5 questions from
selkiesiren
Sep. 1st, 2004 07:19 pmUpon having my thursdays surprisingly free in my single 90s when I could (and did) dance pretty much every single day of the week, mostly Scottish, I finally followed a college buddy to the Foggy Bottom practice. The contrast between the simplicity (the basic patterns are variations of the playfords I'd already been doing in 3LF), combined with a power, were already an attraction.
Now add in very good company, an appreciation for other folk arts among the team members, and a bond of good beer drinking, and it sort of exploded within a month.
The general impression is that the Morris takes the dancer, not the
other way around.
2.) Your engagement was
beautiful...I was standing in line nearby when I saw the crowd gather,
and did my best to look over the shoulders of taller people to hear and
see what was going on (missed a lot, but what I caught had me in
tears). How surprised were you? And, what were your thoughts/feelings
at the time on having the "traditional" roles reversed (Good on ye,
Cyd, by the way. I'm all for a little tradition thrashing once in
awhile)?
Surprised? Shocked and Stunned. Absolutely Shocked and Stunned.
Needed serious drink afterwords
(to whit, the Order of the Drunken Sots Germans gladly provided at Ze
Vine Gardon).
3.) When did you start taking the
time
to really educate
yourself about politics? I.E.: was there an event that shook you awake
and made you feel as if you had to, or was it a gradual process?
"We're only immortal for a limited time". Its a lyric from a Rush song (author, Neil Peart).
I'd always been educated about it, but my cynicism and apathy 'cause
"both sides suck", which I inherited from my father, overwhelmed any
other feelings of activism or interest. I was part of the great
1980s and 1990s middle class, the immortal, the timeless, the ones
destined by history to dominate, regardless of the actions of the rich
or the numbers of the poor. The class that saw no end to its
growth except the day when we're all that way. Comfortable,
content.
Greed could be seen, recognized, chastized, and ridiculed out of
importance (a-la commedians like Robin Williams and Whoopi Goldburg and
the whole Comic Relief scene, and of course Doonesbury which I followed
religiously since the 1984 return to operations).
Laughter, logic, reason, and education should have been enough to keep
this country going well, and in 1993 the final idiot in the way of
progress (Bush Sr.) was gone and my parents generation, whom I'd always
respected, finally got the chance to steer this country right and stop
the freeze caused by the WW2 generation.
Uncle Newt came in 1994 and I shrugged it. "Contract with
America" indeed. I certainly never signed it. As Desmond
pointed out in his column, 2 years into the "Contract", the only thing
that Congress did was pass itself a raise. "Family Values" were
being praised as the ideal by divorcees, parents of homosexual children
they'd practically disowned, alcoholics, parents of children caught
abusing drugs. The "Family Values" pastors all preached to a
choir of Jerry Springer worshipers. They still do. And he's
a Democrat, dammit!
The Sonny Bono copyright extension act, and the abuses of the patent
system on software, started to get my attention, thanks to
slashdot. They remain major hot-buttons for me.
A practical tie in the Senate came in 1998 and I shrugged it. It
wouldn't last.
Kansas as a state decided Darwin was wrong. I laughed. They
got kicked out and science returned.
Bush Jr. became "President" on a campaign of lies and Reagan Worship,
and I got a little pissed, and started to try to figure out why a
people would vote so against their own interests. At that point,
my main concern was just the Supreme Court. The dot-bombs would
never fall on me. I was too smart, I was in the right business.
The military always spends money on research.
9/11/2001 happened, and I felt very secure. Information
processing was our business and we would handle it.
I didn't see that Big Brother was coming in the form of John
Poindexter's TIA. I had major problems with that, but I kept my
mouth shut. We had other things, things I could work on.
Still, I could see it coming. Projects were more oriented towards
increasing intelligence gathering to massive amounts of data on everybody, rather than processing
the information they already had (which as the commission reports,
would have been enough to at least green-light an investigation of the
florida flight school students). I saw in an instant what kind of
an ass Ridge would be.
