Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Trading Up

When you get older the "darndest" things tickle your fancy. Like salads. Now that I walk crooked instead of in a straight line I get a bigger kick from eating a 5-pack of salads than I do out of drinking a 6-pack of beer.

Sounds a little strange, I know. But, like Scotch whiskey, it's an acquired taste.

Monday, June 08, 2009

My Kind of Guy

Back in the late 1980s I lived in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, where the summers were longer and hotter and the winters were shorter and milder than they are up here in the Allegheny Plateau. One of my favorite things to do on a Saturday night back then was to stay up late and watch a local television show about UFOs, extraterrestrials, the solar system and outer space on one of the local TV stations.

The show was called E. T. Monitor and the host of this show was Robert D. Barry. The fact that this show was not broadcast from New York or Los Angeles or Chicago is what made it so appealing to me. It was broadcast at midnight on Saturday night by Channel 49 from Red Lion, Pennsylvania. Only thirty or so miles from where I lived at the time.

Mr. Barry's show included prominent guests like Dr. Jack Kasher, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Nebraska and Bob Lazar, a physicist who claimed to have worked at the secret government installation S-4, near the infamous Area 51 UFO research center at Groom Lake, Nevada and Stanton Friedman, the man who blew the lid off the 1947 Roswell conspiracy. In addition, Robert Barry took phone calls from anyone who wanted to talk about UFO sightings or their UFO experiences. Mr. Barry's own wife, Lucy, manned the phones during these broadcasts.

I was watching E. T. Monitor one night when the broadcast was suddenly interrupted and never came back on. A couple of weeks later Mr. Barry told his audience about a warning the FBI had given him about keeping his mouth shut, a warning that was followed up by the mysterious "plug-pulling incident". Bob Barry died not long after that and his dedicated wife, Lucy, tried in vain to keep the show alive. E. T. Monitor died the same undeserved death that its host had succumbed to and some of us dedicated viewers smelled a big, government conspiracy rat.

But the most intriguing thing about E. T. Monitor was the host. Robert D. Barry was an unpretentious, inquisitive and brave man who dared to ask the questions I'd been asking myself since I was a kid and he confronted the skeptics and the authorities that are always there when the truth is about to be uncovered. They come out of the woodwork, debunking and denying their lying-ass-dog asses off in an effort to keep mankind in the dark and to uphold business-as-usual as the true law of the land.

This simple blog posting is my tribute, then, to Robert D. Barry, whose memory is kept alive by a few dedicated people at YouTube. Here's the link to the first of a 5-part video of E. T. Monitor with Robert D. Barry. My kind of guy.

E. T. Monitor with Robert D. Barry

(Author's note: The very second I finished writing this blog posting in WordPerfect 12, and before I could save the document, the power went out here in Snow Shoe, Pennsylvania, and I had to write it all over again from memory and then post it to Blogger. Now, that's no coincidence. And, no, I never get used to this manipulative nonsense. The feds who work with the alien-controlled "New World Order" are nothing but traitors who think they're above the law. Personally, I think they're worse than that. I think they're unconscionable, unrepentant, rat-bastard, lyin'-ass dogs who should be jailed for life and fed dog food for breakfast.)

Sunday, May 17, 2009

SETI@home 10th Anniversary

Wishing SETI@home all the best on its big 10th Anniversary.



Friday, May 15, 2009

Website Welcome Wagon

Because of uncontrollable technical difficulties with posting videos on my website, I'm welcoming people to Science Fiction for Thinkers from my Think Tank blog, here at Blogger.

Thank heavens for Blogger.


video



Friday, May 01, 2009

Happy Valley Detour

There's a signpost up ahead: Next Stop, Happy Valley!

No, this isn't about an episode of The Twilight Zone. The following tale of supernatural phenomena has nothing to do with the boundless imagination of television writer Rod Serling. This one is a true, albeit a sad and somewhat disturbing story, of a regular guy who once found himself in the incredible upside-down and inside-out world of Happy Valley, PA. And who lived to tell about it.

Back when I blindly believed in the goodness of people and the sanctity of old age, I used to volunteer my time at various senior citizen events. I fetched and carried like a "gopher", moved furniture, set tables, helped people to and from places, pulled out chairs and pushed them in again, and generally served and respected my elders the way I'd been taught as a boy. And I did this because I liked older people and old folks, felt at home around them, and always believed that none of them was getting a fair deal out of life anymore. I still believe that, although I'm a little more cautious nowadays about practicing that belief.

Anyway, several years ago I volunteered to hand out bingo prizes at a big senior citizen event "just a stone's throw" from Penn State University. Lots and lots of senior citizen women and even a few senior men attended this blowout and it was held in Happy Valley, PA. Where else? That's State College, Pennsylvania, USA, for those of you who, naturally, have no clue. Happy Valley is a "Marginal People's Paradise" that's presided over by Big-Sister, Penn State.

