Sunday, November 29, 2020

Bad Poetry: Covidiot

(If it's true that there's a general tendency for more "liberal" types to show more interest in coronavirus quarantine--although I myself doubt this--can we count this post as Liberal Post #4?)

This is the first Thanksgiving holiday where the Internet's been on the guest list, in my life. Last night I was surfing the'Net and found a real blast from the past--songs by C.W. McCall. 

Supposed truck driver McCall was a character created for radio ads by an advertising man who couldn't sing, but found that no great obstacle to producing country-western hit songs. Instead, he made McCall one of the commercial music industry's first rappers, chanting his rhymes in between choruses sung by backup bands. His best known song was "Convoy," which generated a movie (with updated verses reflecting the movie's plot) and several imitations. 

The best of the imitations, for which I couldn't find anything at all on Goodsearch, was a protest against the sensible 55mph speed limit called "Yovnoc," in which "That turtle in the girdle was doin' five-five, right wher' she oughta be. But I slowed my rate so I wouldn't tailgate, and I was doin' about fifty-three. Oh, we're gonna have a Yovnoc across the U.S.A., a two-lane legal Yovnoc, everybody watch and wait," and in the final verse somebody was driving "minus three." Any relation to reality was strictly coincidence. That was what I thought made the rhymes so hilarious. 

McCall also recorded a song YouTubers described as "haunting" that envisioned an instant cultural-and-environmental apocalypse, very different from the gradual cancerous growth of "Agenda 21" but having similar outcomes: "It's only gon' be about an hour before they dam your favorite river, so you can water-ski just one more reservoir...and that one last tired old eagle bites the sand, and all of that high and mighty scenery's gon' be levelled to the ground by...mindless strip mines across the land...There won't be no country music! There won't be no rock-and-roll!" Though the timing was all wrong, I was just the right age to appreciate this song when it came out of radios in the 1970s. It's still a favorite.

Then this morning the following poem prompt was in my blog feed: https://poetsandstorytellersunited.blogspot.com/2020/11/writers-pantry-48-words-words-words.html .

The word "Covidiot" reminded me of something documented at this web site, years ago...Stupidity happens to everybody now and then, even me. 

I grew up knowing how it feels to be a theoretically healthy person with a very weak immune system--the person who catches every little cold that goes around and has symptoms for weeks, and everybody thinks the person is making it up, and so the person is forced to go to primary school while conspicuously ill. Not fun. And then in my thirties I found out how it feels to be a healthy adult with a robust immune system who picks up and passes on a harmless little "summer cold" and thus inadvertently causes the death of, in that case, a lovable sickly child. 

And then, in my forties...I recognized the woman who'd moved out to a remote computer center, from the main telephone company office. I thought from her manner that she'd made that move because she was an introvert, so if I just didn't talk to her or bother her we'd get along fine, while I posted about the computer center and thus encouraged other people to discover it. And I posted jokes about the harmless little streppy-bugs a sickly kitten kept breathing on me, and how if people annoyed me I'd breathe on them, and strep stinks. Streptococcus bacteria do have an odor; it's what comes to mind when I think of the word "foul." Hello? Though most streptococcus bacteria are harmless to most people, many people who were already in poor condition die from streptococcal pneumonia too. I thought the woman was acting idiotic about the way my nose clogged up while I waited for her to open the building on cold afternoons. I never once thought to ask whether she was acting that way because she was, or was living with someone who was, taking immune system suppressants. Local lurkers drove out to keep the nice free computer center open! They brought their friends! They brought children! And the telephone company employee, also obviously under the influence of the Cloud of Stupidity, never tried to explain, but just gave me increasingly evil looks until she could quit the job. And the company shut down the computer center. 

Maybe the pathogens themselves have something to do with this kind of behavior.

