535 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
535 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
Transcript: Hakim Bey / Mordecai Watts
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Telephone Interview
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June 25, 1995
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MW: I just got the T.A.Z. album-- after listening, I dreamed of a commercial for
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an amusement park ride that carried its passengers through a rapid sequence of
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images appropriated from Dali and other surrealists.
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Bey: There was such an amusement park. It wasn't really appropriated from
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surrealists. The other way around, if anything. It was called Dreamland, and it
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was at Coney Island around the turn of the century. Jim Koehnline knows a lot
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about it. I don't know if it was deliberately meant to be surrealist or not, but
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the effect certainly was. There's a book about old New York, or old Coney
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Island, that has some pictures.
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MW: I believe Kim Deitch did something about it in one of his comics...
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Bey: Yes, he did. You're absolutely right. He's a fan of it, too.
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MW: One of the points in T.A.Z. and on the album is that imagination has been
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co-opted by the media, almost as if people no longer have imaginations of their
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own... imagination is now something people are fed, as opposed to what they used
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to excrete by nature. You mentioned virtual reality in passing, referring to it
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as the latest form of entertainment the least amount of imagination to date...
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Bey: It just seems to become more and more apparent to me... I have to admit I
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felt a certain intense interest, perhaps even amounting to a potential
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enthusiasm, when this tech was first being discussed. I'd read Gibson like the
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rest of us, and I certainly understood his dystopian point, but nevertheless ,
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when Tim Leary and people like that began to get enthusiastic, I had to
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investigate on that level. I haven't seen much evidence that what Uncle Tim
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thought was going to happen is really happening. Once again, any technology
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could be democratic if it were distributed, you know what I mean? It's a simple
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Marxist thing about means of production. There's nothing inherently
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authoritarian-- at least at first glance-- to any technology, although one could
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argue about how technology then shapes the society that has already shaped the
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technology in a kind of feedback loop that can move towards greater and greater
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authoritarianism/lack of autonomy. And in fact, I think that something like that
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is what's happening with communications technology. The potential for what, back
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in the '50s and '60s, people were calling electronic democracy, is obviously
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still there as a potential structure, and you can see certain elements of it in
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the Net, but when you're talking about the high tech involved in virtual reality
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you're really talking about something that is not accessible to most people. And
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I think it probably never will be. There's never going to be any cheap VR kit
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that's going to allow a dock worker in Manila to get on some kind of cyberspace
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Internet, much less a dock worker in Atlanta-- or me, for example. So to talk
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about electronic democracy when you're still dealing within a capitalist
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framework that deliberately prices things along class lines, you know, we're
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going to have an information highway but it's going to be policed by the likes
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of the Democrats and the Republicans. It's not going to be any more of an
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electronic democracy than America is now a legislative democracy.
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Also, on the subject of the recuperation of the imagination, I would say that my
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thinking has gotten more gloomy over the past few years in relation to VR and VR
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type technology. I think that even the Internet-- although I've had some
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enjoyable moments myself in connection with the Internet, and I certainly don't
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want to put it down in and of itself-- it's a fascinating phenomenon-- and it
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does show some features of what an autonomous, non-hierarchical Web could be
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like in cyberspace-- but it's also under assault from power, as we all know. And
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eventually, power will win, because power has the power. It actually owns the
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kilowatts, not to mention the big battalions, as Stalin said in relation to the
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Pope. So I'm a little gloomy about20the future of the Internet if Carter-- not
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Carter, I keep calling that asshole Carter-- Clinton and his assholes are really
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serious about the information highway and about the policing of the information
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highway, I think you'll see that even the smiley-faced liberal Democrats will
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act in no wise different from cyber-fascists. In fact, they are one and the same
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thing. So there's still room for contestation, room for struggle, whatever you
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want to call that, and the Internet is an interesting area of contestation, but
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90 per cent of what goes out over the Internet-- correct me if I'm wrong, I
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don't play on the Internet myself-- my impression is that 90 per cent of what
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goes out over it is completely unrelated to any kind of freedom interests or
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autonomy proposals or projects, or struggles for genuine non-hierarchical,
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non-authoritarian group dynamic. Most of it is just chit-chat-- banal chit-chat
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that could just as easily be carried out over an old fashioned party line phone.
