how’s your border trip, congressman?

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from rawclyde

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The Mexican/U.S. Border is Biden’s Achilles Heel. It can kill his campaign to get re-elected. Less resistance to Republicans in regard to the border might help Democrats ~ and Biden.

It’s real easy not to talk about the border. But it seems to be demanding more and more attention. Anyway, I’ve been living in Yuma, Arizona ~ and its only a few miles away from ~ the border. I don’t even go down there and look at what was built of the wall. I know it’s there.

Citizens from many parts of our nation don’t seem to have a clue about the border. I guess they might as well not even talk about it. But I think it’s getting harder and harder to pretend like it’s not here. Major cities are getting influenced ~ like Chicago and New York.

Anyway, the same old explanation applies ~ humane solutions don’t work without severe solutions in place ~ like the wall and the system that was being built around it ~ something people could see with their eyes. The Border Patrol was thrilled with the system they and Trump were building around the wall. When Biden first came into office and plucked all that into the trash can, I and others knew it would come back and bite him in the ass.

As long as our two political parties keep destroying what the other is doing instead of buffing it up and adding improvements, we’re in trouble.

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the border

joey boy meets the west

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an excerpt from a tall border story

published by the author around 1973

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(one of the chapters)

Flies

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     Ramon, thee notorious town drunk, sat upon the sidewalk with his back propped up against a wire fence, and an empty Tequila bottle in his hand.  Flies, of course, were buzzing, have always buzzed, will always buzz ~ no matter what we do.  Ramon swatted uselessly at them as they buzzed around his unkept mud caked head, until he had no strength left and could swat no more.

     It was in the autumn of ’73, in a small town called Tecate, in Mexico, near a border patrol station, about 30 miles from San Diego.  The time was 8 o’clock in the morning, or about that time, let’s say Saturday ~ and it was this Saturday morning that Tulip was getting married.

     Ramon moaned.  A Mexican curse dangled from his lower lip and fell on his shirt.  And he blinked with disbelief as a faded purple ex-milk truck with a Howitzer M1857 (Napoleon) cannon chained to its rear bumper, swiftly rolled with a growl and a clank clank, by his red veiny nose.

     Throughout his career as thee notorious town drunk of Tecate, Ramon had sat and watched many things cross the border ~ parades, armies, the most weird of vehicles, the weirdest being in 1956 when a giant, brightly painted, hot-dog weiner on wheels crossed the border, with a handsome man’s head sticking out the top, on the man’s head a big white cook’s hat.  The man had smiled and waved to Ramon.  In ’56 this made Ramon feel good and alive, even important ~ to have a character such as this wave to him!  He’d tried to wave back, but he was too drunk to lift his hand ~ and had simply blinked.

     Now, in ’73, a faded purple, so faded almost grey (with chipped paint), ex-milk truck (and without doors on the entrances to either side of the cab), pulling an old cannon behind it, rolled by.  The driver, with long dark hair in a tangle under a gray dirty cap on his head and wearing black jeans and a gray long sleeved and soiled work shirt with half its tail out, noticed Ramon, smiled and waved to him.  This was as good as being waved to by the weiner cook back in ’56 ~ but like then, Ramon was once again too drunk to wave back.  And only blinked.

     Yet there was a difference this time.  A few years after the weiner cook had passed, Ramon had wandered into a few Budhist meetings.  After the purple truck with a cannon vision passed, and Ramon blinked, he muttered into his tequila bleached whiskers (in this year of ’73) the universal song of ‘de universe according to the Budhist faith, which is, “Nam Myoho Renge Kyo.”

     He had just enough strength to do this ~ which gave him more strength to repeat the chant again and again ’til he was standing up and screaming it.

     Meanwhile ~

     At the Mexican border patrol station a few yards away, two guards examined the cannon curiously, and the bill of sales Road showed them.  They waved him to pass ~ and he did ~ after paying them a little money.

     However, at the United States border patrol station, a few more yards away, it was not so easy.  “Are you a United States citizen?” asked the husky easy going United States border patrol man.

     “Yes,” said Road.

     “Bringing back any fruit, vegetables, or liquor?”

     “No.”

     “What do you carry in the back of this truck?”

     “My study.”

     “Your what?” asked the border guard.

     “Books,” said Road.

     “Books?”

     “Books.”

     “What kind of books?”

     “Ohhhh ~ the kind you read.”

     “Can I see?”

     “Sure,” said Road.  He stood up, turned around, unlocked and slid open the doors into the rear…

~

~

     The guard peered in, saw the books, nodded his respectful bafflement, then peered out ~ at the cannon.

     “Where did you get the cannon?” he asked.

     Road handed him the bill of sales.

     The husky guard frowned over the note for a moment.  “What are you going to do with it?”

     “Give it to a museum,” said Road.

     “Does it, uh, work?” asked the guard.

     “I hope not,” Road chuckled.

     The guard kept the bill of sales and said gruffly.  “Park over to the side there.  We have to check out your truck and, uh, cannon.”

     Road frowned, put the truck in gear, did as he was ordered.

     This husky guard and a woman guard went thru all of Road’s beat up books, soiled bedding, thready clothes, and sparse kitchen ware ~ but without finding the dope that wasn’t there, or the cannon balls, gun powder, Colt 45, or stolen money that was there.

     “This is a very interesting truck,” said the woman guard as she browsed thru the silly stories that Road had written that he kept in some folders.

     “That’s because I’m a very interesting guy,” said Road.