In the "Know Your Pests" posts there's a link to a science site that describes how caterpillars with certain infectious diseases seem compelled to assume an "inverted V" position, in which they hang upside down from twigs with both ends hanging down below their middles. The inverted V position probably offers some relief from some form of pain for the caterpillar. Its real function, however, is to benefit the disease germs. From this position the infected caterpillars "rain" germs down on other caterpillars. The researcher describing this compared it with the way some cold sufferers seem to crave companionship, and wondered whether virus and bacteria are evolving abilities to drive their victims to spread these germs to others. 

This is not, of course, the primary reason why some people have been actively seeking out the dreaded coronavirus. For the healthy people who have hardly any noticeable symptoms as they built up immunity, it was reasonable to want to have the virus in summer so you'd be safe before flu, school, work, and holidays came along. (Unfortunately a few people, like Herman Cain, overestimated their resistance.) For some people who've already decided not to bother with expensive, painful, high-risk treatments for painful, fatal, yucky diseases, it's reasonable to want to die of pneumonia before the cancer becomes unbearably painful or the brain deterioration comes between you and your family. 

When I woke up with a peculiar kind of cough and mild pericarditis I remember thinking, "Could this be the dreaded coronavirus? Please, God? May I have coronavirus now, please?" and being absolutely delighted, at least on my own behalf, by the evidence that that was what I had late in August. 

So, yes, if you live alone, or can arrange to live alone, or live with likeminded people, deliberately exposing yourself to coronavirus makes sense to me. 

Exposing other people, or people who will be around other people? Not so much. You don't know their level of resistance. Some people who try very hard to become healthy, go to school, play sports, have jobs, etc., are really not healthy at all. You can't tell by looking. Especially not about people like my younger self, living with a serious low-grade chronic condition for which adults didn't check before they told me "You're healthy as a horse if you'd just stop being lazy."

At how many offices would adults actually have conversations like, "Hello, Joe. Have you lost a lot of weight, or is it just a different hairstyle that makes you look so much thinner."

"Hello, Jane. No, actually I'm having chemotherapy and radiation treatments. I may be slightly radioactive. Stand back from me if you are or ever plan to be pregnant. So you were saying this wig looks lifelike, eh?"

"Yes, but actually I've had myself spayed because I don't want to risk pregnancy when I've been having so much trouble with lupus and with the immune suppressants I'm taking for it..."

Not likely. So I've been saying for years that we all need to learn to maintain a nice healthy social distance from everybody, all the time. Even in groups of healthy young people who think streptococcus is mainly a subject for jokes about its odor. Feeling "lonely" and wanting to be closer to other people can, of course, still be merely a symptom of extroversion, or of a physical attraction to a particular person, but who knows whether it's the diseases that make us act like Covidiots, or Rhinovidiots, or Streptidiots...

COVIDIOTS SONG

(Rap)
Well, he disinfects the counter with a mask tied on his face,
Then he runs around to lift a milk jug, and he is out of his place.
He orders a customer, "Mask up!" Oh, he's brave to take a stand!
Then he gives somebody change and presses the coins into the hand.

(Chorus)
He's a Covidiot! Covidiots! Where do they all come from?
(Repeat, with variations, until it forms a tune.)

(Rap)
Well, she goes to wake the children up, and they'd rather stay in bed.
They clutch the sheets and pillows tight around each little head.
Say, "Mommy, my throat's prickly, ears are ringing, skin is tickly,
No, there's nothing wrong at school, it's just me, I'm feeling sickly.
My nose itches, too-tight britches, oh, I feel no urge to roam.
Can't remember since September, and I just want to stay at home."
"No fever? Nothing's wrong with you," replies this viral fool.
"Wear a sweater if you're chilly, and get yourself off to school."

(Chorus)
She's a Fluidiot! Fluidiots! Where do they all come from?

