Wake me up when September ends
It's going to get pretty slow around here after today. I'm heading out--boat-in destination largely unknown--for three weeks of late-summer reforestation, which I'm hoping won't be a hornet-infested, sweltering, cranky affair set inside storms of fireweed fluff. Fuck work. Wish me luck.
August 28, 2005
Do they make weather icons for a Category 5?
posted by Charlotte at 1:35 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 26, 2005
He once called me a hippie vegetarian pinko
I've always been kind of fascinated by my brother's martial proclivities, not only for the gun stories but also because I suspect, though he's never come right out with it (in our family, razzing is a table sport), that he's a Republican. When he was a kid he used to draw these incredibly intricate and devastating gun battles between F-14s and aircraft carriers and the like. They were pretty good, actually, though the carnage used shock our mother, a deeply humane and left-wing sort of person. Who now says things like: "I have to remind myself that you guys shared a womb."
Alex and I began this weird little email volley some weeks back. I anticipated a segue from questions about the Border Patrol into probings of his more James Bond-like activities as an Air Marshall (eg. "Do the flight attendants know you're packing?") But, alas, it wasn't meant to be:
CG: Official job title?
AG: Usually I am a "Senior Patrol Agent" but for two months they have me as an "Acting Supervisory Border Patrol Agent," which is really boring.
CG: Patrol Agent as distinct from the guys who hang around the drive-through booths?
AG: We guard the border in between the port-of-entries [sic] (or booths for you, Char). Casa Grande station is responsible for about 20 miles of linear border as well as areas away from the border--surrounding communities near Casa Grande, the Phoenix Airport and bus station, smuggling roads leading north from the border, and Interstate 10 between Tucson and Phoenix.
CG: Smuggling roads. Very cloak and dagger. Do you just cruise up and down in tinted-window Suburbans or do you hang out in the bushes, so to speak, waiting for the criminals to show up?
AG: Usually we wait in the dark for vehicle bugs [magnetic vehicle sensors] to go off in the desert then we drive using IR [infrared] lights and night-vision goggles to a specific spot where we lay out tire spikes and wait. The vehicle is usually a pickup with 40 or so people crammed on top of it. The vehicle stops and the people run into the desert. It's a free-for-all. You trip up and grab what you can. We seize the vehicle and the smugglers never see it again. But we're talking $400 pickups or stolen trucks out of Phoenix.
CG: After you round them up, what happens next?
AG: We usually confiscate the vehicle and transport the aliens to the station. We have a really neat computer program called AFIS that can read fingerprints, access the FBI database and obtain a complete criminal record in 3 to 4 minutes. It's really amazing. Everyone is run through the database. We usually have a 10-20% "scumbag ratio" in every group--10-20% have prior criminal records or warrants on them. Smugglers have built their own road network in the desert. The picture was taken actually 30 miles north of the border.
CG: So you hang out in the dark (eating cheese sandwiches? flossing?) waiting for these guys in nylon windbreakers to crash the border. It's a numbers game, no? Run like hell and hope you're not one of the poor sucks who gets caught. They look sort of harmless and bewildered--I think there's even a child in amongst them. You can see how it's easy for certain factions of the American populace to feel sympathy for illegal immigrants. I mean, they don't exactly look like hardened crims.
AG: Well, I don't feel one bit of sympathy for them. There's always one way to avoid problems in the desert--don't cross the border in the first place.
CG: What happens after processing at the station? A free ride back to mom?
AG: Usually they get trip back to Nogales port-of-entry to be kicked back to Mexico. If they don't have a criminal record that is.
CG: You know I'm going to blog all this.
AG: [Silence.]
posted by Charlotte at 5:21 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 24, 2005
Occupational hazards
I should also mention Rosemary Bockner, the eye behind the lens, whose birthday it was yesterday. Rosie makes art from photos of people partying. Genius, really--all high angles, bathos and human frailty. I don't have any images of her work, but I do expect to find myself drunk on some gallery wall one day. For now here's this song by Peaches with Rose written all over it.
posted by Charlotte at 3:45 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
The beverage of your choice that will end your life tonight
posted by Charlotte at 9:43 AM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 23, 2005
Benevolent ghosts
posted by Charlotte at 12:02 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
If it makes me laugh, I blog it
Added feature: Blurb-O-Matic. "Stale and meaningless praise guaranteed."
posted by Charlotte at 9:36 AM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 19, 2005
Laughing out loud, with Robaxacet
illiteratedyslexic"busy"busy celebrities.**There's this, a letter received from an unnamed publicist by blogger-with-a-giant-following Maud Newton in NYC.
Maud's reply:
**While I was laughing at the above post, I leaned back in my chair, got one of the casters caught on the rug, nipped myself upright while on the verge of tipping over, which in turn caused the mild lumbar ache I've got right now. Serves me right.
posted by Charlotte at 3:03 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
We share the towel rack
posted by Charlotte at 2:31 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 16, 2005
Justin Timberlake
posted by Charlotte at 1:13 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 15, 2005
Lifes just to short to waist turnin pajes
Now does this mean never cracked a spine? Or, less impressively, never read a book all the way through? (Via Bookslut: "No, wait, sit down. Sit down for this shit.")
posted by Charlotte at 3:18 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
Happy (belated) birthday Ninjas!
posted by Charlotte at 10:39 AM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 13, 2005
Stately, plump Patience Liccketto came from the stairhead, bearing a bowl of lather . . .
posted by Charlotte at 12:55 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 11, 2005
Everlasting gobstopper
Check out the Wonka kids today. Charlie is
"an even gayer Ned Flanders"a dairy veterinarian living in upstate New York. By odd coincidence, three of the others are now accountants. (Via Boing Boing).posted by Charlotte at 8:51 AM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 8, 2005
Panel: writers who blog
I have no idea what I'm going to say but you can be sure it will reveal my blogging habit as the
divine procrastinationcreative outlet it truly is.posted by Charlotte at 12:10 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 7, 2005
"Grandma, he's here to pimp our ride!"
They forgot to mention the high cost of pimpin' around the block, beater or no. I think human blood is actually cheaper than gas these days, which hit $1.08 in Vancouver this weekend. It's as tough to get nostalgic about guzzlers as it is to contemplate cruising in a Smart Car, but yeah, I smoked pot for the first time in the back seat of a Chevy Impala. Semiotically linked to both the squad car and the taxi, it was the perfect stealth machine for an infinity of teenaged delinquencies.
posted by Charlotte at 11:07 AM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 6, 2005
Pet tree homicide
posted by Charlotte at 9:13 AM | permalink | email it |0 comments
August 3, 2005
Who's ya daddy?
posted by Charlotte at 12:59 PM | permalink | email it |0 comments
Beware, backpacked little person who can't yet read
I love how the modifier "a bit" softens the word "foreign." I wonder if their public relations department worked all night on that posting.
posted by Charlotte at 10:47 AM | permalink | email it |0 comments
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