     She nodded some sort of acknowledgment with a little smile.  Her hair was hidden in a tight bun under her cop cap.  She was older than Road.

     The husky guard examined the cannon from barrel to grease bucket.  Road yawned, pulled a cigar out of the glove compartment, bit off the end and spit it out, lit the cigar, and puffed.  The entire examination of the truck and cannon lasted what seemed like an hour ~ maybe an hour and a half.

     The husky guard, flustered, clomped into the station, came back out a few minutes later accompanied by the gray haired chief.

     The husky guard, the woman guard, and the gray haired chief all stood on the outside pavement beside Road, who sat in the driver’s seat of the truck.  He puffed on his cigar.  It was a good cigar ~ bought the night before in Tijuana.  Dry ~ and a taste all its own.

     The three guards talked amongst themselves, then turned and silently looked at Road.

     Road was yawning, watching the trickle of traffic slowly roll by.  He blew a cloud of smoke at a fly on the windshield.  He was very tired and hungover after the celebration in Tijuana the night before.  Plus he’d been driving the rest of the night into Mexico, and all the dawning morning out of it.  “Shit,” he sighed heavily, turned his head and saw the 3 guards standing next to him, studying him silently.  “Oops!  Excuse me.  I didn’t realize…” said Road.

     The woman guard seemed very friendly with her little smile.

     The other guard, cigarette in mouth, and the chief, cigarette in mouth also, glared back at Road as if he was a mortal sin.

     A long heavy moment passed.

     Flies buzzed.

     The woman guard lit up a cigarette too.

     “I don’t know what to tell you,” said Road, throwing his hands up in the air.  The cigar butt wiggled dry and suddenly tasteless in the corner of his mouth.

     The old chief jammed the cannon’s bill of sale into Road’s hand, and growled, “How about, ‘good bye’?”

     Road glanced for a moment at the lady in uniform, wanted to smile but didn’t.  “Good bye,”  he said into the chief’s steady eye, and drove away, anxiously thinking about Tulip’s wedding.

(Copyright Clyde Collins 1974, 2010)

~

hounded

!

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https://www.borderreport.com

~

old timer chronicle editor

rawclyde

!

perchance my leader

Kamala

yesteryear

~

now

in Her is a spirit

intelligent holy unique

manifold subtle agile

clear unstained certain

not baneful, loving the good, keen

unhampered beneficent kindly

firm secure tranquil

all-powerful all-seeing

~

message partnered with

The St. Joan Reincarnated Almanac

~

post assembled by spitball fury

~ Continue reading

i wanna be a good boy

~

A Love Story

by

Sp4 Clyde Collins

Caducean Newspaper

Tripler Army Medical Center

early 1980’s

~

     A place of ultimate contentment, the Pure Zone, existed in a corner of the mind of PFC Donald Duty, inspiration specialist, Poetics Lab.

     In this Pure Zone between his ears, there blew a gentle cool breeze over a limitless field of green, green grass.  The grass cheerfully, constantly waved “howdy” while an infinite herd of fat cows, dumb and content, munched on it.  The sun always shined.  It never rained.  There were no flies or cow paddies.

     Somewhere in the midst of the lackadaisical cows, under a tree on a small knoll, Duty and Sp5 Denise Daisy, assistant ward master, Ward Pluto, sat together.  They sat upon a colorful, smartly designed, afghan blanket knitted by Duty’s grandma in another age.  In the Pure Zone of the PFC’s mind, he and Daisy picnicked eternally.

     When the cows mooed, they did so in cohesive chorus and created the ultimate melody.  Occasionally a bird perched itself on a branch of the tree on the little knoll and chirped, which did nothing but add even more charm to the scene.

     Not too far away was Duty’s hometown, Buttermilk, Kan.  But nobody could reach Daisy and Duty because the cow herd, being infinite, surrounded everything.

     The Pure Zone in Duty’s head was largely responsible for the charismatic grin that was always (well, almost always) dancing around on his face as he accomplished mission after mission at Tripler Army Medical Center.

     However, in actuality Daisy married Sgt. Mickey Kandoo, bad dude, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks.  She moved out of the TAMC barracks to live with her infantryman in Aliamanu Military Reservation (AMR).  When she did this, Duty’s Pure Zone was shattered.

     Duty could not sleep.  Duty could not eat.  One day at noon a few weeks after her wedding, in the TAMC dining facility, Daisy happened to notice that her little buddy looked like death warmed over.  She parked her tray of good Army chow on the table next to Duty’s and said, “Hi.”

     “Hi,” moaned Duty.

     “What’s wrong, Donald?”  she inquired with a deep furrow of sincerity upon her brow.  “You look like death warmed over.”

     Duty tried to swallow a mouth full of fresh buttered peas and coughed it up.  “I’m sorry, Denise.  Ever since you got married I haven’t been able to eat or sleep.  I guess I love you.  But since you got married there’s nothing I can do about it except roll over and die.”

     “Oh Donald,” said Daisy in a barely audible whisper.  Tears suddenly sparkled in the corners of her eyes.  She was speechless for a long moment.  Finally under the table her hand touched Duty’s hand and squeezed it.  This was the only time Daisy and Duty had ever touched.  “You’re the best friend I have,” said Daisy.

     The juices in the PFC’s brain gushed like a refreshing cloudburst and in the Pure Zone a single flower radiantly bloomed.  He attacked the peas on his plate with a new fervor and successfully swallowed every one.

     “Oh boy, am I hungry!” grinned Duty.

~

DUTY WORLD

1980-1984

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