(Rap)
He's a good hard-working fellow! Oh, he's never missed a day!
But his eyes are looking glassy. As you draw near, you hear him say,
"Got the lazies, drivin' me crazy, since I crawled out of the sack!
Form'la 44 is worth payin' for! Oh, it feels like a heart attack!
Re-ti-re-ment is not for me! On the job is where I want to be!
I just beat that kid out of a cash prize, and he's only twenty-three.
Coronavirus? What, me worry? That's just a big old hoax!"
The bigger they come, the harder they fall, and this is a big guy, folks.

(Chorus)
He's a Covidiot! Covidiots! Where do they all come from?

(Rap)
Well, I've always left her quite alone, so now what can her problem be?
Once I'm in out of the cold nobody hears a word from me.
I'm just here to do my job while keeping strictly to myself,
But it looks from the way she's acting as if she thinks I have bad breath.
Oh, by the way, I spent yesterday with someone who had a bad cold.
They said "Will I die?" and I said "Why? You are not even old." 
I stopped at the store, that's what it's for, bought lozenges for my throat,
'Cos the cold wind makes it prickle so, I can hardly sing a note.

(Chorus)
(I'm)(S/He's) a Streptidiot! Streptidiots! Where do they all come from?

(Rap)
I don't know where they come from, but I know 
where a lot of people wish they would go...

Friday, November 27, 2020

Petfinder Links: Tabbies and Torbies

Ahhh, Google's brought back the pictures! Thank you Google! 

Today's Petfinder theme is Tabbies and Torbies--the most common kind of cats. Their coats are gray with black stripes, orange with deep red stripes, or sometimes mostly gray with black stripes and brownish patches (the Torbie). Some of these cats also have white fur underneath. Because tabby cats have agouti-type hair, in which sections of different colors on the individual hairs form the stripes and shading, Torbies don't have to have two X chromosomes and can be fertile males. (Years ago, I posted that I'd considered calling our Mackerel kitten "Small Change" because he had coppery as well as silvery patches. He was a Torbie. So not only can Torbies be male, but male Torbies can be fantastic once-in-a-lifetime pets.)

1. Zipcode 10101, New York: Simon from New Jersey

For those who've liked all that orange hair from New Jersey that's been in the news lately, here's an example of the red Tabby type. 


Simon is thought to be about eleven years old. In describing him as "sort of social" his human's not claiming that he's a social cat, but that he's gradually become human-friendly. He is not noticeably a social cat. He's described as quite a typical older male who likes to be brushed and petted until he tells you he's had enough. He's intelligent, though, in his way--he's learned to pose well! Bonding with him will be the challenge. If you do bond with him you'll love him. To find out whether that will happen, or whether you'll bond with another adoptable cat first, paste or click: https://www.petfinder.com/cat/simon-7410949/nj/fair-lawn/cozy-cottage-cat-adoption-center-fobas-nj158/

2. Zipcode 20202, Washington: Athena from Virginia 

Worth driving down to Dale City for? Quite likely. Isn't that coat special?


Some tabby cats' coats form a striped pattern like a tiger's coat. Other cats, like Athena, grow fur that forms a swirl on either side. Though it looks as if this pattern would be harder for nature to produce, it's actually thought to be produced by a dominant gene. Athena's age is unknown. She's described as clean, healthy, already spayed, vaccinated, and generally not much trouble, though she does share the calico cat's special ability to shed contrasting hairs on everything. (Cats like for everyone to know that you already belong to them, and so--admit it--do you.) To meet this splendid example of natural camouflage, click or paste: https://www.petfinder.com/cat/athena-30380114/va/dale-city/vip-rescues-and-adoptions-va570/.

3. Zipcode 30303, Atlanta: Eloise from Greensboro 

Here's a tip for shelter staff. Searches for tabby cats have to be filtered somehow--there are so many! People who've lost a pet search for the newest additions to shelters. There's something to be said for this filtering option (Petfinder makes it easy) from a humane point of view, too, since the newest shelter animals may be the least traumatized and easiest to adjust, but today I filtered for the pets who've been languishing longest in a shelter. That pulled up a lot of pictures of obese animals. Fat animals are not photogenic. They look like a lot of veterinary expenses looking for a place to happen. Please help the shelter animals get exercise as well as food.

