He barked regularly about stereotypical Texas pop culture things: guns of course, high school football and football generally, trucks, ATVs, the Alamo, John Wayne movies about the Alamo, Sam Houston, country music, Davy Crockett, and Shiner Bock.  

One time, the captain let it slip that he had been born and spent the first several years of his life in Minnesota, a different Anglo settlement but one without the rough and tough cowboy image.  He quickly covered up the slip with an enthusiastic “I wasn’t born in Texas, but I got here as fast I could,” like the bumper stickers on base read, not ironically.  And, we learned that he was from a sprawling cookie-cutter Houston suburb and that he studied engineering and political science at Rice.  The latter shouldn’t have precluded him from having authentic Texas pride, but Rice University grads weren’t exactly cattlemen or vigilante-rangers. Often, they became oil execs who fashioned themselves cattlemen or rangers.  At some point, as a boy or adolescent, the captain must have consciously taken up that Texas pride.  Maybe he decided Texas would be his thing, perhaps after an early adolescent baseball/softball-related heartbreak--getting cut or getting picked last.  (I got cut in 9th and 11th grades myself.  I know the feeling, and I did not have Texas folklore to comfort me.  Ops probably never got cut.)  Or, maybe the captain took up the Texas pride every morning before he saw us: “Texas… a chance to be a different man,” as the fictional Travis admitted.  My military chain of command on the Pelican not only included our suburban-cowboy captain from Minnesota but also the millionaire-Yale-cheerleader-cowboy George W. Bush at the top.  Bush, who saw Afghanistan and Iraq as his “Indian Country” to conquer—“in-country” for short, in military speak—was not originally from Texas either.  Nor was his thousand-points-of-light president-father.  Nor, for that matter, was William Travis.  Nor Sam Houston.  Nor Stephen F. Austin.  Nor Davy Crockett.  Nor James Bowie.  Nor most of the Texan patriots. 

By all accounts, Santa Ana was a mean son of a bitch, yes.  Yes, the Mexican government invited the Anglo settlers into Tejas.  But, the freedoms the Texan patriots fought and died for at the Alamo were principally the freedom to have as much land as possible--previously Native American land, of course, before it was Spanish and Mexican--and the freedom to keep slaves to grow cotton and make immense profits.  “Manifest destiny.”  “Popular sovereignty.”  Many of the heroic Texans had run away from debts, taxes, and failing marriages in their home states.  They were seeking new lives, “second chances.”  

Could they just not have gone?  Stayed at home, figured their lives out?  Have been content with the expulsion of Native Americans they already completed, trails of tears on the earlier frontiers?  Or once the game was up with Santa Ana, couldn't they have agreed to give up their slaves, to pay their taxes, to not die at the Alamo?  The tragedy at the Alamo seems very self-imposed--foolish, I dare say--but I understand that the Greek definition of tragedy comprises some self-imposition.  Some type of negotiated settlement could have saved lives, but it wouldn’t have been heroic, obviously.  They had no choice, we say definitively. 

Maybe, those men couldn’t handle the hardship, the boredom, the simplicity of sedentary life.  Their homesteads back in their home states, or even just small (un-slaved) plots of land in Texas did not satisfy.  Once Texas would become fully settled and enclosed and once life would become mundane again and the daily struggle just to be decent would become hard again, would they want to push further west? Into New Mexico, Arizona, California? Then Hawaii?  As far as the Philippines?

Couldn’t the captain have just walked away?  Couldn’t he have leveled with us?  Or told his boss, “Nahh, man this is silly”?  Realize the cards he was dealt were lousy and just have fun with us until our tour was through?  A little more Down Periscope, less Caine Mutiny or Crimson Tide?  Doing so, of course, would have meant he would stop climbing to the top of the navy, but we the crew could have written him a recommendation letter: “Dear Admiral, you gave him a bum ship.  He’s our guy, though.  Give him another chance, another ship.”  After Castro’s mutiny, could the captain have walked back his vitriol?  Reformed his persona?  Apologized?  Or, was the burden on us mutineers to walk it back, as we had escalated the situation?  Or, could he have walked everything back after the hearsay-drunk-driving confrontation?  He could have released those tears he was holding back.  We could have cried too and all hugged it out as a wardroom.  But by then, it was too late.  He would have been seen as weak to us, to his peer captains, to the squadron commander, to his wife, or to his kids, if they knew or cared.  Would any of us have cared?  

*                  

“All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone,”  said Blaise Pascal.  And, to live humbly in one place, together, Wendell Berry would add.  Save us all from frontiersmen--both real and pretend--and the causes they’re for.

*Janet Jackson, "Escapade," Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814, 1989