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You're probably not old enough to remember those, when there would be five or
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six people on a phone line, there'd have to be signals so you'd pick up when it
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was for you, and so forth... I don't see that there's been any kind of great
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advance there over my dear old Aunt Janice who used to pick up the phone and
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listen to other people's conversations when she wasn't supposed to. If that's
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autonomy then we've had it.
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MW: Now you can do that with cellular phones. That's supposedly how they tracked
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O.J. Simpson, through cellular phone transmissions. Did you catch any of that
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media fiasco?
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Bey: I didn't. I heard about it from other people. I don't own a television.
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MW: Lucky man.
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Bey: Not luck. Foresight.
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MW: I had the feeling that something was terribly wrong here, and that I was a
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part of it by watching it.
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Bey: That's exactly what my friend who told me about it said. For some reason,
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he turned on the game-- he hadn't looked at sports on television for decades--
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and there was this weird thing going on. He was just sucked in and couldn't get
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away, couldn't get out of it, started feeling really terrible, couldn't turn the
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TV off. Must have been weird.
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MW: The news crews were basically waiting to se if he was going to shoot himself
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in the head...
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Bey: Of course. As Jerry Mander [sp?] pointed out years ago, death makes the
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best TV. And that's what everybody on TV is waiting for. It's the most exciting
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moment.
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[Here MW brings up the Hakim Bey Web site maintained by Marius Watz (similar
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name, but no relation!) and must explain the basic notion of the WWW to Bey....]
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Bey: That's why the stuff is out there in anti-copyright. I encourage people to
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distribute it by any means that they can.
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MW: How are you handling anti-copyright with the T.A.Z. album?
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Bey: At the minimum, there will be a statement from me that, as also
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representing the publisher of the book, Autonomedia, that the text is
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anti-copyright and can be copied and distributed at will. We're still working on
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the legal thing with the people who own Island/Axiom. I'm hoping that we can get
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the whole thing out with some kind of very obvious invitation to copy freely.
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Bill [Laswell] and everybody I've been working with with Bill is entirely in
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agreement with this, but on the other hand it's not worth their jobs. So they're
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not putting their jobs on the line over this, but they're trying their best to
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get rid of all the usual copyright bullshit. Even from a marketing point of
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view, in my mind that kind of stuff is largely irrelevant. People copy anyway.
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What we found out-- oddly enough, this is something I didn't expect-- but I
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think putting an anti-copyright on the book actually made the book sell better.
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When people got hold of an outtake from the book, and then saw there was an
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anti-copyright, they said, 'Oh, I can copy this,' so they went out and bought a
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copy of the book and then copied it. That way, three and four more people maybe
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got to read bits and pieces of the book, or the whole book, but it also sold one
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more copy of the book. I explained all this to Laswell and his crew, and they
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saw the logic of it, and I think it very is much the logic of the Net at work.
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Intellectual property, as a legal problem, might just evaporate if the net
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really behaved in this truly non-hierarchic fashion that we were talking about
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earlier. And as long as there is a net or a counter-net that does behave that
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way, it can raise its own money.
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MW: Do you have any thoughts on how one could best realize the Internet as a
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T.A.Z.?
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Bey: I'm led to believe, through conversations with people who are much more
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techie and active than I am, that cypher-- unbreakable code-- is the key. So the
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cypher-punks are the people to keep an eye on at this moment. And they also tend
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to be the ones who are most active around freedom of speech issues and so forth,
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whether legal or extra-legal. If Clipper were to prove impossible due to an
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ever-receding technological horizon of impenetrability, then this would-- God
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knows what they would do, I suppose they would have to try to physically break
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down the technology in the households, and the actual people who were key and
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central to such a system. There certainly would be a declaration of war of some
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kind or another, I should think. I think there's one now. I think Clipper was a
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declaration of war on the Net. Now that the egg is on their face, because within
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ten minutes some hacker figured out how to beat the Clipper, is sort of an
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indication of-- oh, let's call it an area of chaos. Within areas of chaos,
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either horrible destruction and disease and death occur, or, if you're flowing
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the right way, and if all hearts are beating in unison to a certain degree, then
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that area of chaos can become the T.A.Z. Now I've said over and over again, that
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there's no such thing as a T.A.Z. that's only on the Net, and I maintain that
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that's true. In order to have autonomy, you have to have physicality. Autonomy
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is not something that can only exist in the imagination or in the world of
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images. I think that it involves the entirety, the whole axial being, and that
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is rooted in the earth and concerns physicality, materiality, the body,
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mortality, if you like, as contrasted to the spurious immortality of cyberspace.