This young adult cat is not obese.



Pale, pretty Eloise is described as shy and skittish with humans but social with other cats. That's the sort of cat Heather might have let me adopt if Samantha hadn't found me, or the sort Serena would be likely to allow to stay at the Cat Sanctuary--but why bring her to the Cat Sanctuary? She's in Greensboro, Georgia, looking for a Purrmanent Home. In between Georgia and Virginia, there has to be a good home looking for a lovable, young, healthy barn cat. To meet Eloise, paste or click: https://www.petfinder.com/cat/eloise-32314895/ga/greensboro/oconee-regional-humane-society-ga70/

4. Bonus: Winona from Arizona

And today's bonus pet is from Arizona. (Flagstaff, to be exact.) In honor of a theme that got out of hand--I suggested that the fiscal conservatives in that State organize a GoFundMe page for Miguel Ochoa, which has been done at https://www.gofundme.com/f/uber-driver-attacked-medical-bills-aid , and haters immediately used the automatic shadowbanning mechanism to hide my tweets from followers--I've received a lot of tweets and links from a State I don't actually intend to visit again in this lifetime. It's a great State, though, for those who like that kind of thing, and here is a blurry but charming photo of the photogenic cat Winona from Arizona.  


About all the shelter care to say about her is that she's a light brown, black, and gray tabby (Torbie) with short hair. Well, you can see that she's more interested in checking out the camera than in posing or snuggling, and from the fact that a "Humane Association" are holding her for adoption you know she's friendly and gentle. If you are in Arizona, click here to meet Winona: https://www.petfinder.com/cat/winona-45138838/az/flagstaff/coconino-humane-association-az126/ .

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Amazon Reviews Update for Authors and Publishers

(Cross-posted from Ko-fi)


As you may have heard (possibly here), Amazon is cracking the whip on Associates. We now have to meet a sales quota every six months. Since the sales quota counts only use of specific links, as in specific copies of books, it appears to me that at no time in over ten years of Amazon Association have I ever met the quota. 


One trusted e-friend told me she clicked on a link I'd posted to a product she'd specifically mentioned looking for--a paint set for a child. She browsed around Amazon and had a wonderful time, letting the child choose a different paint set and ordering stuff for other family members as well. Credit to my Amazon account for those sales? Zero--because it's all handled by computer and my link went to the page for the paint set she didn't buy.


At the time I laughed it off. I was posting reviews of books I had for sale in the real world. Reviews drove real-world sales for me, so any Amazon sales were bonuses.


Now, I need to see use of the links in order to resume posting the links. And also, Amazon decided a few years ago to display reviews only from customers who bought the stuff we reviewed online using credit cards. (I use prepaid giftcards. Some clients pay me in giftcards.) 


I had given some publishers good reviews. Terse for Amazon, terser for Goodreads, full-length on my blog. I sold long-form reviews to review sites. One publisher told me, repeatedly, that a little more "literary" warbling than I normally do when writing online ought to get my reviews into print at the Kenyon Review or New Yorker. (Meh. Lots of competition.) And then Amazon made all of them disappear.


Though, frankly, they did need to do something. Amazon sells a lot of books and, although I've reviewed some rare ones, their space for reviews of successful new books does tend to fill fast.


However, for religious reasons, I don't do credit cards. And I think, if enough money were involved to justify a lawsuit, Amazon's demand for credit cards would count as religious discrimination.


So...after reviewing some online messages from publishers and fellow writers, I think I've thought of a work-around that will comply with current rules and laws.


1. You will be a legitimate author/publisher of a book that's available in the United States in English, French, or Spanish. (If you want a review that makes intuitive sense on Amazon, that does not begin with "This is not my native language so I'm not sure...", it should be English.) And you or your employer will have a credit card. And you will be able to afford to buy a copy, even if you already had the review copy you sent me. 