I found a folding chair behind an unused podium and sat down with my little Mini-Igloo cooler, containing a few snacks and some bottled water. I'd already prepaid for the big, sit-down lunch with the others but I had this little life raft with me, just in case. I happily waited in this spot, out of the way, until I was needed by the bingo caller. The room was soon filled to the brim with people well past their prime, guys and gals who'd finally had to turn in their lease on life for canes and walkers and electric scooters and restricted activity. My heart went out to them as it always did. Senior citizenship on planet Earth was no way to treat a lady, or a gentleman, but it was the best this backward world had to offer them at the present time.

No one in the room smiled or waved or nodded at me. What they did was stare. They stared and stared. And it wasn't because I was a lot younger than they were. I was in my early 50s and would be one of them before any of us knew it. Besides, there were plenty of volunteers and workers at this shindig who were my age or younger. Anyway, they continued to stare at me until I wanted to rush to a mirror to see if I had a smudge on my face or something objectionable peeking out of my nose. But I knew instinctively what it was, why they were staring at me like I was "a little green man from mars" or something worse. It was worse. It was my clothing.

My cargo shorts didn't say "Dockers" on them anywhere. My sneakers were not Nike or Adidas or Reebok. The crown of my ball cap was way too high by collegiate standards and it didn't sport a cool Nike logo or the name of a U.S. Virgin Island on it. My shirt wasn't an expensive golf shirt with a tiny Izod Lacoste alligator on the left chest. It was a teal-colored T-shirt that said "Penn's Cave" on it and that made it all too common in Centre County, Pennsylvania, Land of Penn State and Penn's Cave. That was it, then. That had to be it. An alien, redneck hick from The Mountaintop (that's anywhere in the Snow Shoe, Clarence, Moshannon or Pine Glen area of Centre County for those who, naturally, don't know) had entered their shallow world of superficial things and symbols and meanings, and they didn't like it one darn bit.

Then, before I could even hand out my first bingo prize, a short-haired female head appeared over the podium from the front. I craned my neck to engage her eyes with mine. She was somewhere in her late forties or early fifties, I imagined, maybe older, and I waited for her to speak. Maybe she was about to welcome me aboard or she wanted to introduce herself or thank me for my participation. I waited patiently and quietly for what she had to say. Then she spoke. Her voice was chilling and clipped and her words were unforgettable.

"Don't mess us up," said the talking head. "Don't mess us up," she repeated, her carefully-controlled hostility making her point very clear to me. "Because, if you mess us up, I'll kill you." Her penetrating stare assured me that this was no joke, no prank. She was serious. And then she turned on her heels like a Gestapo Agent and disappeared into the mostly older female crowd. I was even more speechless than before. I wanted to open the little Igloo cooler and crack the seal on the first bottle of water in the worst way. But assuaging my sudden bout of "cottonmouth" might have been some act of "messing up", I wasn't sure. I wanted to consult someone, somewhere, about what I'd just been told but that might have also been some way of "messing up". So, until someone finally hollered bingo, all I did was just sit, sit, sit, sit. And I did not like it. Not one little bit.

I apparently "didn't mess up" and successfully verified each bingo winner's winning numbers and eventually handed out the last of the bingo prizes. But I was a little taken aback by the fact that no one spoke to me as I did this. No one said "Thank you." No one smiled or nodded his or her head. They just kept staring and staring at me as if staring at me would somehow make me go away and not come back. I tried to blame my own imagination or some hidden paranoia but I snapped out of that zone when I realized that seeing is believing and the sound of silence cannot be mistaken for anything else.

Afterward, I found out that the terrible little face at the podium with the great big warning for me belonged to none other than the person in charge of this big shebang. I found that very hard to believe, at first, but then I reminded myself that this shindig was taking place in Happy Valley, not the real world. I ducked out before lunch was served. They could keep my lunch money, like bullies on an elementary school playground. I'd lost my appetite.

When I tried to figure out what this misdirected hatred toward me was all about, the only thing I could come up with was the fact that this disturbing incident had transpired in Happy Valley, a locally infamous Shan-gri-La where little enclaves of dysfunctional people huddle together against the natural, normal, everyday, outside world. Beyond this unhappy bubble of screwed-up humanity which is incredibly called Happy Valley, telling a complete stranger out of the clear blue that you will kill him, is considered to be a terroristic threat. And inside this bubble (or outside of it, for that matter), any man telling anybody a similar thing means a swift and irrevocable trip to the slammer for him. But, in Happy Valley, PA, whenever a woman tells a man that she will kill him, it's considered to be therapy.

Did I ever volunteer to help out at subsequent senior citizen events? You bet I did. On numerous occasions. Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays a Baby-Boomer gopher from the swift completion of his appointed rounds. I just never volunteered for any more events of any kind in Happy Valley, PA, that's all. In fact, if I ever did volunteer to serve my fellow man and fellow woman in such a place as Happy Valley again, it would be either a cold day in hell or an unplanned and unexpected trip to The Real Twilight Zone.