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    The Crazy Years


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      Praise for Spider Robinson

      “Robinson’s strong points include a punchy, clear-eyed style…a near-tangible concern with community, responsibility and creativity, and a willingness to take risks with offbeat ideas.”

      —SCIFI.COM

      “Robinson’s writing [is] potentially addictive and…full of earthy delight.”

      —PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

      “If I didn’t think it understated his achievement, I’d nominate Spider Robinson…as the new Robert Heinlein…He writes as clearly about computers as he does about karate chops.”

      —THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW

      ALSO BY SPIDER ROBINSON

      Telempath

      Antinomy

      Melancholy Elephants

      Night of Power

      True Minds

      Lady Slings the Booze

      Deathkiller

      The Star Dancers

      The Free Lunch

      Very Bad Deaths

      The Callahan Series

      Callahan’s Crosstime Saloon

      Callahan’s Secret

      Callahan’s Crazy Crosstime Bar (a.k.a. Callahan and Company)

      Callahan’s Lady

      The Callahan Touch

      Off the Wall at Callahan’s

      Callahan’s Legacy

      The Callahan Chronicals

      Callahan’s Key

      Time Travelers Strictly Cash

      Callahan’s Con

      The Stardance Series*

      Stardance

      Starseed

      Starmind

      The Deathkiller Series

      Mindkiller

      Time Pressure

      Lifehouse

      *with Jeanne Robinson

      The Crazy Years

      Copyright © 1996-2004 Spider Robinson

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

      BenBella Books

      6440 N. Central Expressway

      Suite 617

      Dallas, TX 75206

      Send feedback to feedback@benbellabooks.com

      www.benbellabooks.com

      Printed in the United States of America

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Robinson, Spider

      The crazy years / Spider Robinson — BenBella Books ed.

      p. cm

      ISBN 1-932100-35-0

      I. Title

      PS3568.O3156C73 2004

      814'.54—dc22

      2004018608

      Interior design and composition by John Reinhardt Book Design

      Cover design by Melody Cadungog

      Distributed by Independent Publishers Group

      To order call (800) 888-4741

      www.ipgbook.com

      Contents

      Introduction

      The Crazy Years: A Mission Statement

      Information Overload

      Braindrain Wave

      Says Who?

      The Mahooha Filter

      A Tale of Two Charlies

      And Now the News

      Substance Abuse

      Bean Counting

      Reflections of a Recovering Nicotinic

      Mugging the Poor for Their Own Good

      Big Nanny’s New Clothes

      Terminal Improvement

      Where There’s No Smoke

      Imagination Has Its Downside

      Science in Fishnet Stockings

      Buzzed High Zonked Stoned Wasted

      Flinging Phlegm at the Flim Flam in Flin Flon

      O Canada

      Citizen Keen

      Thanks for All the Fish

      Phone-y Manners

      Night of the Impolite Canadian

      Pull Up a Soapbox

      Hail on the Chief

      There Are No Good Bushwhackers

      The Opposite of a Great Lie

      Free Speech Is Worth Paying For

      I Want a Really Interactive Newspaper

      Lead Us Not Into Temptation

      The Process

      Qui Custodiet Ipsos Custodes?

      Declarative Sentients

      Present Imperative, or Social Mahooha

      Burning the Sambuca

      The Fall-Guy Shortage

      Seduction of the Innocent

      You Never Forget the First Time

      Lay Off the Lady

      School Will Be Ending, Next Month

      What Is It With Bankers?

      “More than enough is-a too much…”

      Please Don’t Talk About Him ’Til He’s Gone

      A God Too Old to Change, or Pope Sinks Hope

      You Just Can’t Kill for Jesus/Allah/Jahweh/Rama/Elvis

      Biting the Hand That Leads Us

      Whatever

      Environmental Floss

      Loathe Yourself, Fine—But Leave Me Out of It

      Some Cats Know

      Voluntary Poverty Threatens Real Poor People

      Ain’t That a Shame

      Extreme Forms of Argument

      Mass Destruction Isn’t Rocket Science

      What Does It Mean to be Human?

      The Only Thing We Have to Fear

      Strapped for Takeoff

      The Beam Up Mine Own

      “It claims to be fully automatic—but actually,

      you have to push this little button, here…”

      “His bow-tie is really a camera…”, or The Future Is Not Listening

      Sting of the Cyber Trifles, or How I spent my winter worktime

      Compared to What?

      Don’t Go Toward the Light

      Off the Road

      Got to Admit It’s Gotten Better

      The New Idiot Box

      Be Less Than You Can Be

      Give It Another Kick, David—

      Cyberspace Cadets

      About as Reliable as a Computer

      Nuking Themselves in the Foot, or Look out, tech’s press

      Devil’s Advocate

      “Fool, fool, back to the beginning in the rule—”

      Character Defects

      Space

      Headline

      “…still I persist in wondering”

      The Day It Hailed Columbia

      The Virgin Next Door Is Wet

      Starsong on My Desktop

      If You Can Fry an Egg in Space, Hilton Wants to Talk to You

      Senator Socksdryer and the Two Million Dollar Boondoggle

      Nostalgia For Tomorrow

      2001, by God!