2. You will have sent me the book, and I will have read it. Galleys are fine. Copy-editing fees depend on the job; some galleys need lots of changes, some are ready to go. I'm tagging Andrei Codrescu because, years ago, I started flagging errors in a galley and didn't have enough online time to finish the book: Hello, Andrei and friends and fans, for the next year I should be able to go online whenever weather conditions permit. And I can do copy-editing in Word. 


This does not guarantee a rave review. I may think the premise of your speculative fiction is too unlikely to be even funny, or I would not personally eat anything made from your recipes, or your assumptions about "politically conservative" people are at least three generations out of date. But guess what? There are review sites, like the printed Washington Post Book World, that don't do really unfavorable reviews, although the Post has printed some overall-favorable reviews that included harsh criticism. Why? Because, if a reviewer thinks a book is really vile, and posts or publishes a review to that effect, people will buy it just to see if it's possible for the book to be as bad as the reviewer said. At my web site my policy is to post reviews that encourage living writers. Only at Goodreads, where the books have pages and reviews no matter how vile they are, have I posted anything about books I physically received, read, and burned. But I have posted comments on older books with titles like "Vindictive Review" or "Book Rant," where they seemed applicable--for books I was willing to sell while expressing disapproval--and two things happened: (1) they got five times the page views my normal book reviews did, and (2) I didn't have to store those books any more. Critical reviews sell books.


So it's up to you whether you want to pay for a critical review, if that's all I can offer. I would not recommend taking the trouble to get a critical review on Amazon. But a critical review on my blog is not going to hurt sales of your book.


Normally, my reaction to books is pretty bland; I've read a lot of books already. I don't claim that I loved all of them. I've taken a vow not to blather about "luminous prose." I'm more likely to write about the kind of person who would want this book to be their only gift from you this year, and leave it to readers to notice how different that person might be from me. Most novels and short story collections inspire terse reactions from me, and terse is best for Amazon.


3. So if you want a terse review on Amazon, a chattier review (with tangents and divagations) on Blogspot with an Amazon link, and the possibility of a 2500-word review at a paying review site, you would e-mail me to schedule a rendezvous on the banks of the Big River. (For brand-new books, this should be on the day of release--I've blogged about the galley system, but most non-writers haven't read that blog post and distrust pre-publication reviews. I can explain about them on my site.) I would then change my Amazon password and send you a new Amazon password, valid for the next ten minutes. You would use this password to log in, buy the book with your credit card, and have Amazon send it somewhere--as it might be to the next reviewer on your list, or to someone who prefers a Kindle edition. You would then log out, and I would then change the password. 


4. Sooner or later somebody's going to try to abuse this system just because it is there. Hacking into my accounts has never enabled anyone to steal any money; I don't have e-money. This has not kept literally hundreds of attempts from being made. People want to hack into personal, not-for-profit blogs (like my Live Journal) just to change a word and gloat that "I wuz ere." What happens then? They're not going to get more than US$100. Bezos can afford to have them hunted down. I will think very bad thoughts about them while changing the digits in my account. You, the one with the credit card, are the one who has to worry about intelligent hackers. Since I won't have your credit card digits, you don't have to worry about me.


5. However, there are review sites, like Metastellar for speculative fiction, that specifically encourage reviews that can include things like "The author is a good e-friend." There are sites, like Twitter, that specifically encourage writers and readers to follow each other, interact, tweet about our health and families and forthcoming new books and so on, which makes it easy to become good long-term e-friends. Sending me a review copy shows trust and builds warm fuzzy feelings. This is a point authors and publishers should consider. Read blogs! Bond with emergent authors! Even someone who blogs about being homeless can help you!


Some of my Tweeps (Margaret Atwood, Neil Gaiman, Jonah Goldberg) already have hordes of fans squabbling for position on Amazon's book pages. Others (Jim Geraghty was the one who mentioned it yesterday) are wondering why their sales numbers are out of proportion to their Amazon review pages. Feel free to recommend this system to other friends if it works for you. I'm eager to try it out during the holiday shopping season. 


