MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Last night, songwriter Chris Rea channeled for me the ghosts that have been haunting us all in the weeks since the Deepwater Horizon blew sky high and then sunk to the depths of the Gulf of Mexico, taking 11 men with her to its despoiled, watery grave.
I don't watch much television. I have especially avoided watching the news reports from the Gulf that show clips of the Deepwater Horizon exploding into hellfire and brimstone before collapsing into the sea. I likewise cannot bear to see video of the consequences of that horrific catastrophe as played out in the tidal flats and the bayous and the beaches and the oyster beds and the rest of our beautiful Gulf. There's only so much anger and sorrow I can accommodate at any one time.
I grow angry - nay, furious! - because so many of the disasters I could foresee on the horizon have now come together in this one senseless tragedy of epic proportions. Corporate greed, a failed energy policy, politicians in the pocket of campaign contributors, corrupt regulators, short-sighted consumers, arrogant Exceptionalism - all these and more expressions of our collective disease have triggered an environmental calamity that is as unprecedented and irreversible as it was predictable and preventable.
The gods are punishing us, and they have turned loose Satan himself, it seems, from the bowels of the earth to drive home their point.
I can avoid the TV with success, as proven, but last night I learned I cannot escape the ghosts who remain unsettled by our pathological addiction to the devil's crude. There I was, past midnight, consuming hydrocarbons in my eighteen wheeler as I hauled the mail between Madison and Milwaukee. I punched up the iPod to listen to music at random, and Chris Rea's song "The Road to Hell (Part1)" was the first up and Part 2 followed. It was the first I had listened to these songs in months.The Road to Hell
(Part One)
Stood still on a highway
I saw a woman
By the side of the road
With a face that I knew like my own
Reflected in my window
Well she walked up to my quarterlight
And she bent down real slow
A fearful pressure paralysed me in my shadow
She said "Son, what are you doing here?
My fear for you has turned me in my grave"
I said "Mama I come to the valley of the rich,
Myself to sell"
She said "Son, this is the road to hell'
"On your journey cross the wilderness
From the desert to the well
You have strayed upon the motorway to hell!"
(Part Two)
Well I'm standing by the river
But the water doesn't flow
It boils with every poison you can think of
And I'm underneath the streetlight
But the light of joy I know
Scared beyond belief way down in the shadows
And the perverted fear of violence
Chokes the smile on every face
And common sense is ringing out the bell
This ain't no technological breakdown
Oh no, this is the road to hell
And all the roads jam up with credit
And there's nothing you can do
It's all just pieces of paper flying away from you
Oh look out world, take a good look
What comes down here
You must learn this lesson fast and learn it well
This ain't no upwardly mobile freeway
Oh no, this is the road
Said this is the road
This is the road to hell