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But I still maintain that, at least in theory, the net could be an adjunct to
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the T.A.Z., could be a tool or a weapon, even, if you want to look at it that
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way, for the construction of the T.A.Z.
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MW: There was recently a net hoax about a Clipper-type rider to congressiona l
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bill-- the goal was to make people realize that they should question the info
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they got on the net.
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Bey: [laughs, assumes sarcastic tone] Well, gee, thanks! Gee. I never thought of
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that.
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MW: But a lot of people, enthusiastic about the Net as an information resource,
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bought the story hook, line and sinker.
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Bey: Well, sure, and it's going to lead to all kinds of spy story bullshit. But
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when the Zapatista thing started down in Mexico, I was desperate for information
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because the New York Times, which was the only paper that was reporting it that
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I knew of, was clearly lying about everything. I found better information on the
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net. That's actually the one example I can give you of when I felt that I was
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getting something concrete and solid out of the net. Of course, a few weeks
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later it was all in print, in various 'zines and underground magazines, Covert
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Action Review and all that sort of stuff. But at least I had it a couple of
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weeks early.
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MW: Speaking of the NY Times-- do you get Lies Of Our Times ?
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Bey: I see it from time to time. I know Marty Lee [sp?] pretty well.
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MW: Regarding power and VR: David Blair has pointed out that VR technology
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actually emerged from military flight simulation technology.
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Bey: Absolutely. Everything's always emerging from military technology. I just
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found out the other day... you know what Taylorism means? [It's] the
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rationalization of factory production by rationalizing the workforce with time
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clocks, what have you... the guy who invented it, Taylor, figured it all out
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while he was working in an arsenal for the army, around the post-civil War era.
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Do you know the work of Manuel Delanda [sp]?
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[MW sheepishly confesses his ignorance.]
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Bey: War In The Age of the Intelligent Machines. This is a major thesis that
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Manuel is working on, and I think a very, very important one, that we have to
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question all technology if we're questioning the militarization of
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consciousness, because all technology is suspect from that point of view. It's
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not all guilty, maybe, but it's all suspect.
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MW: Have you launched the Atlantean Society yet?
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Bey: Well, we've been trying. I have to admit I've been remiss. I expect to get
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it going some time soon, God willing.
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MW: Has James Koehnline put out more issues of the Mad Farmer's Jubilee Almanack?
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Bey: Yeah. I'm working on a couple of Atlantean projects. I've got a project
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going about the European converts to Islam who fought with the Barbary Pirates
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in the 17th Century in Morocco in a kind of pirate Utopia that lasted for about
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forty or fifty years.... There's an Irish connection there, so it's a North
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African-Irish connection there from the 17th Century. I'm also working on the
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thesis that the ancient Celts had some kind of soma ceremony, some kind of
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ritual psychedelic, which would conceivably also involve the indigenous,
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non-Celtic people, who we believe-- we Atlanteans believe-- are the same people
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as the Berbers and the Iberians. So my work is going on... but unfortunatel y,
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the Society hasn't really quite emerged from the world of the unseen yet.
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MW: Is Bob Quinn's book [Atlantean: Ireland's North African & Maritime Heritage]
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available in the US?
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Bey: I've never seen it here. I could give you the address of the publisher.
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MW: I have it in the the Almanack. [Quartet Books, 27/29 Goodge St., London WP
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LFD.]
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Bey: Are you interested in the subject particularly?
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MW: Yes.
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Bey: There's another book that you really should know about called The Black
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Celts, subtitled An Ancient African Civilization In Ireland and Britain by
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Achmad Ali and Ibrahim Ali. It's published by Punite Publications, Box 478,
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Cardiff, Wales, UK. It costs about nine English pounds, I think. It was reviewed
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in the newsletter of the London Psycho-Geographic Society, which is a great
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little publication. It's a very valuable addition to the Moorish Empire in
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Ireland thesis. A very disorganized book, but full of interesting stuff.