E-mail: PriscillaKing2020@outlook


Books: Boxholder, P.O. Box 322, Gate City, Virginia, 24251-0322

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

At the End of a Twitterday...

Someone asked for a Twitter Thread on the same day someone else claimed not to understand Threads. Most Twitter Threads consist of three or four tweets. This is the longest one I've posted; since I find it easier to follow the "subtweets" or "quote-retweets" some Twits prefer and others loathe, I don't expect to do another blog-post-as-Twitter-Thread...but who knows what I might do if provoked. Twitter has been very provoking lately. I'll admit I'm subjecting myself to provocation after having invited Beck, Ingraham, Limbaugh, my elected officials of both parties, and the whole Republican Party to observe. It was just a casual remark tossed out to boost a Tweep's signal; in fewer than 48 hours it's grown into something I think really might work like Dan's Bake Sale.

After reading the Twitter Thread below, you might reasonably ask why I don't just set up the GoFundMe myself and send links to all my "conservative" Tweeps. One reason: GoFundMe pages work best when set up by people who can afford to put digital money in the pot. I cannot afford to play with digital money, though I can pledge a little real money by U.S. postal money order. Another reason: GoFundMe pages work best when set up, if by third parties, as it might be because the person to be helped is undergoing surgery, at least in the same State and preferably the same city.


For example: JK was abt the only person who saw my tweets in real time today. (I've been posting horrible, hate-evoking tweets about conservatives putting money where mouths are & helping injured Uber driver pay for surgery.)
1
So we argued whether politicians are drifting leftward or rightward. Several of you wd say leftward. You've shared checklists based on UN #Agenda21 and/or old Communist Party platform. Using that definition, definitely leftward.
1
But JK shared material, some unfortunately inaccessible, documenting how it's possible to say they're drifting rightward...Note that this claim defines "rightward" as something different from anything conservative Tweeps currently support.
I usually read only news items at , so reading the Monbiot political op-ed was an eye-opener. It's clear that the British/Canadian Left author & audience are speaking a different dialect of English from the US Right. I find this *very* interesting.
1
The U-Penn Language Log, or *maybe* , would be better prepared to analyze the dialectal variations than I am--but it would be an interesting analysis to follow. Both sides need to understand these things.
1
Meanwhile...I started this exchange by picking on JK's e-friend's appeal for emergency funds. JK replied w harsh judgments on people I respect/ed. Then, instead of flaming, flagging, or blocking, both of us *backed off* & tried communicating.
1
I'm tempted to say this is a middle-aged female thing, but it's not; it was actually what I liked about the boy I liked in high school. It's a learned skill. So why is facilitating "polarized" hostility rather than the skill of discussion?
1
Or, how could my mother & aunt, my husband & I, Carville & Matalin, etc., like & respect each other while usually cancelling each other's votes whenever voting for the same candidates? Such ppl say: "Similar ends; believe different means work."
1
People who talk about the similar ends tend to be "socially liberal" types whose similar goals include individual freedom, equal civil rights, equal pay, cold wars or none at all, good will and reasonable hopes of prosperity for all.
1
"Polarizers" tend to deny having similar ends, yet they do tend to achieve similar goals when they can--hostility, aggression, alarm & despondency, demands for more #censorship & surveillance, collapse of national economy if these reach natl levels.
1
Those "fascist" qualities we all hate & dread can appear on either Left or Right...wherever the ethical element is missing. David Duke & Louis Farrakhan used to exchange Xmas gifts (admittedly!) in honor of how each hater boosted other's following.
1
Will I write it? As my lawyer says when giving gd free advice, "That will take Research, & Research will take Money." Yet it's possible that this new wave of #cyberbullying may generate enough publicity that I may be the 1 to write that book.