Then I got laid off in 2003. Directly the result of the
pre-emptive, internationally illegal, utterly immoral, and finally
totally unjustified war on Iraq. DARPA stopped rewarding
contracts. TIA got trimmed due to public/media pressure. My
company's other customers "froze" while waiting for the war to finish
so they could proceed without worry about whether their own budgets
would get slashed. In the end, the cost of the aftermath caused
those budgets to get slashed anyways, totally unplanned for by
contractors or the customers.
It got personal. Big time.
I stopped caring about my present; its already screwed, and thank god
for faire, good scotch, a job outside of the government world, a loving
and talented wife, as being the only thing keeping me sane.
I had to care about the future. I can't sit by anymore and let
this man and his corporate cronies destroy my child's* future for the
sake of their religious prejudices, their grievances against a nation
that did them no harm at all (but has plenty of oil they can control),
and their desire to keep getting richer at *my child's expense*.
Logic and Reason lost. Education lost. Humor lost.
The Middle Class lost.
Illiteracy won. Propaganda won. Liars won. Bigots
won. Fundamentalists won.
Arguments that Lewis Carroll wrote 150 years ago AS A JOKE justified a war
that killed 1000 Americans and 20,000 Iraqis, many innocent of the
atrocities enacted in the name of their leader. Governments
continue to take advantage of the basic scientific principle that all
things (I mean, ALL) are nothing but probabilities and extrapoliations,
and have used that uncertainty to destroy the environment and remove
any semblence of modern biology theory from the classrooms.
People continue to vote for their own economic ruin all because someone
told them that the alternative is to give up their guns, or be a sinner
because they would be permitting others to have abortions.
The Poor of this nation, seeing the rich destroy their jobs, their
unions, their home towns, their farms, their schools, their parks and
natural wildlife preserves, their free press, and their pride in
America, have risen up against these Rich men who dominate their every
life. Together in one voice they have cried out that
revolutionary mantra, "We have come to lower your taxes!".
Greed won.
And for the sake of my children's future, I simply can not let that
happen again.
4.) William Larkin? Is there anything
behind the choice of the name?
My middle name (named for my dad's father), and my brother's middle
name (named for a surname on mom's side, first arrived in the colonies
in 1634). Both names are period well before the renaissance,
which was a Markland / Three Left Feet requirement I had to keep in
mind, that being my first performance dance group. Part of me
(the part of me that keeps getting called "Joe" at least 20 times a day
on site) is thinking of retiring the name in favor of something with
Joseph in it, similar to what Bob Garman did.
5.) How do *you* perceive the average perception of you? What do you
think the average Joe sees when they look at "Joe"?
I really have no idea. I know nobody really sees the whole thing,
because each thing I do or am part of, is done to a considerable
depth. The faire crowd certainly doesn't see just how scientific
and geeky I can be; I leave it out of faire now (didn't used to, and
annoyed people that way). Even in the historical setting, they
don't see just how much history I have in me. They know I'm
"smart", but (no egotism here, really), they have no idea just how
smart or just how much *stuff* is in my head. I'm incredibly
arrogant, but as I put it arrogance means being able to back it
up. (note, that doesn't mean being right, that just means being
able to back it up -- governments are arrogant because they can back it
up with the rule of law and a police force).
As a result, I'm sometimes misinterpreted. Arrogance doesn't
necessarilly mean having an ulterior motive or a constant prejudice,
but it can be perceived that way.
One of the reasons my faire persona is more foole-like / child-like
(not the extremes of an O or Stupina, but you get the idea; its just a
mask, not a character) is because that arrogance combined with my short
temper can piss people off. Better to keep those parts of my life
hidden. Playing for kids has worked (they're still
Cat&Fiddle's core/target audience) in helping me build that
mask. But that mask in a sense exists for their protection rather
than mine. "Silly-boy" as Cyd calls it, is much more
enjoyable/comfortable to be around than "Cranky-boy".
* no, I don't have a kid yet, but its in the plans.
yeah, "planned parenthood"
Date: 2004-09-01 06:37 pm (UTC)