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MW: I recently spoke to a musician named Stephen Kent, a British musician who
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started out as a French horn player. He grew up in Africa, wound up working with
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Circus Oz in Australia, and he's now, after fifteen years of practice, a
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digeridoo virtuoso in a group called Trance Mission, as well as a semi-defunct
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group called Lights In A Fat City. He told me that a female shaman aborigine
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told him that in ancient times the digeridoo had actually been given to the
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aborigines by Tibetan lamas.
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Bey: Good grief.
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MW: They do play horns which use similar breathing techniques....
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Bey: I've seen them...
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MW: He was also very interested in the Atlantean theory when I told him about
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it... but in Ireland, sometime in the past, they found a cache of ancient Bronze
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age brass instruments in a tomb... nobody could figure out how to play them
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until someone had the bright idea of applying digeridoo techniques to them.
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Apparently there is now an album out that has some fellow playing these ancient
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instruments along with a pair of Australian digeridoo players, one white, one
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aboriginal. If I ever track it down, I'll get back to you on that.
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Bey: I could arrange to have that played on the radio. That would be fun. The
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strings of the original Irish harp were also metal, and apparently this puzzled
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people quite a long while to how to reconstuct the original Irish harp. I think
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Derek Bell from the Chieftains finally achieved that. Or at least he used an
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all-metal-stringed harp in some of his recordings. But these were wind
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instruments?
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MW: They were horns.
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Bey: Without holes?
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MW: I don't know... I presume not.
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Bey: Well, I'd love to know more.
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MW: Any other projects?
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Bey: There's another book of essays in the works, in which the "Immediatism"
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pamphlet would be included, and then on from there, another two or three times
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more. Three times more material. I hope that will be ready for press by autumn.
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Other than that, you know, Hakim Bey leads a a pretty shadowy existence.
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MW: How deeply rooted is your work in Islam?
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Bey: Well, personally, it is. No one has to interpret it that way if they don't
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want to, but for me, it is rooted in heretical Islam.
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[Here mysteries are discussed. Media blackout in effect. We resume with a
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discussion of matters Irish...]
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Bey: There's an Irish legend that says you can get the gift of eloquence if you
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drink water from the river Boyne in the month of June. I think maybe I should go
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next June, but I'd like to go before then.
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MW: Sounds easier than doing the Blarney Stone routine.
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Bey: That's clearly worn out. In fact, I don't think that ever was a real Irish
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tradition. I think it was invented by some English landlord. I'm not sure, I've
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never actually studied it. It's one of those things that annoys the Irish when
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you mention it, like leprechauns, so stay away from that...
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MW: I'll bear that in mind if I'm ever there. Speaking of that, have you ever
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enountered any belief in that yourself?
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Bey: My very shallow experience of Ireland is probably not worth much, but yes,
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a few individuals... I've met a few individuals who took all that stuff
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seriously, but I think at root everybody in Ireland takes it seriously. It
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reminds me a lot of Java in some ways, which is a country where the spirit lurks
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close to the surface at all times, but it's still very much part of the culture.
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In Ireland it's been supressed as part of the obvious, open culture, but I think
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it's still very much there in the psyche. So to me, the whole place feels edgy
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and magical. But this could be entirely subjective. You could talk to some Irish
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person and they would say I was completely wrong. Maybe that's just my
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romanticism.
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MW: I just read in the Fortean Times that the city planning department of
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Reykavijk, Iceland actually has an alleged psychic who provides an up-to-date
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map of areas where spirit folk dwell.
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Bey: Yes, I saw that article. The other article I liked in that issue was the
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one about the 50-year-old Irish cow. It turned into this icon of worship. And if
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you go back into Irish folklore, you find mythical cows.... this cow is
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obviously a model of the mythical cow.
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MW: Well, Cuchullain spent a great deal of his time rounding up cows.
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Bey: Exactly. There's a famous cow from that legend, the name of which I can't
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remember, who was supposed to have lived to be a thousand years old, and the
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mother of every cow in Ireland... all this kind of stuff... it's obviously just
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a kind of rhetorical exaggeration of a famous cow like that Big Bertha that was
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written up in the Fortean Times.
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MW: The film The Field, an Irish film, involved cows in a rather spectacular
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fashion.
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Bey: I've head a lot about that film. I'd like to see it. It was a very
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successful stage play before it was a film.
