The internal enemy
It is jolly to watch crowds of enthusiastic Cubans marching about, chanting “Down with Communism,” after sixty-seven years of experiencing the real thing. I say this even though I know I’m only watching through a TV-like electronic screen, the way I watched the Iranians chant “Death to America,” Israel, &c, over the last forty-seven years. These are reminders that there is a God, and that the correct place to put Communists and (“radical”) Muslims is in Hell, where all their expectations will be contradicted. I am, however, presuming on the divine by bad rhetorical habit. I do not actually know what happens to them after they are dead, except that, “The only good Communist is a dead Communist,” as my friends from Central and Eastern Europe used to say, or their equivalents in Persia of the Islamic doctrinaires. But this simply blows off steam, for rural electrification projects.
This much can be known, however: that until American voters resume their comatose stupidity, and put the Democrats back in power, it will appear that the world is changing. But, the world never changes, as I’ve now spent more than sixty years learning. I have fought the good fight against political evil, and been punished for it.
I think back to when I was nineteen, and just returned from some first-hand experiences in the Republic of Vietnam. I had been in love with a memorably good (German immigrant) girl back home, for four years, and trying to win her, by way of subtext. Suddenly, and at last, I fell for a nice, available Jewish girl, who was a talented “modern dance” student, and possibly sane. She was certainly very attractive. And then Watergate came along, and several other things, including the American abandonment of Vietnam.
The cure for my naivety, then, was listening to my adored, oppositely-sexed number, shrieking in a café. She spilt no coffee — she actually threw it at me, because I was a fascist. One of the symptoms of my fascism was my love for Israel. She had given only slight praevisus of such views in our previous conversations, but now, after only a few weeks of “relationship,” I received the whole damp load. It was poignant to be lectured on Vietnam, about which she knew nothing, when I had at least been there and become acquainted with its history. It was a passion of mine. I loved freedom, as I would have put it then, without the slightest hint of irony.
She was the victim of a “liberal” education and a “progressive” home, eheu. Even her formal dance training was of a piece with this. There were millions of these fools, then, and there have been many millions more, ever since.