      The Future Ain’t What It Used to Be

      Futures We Never Dreamed

      Evil’s Rootkiller, or Brother, can you spare a paradigm?

      Plus ça Change

      Intellectual Property

      St. George, We Need You Now!

      “The worm on the skyhook”

      They Don’t Make Unreality Like They Used To

      Recutting the Crown Jewels

      The Anarchists Who Couldn’t Shoot Straight

      If You Take It…We Can’t Leave It

      Silver Lining

      Valmiki’s Third Reality

      The Ones with a Zero on the End

      Precious Are the Eggs of the Sturgeon

      Thanks for the Music

      Farewell to Nova Scotia

      Why Pamela Wallin Is Dangerous

      Lagniappe

      What’s All This Brouhaha, Ha Ha

      The Yoomins of Sol III

      Yoomins Reconsidered

      Afterword

      Introduction

      IF MEMORY SERVES (and, increasingly, it only stands and waits), I first met Spider Robinson somewhere in cyberspace in 1999. He e-mailed me to find out if I’d provide a blurb for a book of his, and I e-mailed back to say that I woul
    dn’t.

      That probably doesn’t sound like much of a foundation on which to build a friendship. Well, a lot you know.

      Spider prefaced his request with an apology for making it, and I explained my refusal as a matter of policy, and we said a number of nice things about each other’s work and placed one another on our respective mailing lists. And, let me tell you, I came out way ahead on that deal. What Spider got was a slew of tour schedules, book offers and other drivel from the LB Institute for Perpetual Self-Promotion (of which you too can avail yourself, Dear Reader, by signing up at www.lawrenceblock.com, all free and worth every penny). What I got was an advance peek at each of Spider’s columns, always accompanied by a note advising me to let him know if I wanted to be spared further installments thereof.

      Why on earth would I want to get off that list? I have never for one moment entertained such a notion. Au contraire, mon frere. What I did almost immediately was open a Spider Robinson folder and save each column as soon as I’d finished reading it. I didn’t want to let go of them. Now I suppose I could delete the folder, as I’ve got the columns (including a couple I somehow missed) right here in book form. But I think I’ll let them have hard drive space as well.

      The man’s entertaining, provocative and of a wholly original turn of mind and phrase. Moreover, he’s evidently incapable of writing an awkward sentence. (Oh, I suppose he could do it if he tried. But not if he didn’t.)

      But you know all that.

      And there’s the real challenge in writing this introduction. I am, inevitably, preaching to the choir, because who else is going to show up? However heroic an effort the publisher might make (and, for a small press, every effort is heroic), the likelihood of the book being plucked off the shelf by someone unacquainted with Spider’s work is as remote as Tierra del Fuego and as unlikely as Michael Jackson. (Yes, I know, people do get to TdF—I’ve been there myself—and MJ does exist, albeit in a parallel universe.)

      In point of fact, the members of this volume’s audience are very likely better versed and more deeply steeped than I in the man’s work. I’ve read (and have now reread) the columns, and I’ve read a couple of the Callahan books, but many of you have read all of the Callahan books, and read them over and over and over, and can (and, alas, do) quote them verbatim, and at some length, upon the slightest provocation.

      All things considered (well, at least as many of them as I can think of), I can’t flatter myself into believing that anything I can write here will induce anyone to buy the book, or render the experience of owning and reading it one whit more pleasurable than it would be without my participation. Saying things about the columns is pointless. They’re not “The Waste Land,” for God’s sake. You don’t have to tunnel like a badger to root out their hidden meanings. And a good thing, too.

      We don’t need no steenkin’ badgers.

      Still, I have to say something. I am, after all, getting paid for these words, so it’s my job to furnish a reasonable number of them. Pointing out the excellent qualities of the man and his work does seem beside the point, but what else am I qualified to do?

      Let me see. I’ve only met the man once, if you rule out encounters through the e-mail ether and the no less intimate contact two human beings achieve through sympathetic reading of one another’s work. In July of 2001, my wife and I flew to Vancouver, where we were to embark on a two-week Alaska cruise on the World Discoverer. Spider and his wife met us, and we walked around downtown Vancouver a bit, had lunch somewhere and found that we liked each other as well face to face as we had at a distance.

      Later, we found we had an interesting friend in common, a dear man and brilliant writer named Larry Janifer. I had known Larry back in the late fifties and lost touch with him for years; Spider knew him later in life. Larry moved to Australia, where I was curiously unable to see him because his phone was always busy because he was always on-line. Every few hours he would phone and leave a message at my hotel, and I would call back, and his line would be busy again.

      Then health problems led Larry to move back to the States, where he died. And, now that I think about it, I’m not sure just what that has to do with anything, but Larry played a formative role in my career and, I gather, in Spider’s, and he’s too little remembered these days, so I figured this was a good place to mention him.