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MW: I don't think they could have done on stage what they did with the cows in
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the film.
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Bey: Ah-hah. It's about two brothers who quarrel over a field, about an
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inheritance or something...?
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MW: No, a different story... although it involves a similar land-lust situation.
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Basically, Richard Harris is a crusty old farmer who's obsessed with the land
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he's been working all his life, and can't cope when the owner decides to sell it
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to an American for development... very involved with strangeness about the land.
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Bey: Yes, that is indeed still very strange... since there's only four million
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people in Ireland, it isn't as intense as it must have been in, let's say, 1830,
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when there were about 12 million people in Ireland. Which is funny to think
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about.
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MW: While the population everywhere else is going up...
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Bey: And it never does in Ireland, not since 1848, when they had the potato
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famine and most of the population either left or died. Ever since then,
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Ireland's been underpopulated. That's why... you know this deal?... if you had
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an Irish grandparent and could prove it, you can get an Irish passport.
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I think the Irish are so eager for people that if you said, 'Well, I don't have
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a grandparent but I'd like to apply for citizenship,' they'd say, 'Well, that'll
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take you two weeks longer.' They seem to be very, very eager to have people go
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and settle there even for part of the year-- to the extent that if you're an
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artist, and you're making your money through your art, and you live in Ireland
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six months and a day every year, so that you can become an official resident,
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then they'll exempt you from income tax. In fact, from all tax, on the
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assumption that just having an artist in Ireland is worth it.
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MW: Does Robert Anton Wilson still live there?
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Bey: No, but that's why he went there in the first place. I think he got a
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little lonely or something... actually, the decisive factor for his leaving was
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medical problems that couldn't be dealt with there. His wife was unwell.
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MW:Getting back to the Internet, a while back there was the hoax obituary for
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R.A. Wilson... How did he feel about that?
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Bey: Well, when I rang him up the day I heard, he was laughing. I hadn't heard
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him in such an exalted state for a long time. To survive one's death, after
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all... but that was a nasty stunt.
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MW: It was. It provoked a lot of commentary. After the truth was announced, the
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controversy kept going on because people started claiming that was a hoax...
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carried it on to ridiculous extremes.
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Bey: Well, let people get used to it, man. They were trusting what they heard on
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the news? What kind of idiots...? Everything is dubious. All information is
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potential disinformation, even when it's true.
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MW: A lot of the behavior on the Net is fairly petty and infantile. Particularly
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in any of the groups that deal with sex.
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Bey: Well, I've heard some of the ridiculous stories that go on here. And I
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really don't know where it's all leading, as I was saying before. I have no
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idea. I wouldn't want to predict that it's all leading toward some utopia or
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dystopia .Or if it's just going to be a kind of complicated telephone, just
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become part of our lives the way the telephone has, hot and cold running water
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and the telephone. Hard to say, really.
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MW: You expressed some distaste for Clinton a little while back. Any further
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thoughts on him and his administration?
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Bey: Absolutely. Just gets worse and worse, doesn't it? The worst thing I know
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is this bullshit about decriminalization of pot, this stupid rumor that High
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Times spread that Clinton and Gore were going to favor decriminalization and
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that all the potheads should vote for them. What a crock of shit!
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MW: I was not aware of this...
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Bey: The rumor that went around amongst hemp activist types that at some event,
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and details were given-- who knows whether they were made up-- some event where
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hempoids were tabling, and Gore showed up. It was some kind of political event
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and they were tabling outside, so Gore sidles up to the table and leans over and
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whispers to them a 'be of good cheer' kind of message. And then he slinks away.
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So then High Times printed this story, and I presume all the potheads dutifully
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went out and voted for Clinton. And I think that Clinton had advisers about
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every interest group in America. One day the adviser came who covered this kind
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of thing and said, 'Bill, you know I think you've lost a lot of credibility with
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this non-inhaling business, you've got to do something to get the potheads back.
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There's millions of them. And some of them are well-to-do, and they vote.' And
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so they said, 'Well, send out Gore to spread some disinformation.' And this is
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the way this regime has behaved on every point. On every point it's betrayed the
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interest groups that it claimed to represent, in the most obvious and nasty way.
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Furthermore, any president who can come in on an anti-Bush line20and then
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immediately bomb Baghdad again in order to revenge some insult to Bush-- what
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the fuck is going on? Well, business as usual. It's just one scumbag after
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another. I hope I've gotten Beyond the point where I get upset to the stage of
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losing control of myself the way I did during the Gulf War, which really just
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blew my mind, and I couldn't function. So I hope I learned something from that,
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not to let these bastards get to me on the personal level. But my joke is that
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Clinton is simply a plant by the CFR/Bilderberger/Rockefeller/Kissinger types
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who are running reality for us, and they put him up there for four years to take
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the heat off of the Republicans because Bush had acted like such an asshole
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proclaiming himself the 46reemasonic messiah. They told him, 'Look, you have
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four years to make liberalism stink like shit in the nostrils of the nation.'
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MW: He's way ahead of schedule.
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Bey: Way ahead! So I figure, in '86 it's Quayle and Noriega. And then we have
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Clinton to thank for that. And somewhere there's a Swiss bank account building
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up for the little creep.
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MW: What about the other obvious candidate--?
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Bey: Ollie [North]?
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MW: He got the senatorial nomination in Virginia.
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Bey: He did, did he? He's tarred with the brush of the extreme right to the
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extent where those powers, those central powers that I referred to as the
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Bilderbergers-- which is just a joke, really, but who knows?-- are not going to
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go with Ollie. They pensioned Ollie off long ago, and now he's out there
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bouncing around like some ping-pong ball from the Liberty Lobby to God knows
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what, with the cranks. So I don't expect him to win any more than Duke won. He's
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just a paper tiger now. He's just to keep everybody's eyes off what's really
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going on.
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MW: Speaking of Gore, as we were, have you ever read anything by a novelist
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named Steve Erickson?
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Bey: Yes... no, wait a minute... remind me.
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MW: His most recent book was Tours of the Black Clock.
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Bey: Go back a little.
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MW: Rubicon Beach... well, no, his most recent was actually Arc d'X, which was
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about Thomas Jefferson. Or, it started out being about Thomas Jefferson, but it
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leaps into alternate realities, and involves Jefferson's relationship with Sally
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Hemmings, his slave/lover.
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Bey: I've heard about that one, and I think I read Rubicon Beach, but I can't
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remember anything about it. Why?
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MW: Well, he wrote a book called Leap Year, which was basically, in a sense,
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non-fiction, although there is a good deal of fiction in it too, about him
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attending both major political conventions in 1988. He has a lot to say about an
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unnamed senator who is obviously Al Gore.
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Bey: He fictionalized it, you say?
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MW: There's a lot of reportage in it of him at the conventions, describing
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things, but also, throughout the entire book, the ghost of Sally Hemmings-- her
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first appearance in one of his books-- keeps haunting him, looking for her long
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lost lover, Thomas Jefferson. Which represents, to him, I guess, a metaphor for
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the conflicts inherent in America: love/hate, slavery/freedom, et cetera...
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Bey: So he had some interesting take on Gore, per se?
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MW: Yes, and not a very flattering one... he basically describes him as a pretty
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ambitious guy who's desperate to be president and to get into power.
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Bey: Well...
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MW: Since then, of course, Gore turned Green, you know, wrote his little book...
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Bey: And thereby positioned himself to be the specialist in betraying everyone
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with Green interests, from the environmentalists to the hemp activists.
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MW: There's one interesting scene where Erickson is in a bar-- I imagine it's
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fictional, but you never know-- and a drunken woman begins hitting on him and
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follows him back to his hotel room. One of her great ambitions is to be a rock
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singer, so she starts belting out some Janis Joplin song, while he's trying to
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get rid of her. There's a knock on the door, she crawls under the bed, and it's
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her husband, the Senator, looking for her. So this woman was Tipper... who the
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media seems to have forgotten was the spearhead of....
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Bey: Oh yes, the satanic rock thing.
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MW: Of course, maybe the scene wasn't fictional. I don't know. He blends fantasy
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and political reportage quite skilfully in that book.
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Bey: It sounds like an interesting experiment.
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MW: It's far more interesting than any of the semi-official "Making of the
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President" books that used to come out after every new president.
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MW: I don't read those. It's a bunch of media jerks congratulating themselves on
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how close to power they got.
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[At this point we wound down our conversation and said our farewells.]
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