      I tried to dedicate a book to Spider once. The book was Tanner’s Tiger, and it hadn’t borne any dedication when Gold Medal published it in 1968. A few years ago Subterranean Press brought out a handsome hardcover first edition, and I seized the opportunity to dedicate it to someone, and picked Spider, because the book takes place in Canada, and so, generally, does Spider.

      When my author’s copies arrived, I plucked one off the stack, ready to inscribe it to the dedicatee.

      No dedication.

      Well, these things happen. As far as I’m concerned, Tanner’s Tiger is dedicated to Spider Robinson, whether it says so or not.

      And that, Dear Reader, is as much as you need to hear from me. Turn your attention, I entreat you, to the essays that follow. And if you can get past the “My crows…” groaner, you can handle anything.

      Lawrence Block

      Greenwich Village

      January 2004

      The Crazy Years: A Mission Statement

      IN 1939, THE GREATEST SCIENCE FICTION WRITER who ever lived, Robert Anson Heinlein, produced one of the first of the many stunning innovations he was to bring to his field: he sat down and drew up a chart of the history of the future, for the next few thousand years.

      The device was intended as a simple memory aid, to assist him in keeping straight the details of a single, self-consistent imaginary future, which he could then mine as often as he liked for story ideas. But because Heinlein was who he was, his famous Future History came, over the next six decades, to have an uncanny—if nonspecific—predictive function. That is, no specific event he wrote of came to pass exactly as he invented it, but he was simply so smart and so well educated that, more often than not, he correctly nailed the general shape of things to come. He was, for instance, just about the only thinker in 1939 to seriously predict a moon landing before the twenty-first century—and he invented the water bed.

      And in Heinlein’s Future History chart, the last decades of the twentieth century—the ones he wrote about and discussed as seldom as possible—were clearly and ominously marked: “the Crazy Years.”

      I discussed this with him several times before his death in 1988. He had decided—half a century in advance—that a combination of information overload, overpopulation and Millennial Madness were going to drive our whole culture slug-nutty by the end of the century. One of his characters summed it up by describing the Crazy Years as “a period when a man with all his gaskets tight would have been locked up.”

      This book is dedicated to the notion that Heinlein was right: that future generations will look back on us as the silliest, goofiest, flat-out craziest crew of loonies that ever took part in the historical race from womb to tomb; that never before in human history has average human intelligence been anywhere near as low as it is today; and that no culture on record has ever behaved as insanely as this one now does routinely. And if Heinlein is right, before long I’ll be comfortably ensconced in a padded cell, my frayed nerves soothed by powerful calming drugs.

      Information Overload

      Braindrain Wave

      FIRST PRINTED FEBRUARY 2002

      SINCE POUL ANDERSON, one of the most lyrical and learned sf writers of all time, left us a few years ago, I’ve been digging out old favorite books of his and re-reading them. I doubt I’ll live long enough to finish the task; Poul was almost as prolific as his friend Isaac Asimov. The worst book he ever wrote was above average. The one I looked for first, however, Brain Wave, is missing; I probably lent it unwisely.

      I haven’t read it in forty years, but it stuck: it was one of the first ten books I ever read. It posits a vast force field or zone of some kind in space, which has the effect of inhibi
    ting intelligence—and through which the solar system has been traveling for thousands of years. One day in the late twentieth century, the solar system finally emerges…and every living thing on earth suddenly becomes exponentially smarter. This turns out to present as many challenges as opportunities—are you ready to negotiate with your pet, for instance?

      In real life, however, I’m beginning to suspect the exact opposite has occurred. Available evidence strongly suggests the planet is currently entering an intelligence-suppressing field. How else to explain, for instance, the Israeli-Palestinian lunacy? Peace damn near broke out there, for a while…but fortunately stupider heads on both sides prevailed, boys were taught to throw rocks at armed men, girls trained to blow themselves apart in crowds of innocents and the region was again made safe for mothers insane with grief.

      And speaking of moronic perverters of Islam…Nine years after the first attempt on the World Trade Center failed utterly, al-Qaeda finally developed a genius planner—one Mohammad Atta. But the genius’s plan had him be the first one killed—for no reason at all. His superiors saw no problem with this either: they let their one and only genius suicide without objection.

      And what bloodcurdling follow-up atrocities have they produced since the towers fell? Besides trying to hide behind starving cripples, then leaving their Taliban host/protectors holding the bag while they ran like roaches, I mean. Well, they masterminded two diabolically horrid new schemes and darned near pulled them off, too.

      First, they scoured the earth for the stupidest, clumsiest man alive, incompetent to operate a Zippo, trained him to dress and behave as suspiciously as possible and then entrusted him with a bomb which, even if it had detonated, would not have brought the plane down. Somehow, the scheme went wrong.

      Next, they apparently gave four Moroccan Muslim militants a baggie containing four kilos of potassium ferrocyanide and sent them to Rome in a nice inconspicuous group. The Italian cops recently rolled them up like a cheap rug; they were cleverly carrying around, to save themselves the trouble of memorizing them, several maps of the Eternal City with its water pipes and reservoir highlighted.

     


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