Thank you...I appreciate the opportunity to share our thoughts.

NRIII


Quoting alexander saliby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

Nicholas,
"Chaos does not envelop us during tragedy, rather chaos saves us from
the banal machinations of our undead lives."....Nicholas Ruiz III
10/20/05

Interesting piece this one...and I particularly enjoyed grappling
with the above thought.
Alex

 ----- Original Message -----
 From: Nicholas Ruiz<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2005 6:57 AM
 Subject: The Immersion of New Orleans


 The Immersion of New Orleans

 Nicholas Ruiz III



 Sometimes a city must be sacrificed, so that people can exhale.  The
omnilateral
 spreading of our species can only be furthered as hope floats away
from the city
 of New Orleans. Like the recent New Orleans displacee said in the television
 news, "Now I can leave this town! I've never had such an
 opportunity!"--that and on his way to Houston to get some pants.  Courage or
 recklessness?  Perhaps the only difference is in winning and losing.
 If those
 on the inside can see us, those of us on the outside of New Orleans, on the
 outside of the world?s latest sacrificial offering, can attempt to see past
 the context of media obliteration, past the screening of the
immersion of New
 Orleans.
         Of course, every smile of the media clown has its sinister
lining, and
 for us non-participants, a sign of the real hidden joy borne by the hosts of
 the new victims manifests itself in baleful anticipation, as the gun
sales rise
 in the cities that receive our American refugees, an ironic greeting for the
 displacees of New Orleans.  In the midst of the mediated screen of Texan
 empathy lies the factual fear of absorption.  Not to be outdone, back in the
 disaster zone, the Gulf coast reveals its own ironies; casinos (Mississippi
 claims 10% of its state budget reflects casino taxation) highlighting the
 simulation of southern values in the Bible belt.  Especially the
holiest of His
 states fill their state coffers with the excesses of extracurricular Sunday
 evening slot machines and paper-bagged beer.  Another reminder of the
 supplementary speculation we call the just economy.
         Too much goodness in our hearts, minds and screens--but little to be
 found on the freshly looted streets filling with the muscle and hate of that
 ultra-postmodern Venice.  Unlike Venice, which took years to flood,
New Orleans
 was flooded in a few hours.  The city of New Orleans itself is a speculation
 gone bad, wedged as it was between two gargantuan sources of water,
below sea
 level, damned and leveed for the always spreading masses.  Speculations hold
 that development contracts will explode all over the city map, as
the bidding
 wars begin and a "new" New Orleans is sure to rise as quickly as they can
 pump the water out of the old one.  I liked New Orleans, for what
it's worth.
         How to imbibe this event?  What is its meaning? What is our new
 ontological location, now that that another "world-changing"
cataclysmic event
 has occurred.  A chance for the do-gooders to do good; the
finger-pointers to
 point fingers; Bush isn't responsible for the severity of our
complacency, and
 the aristocrats merely capitalize upon it?despite the editorial pieces and
 listserv diatribes of the free-thinkers; a chance for the
speculators to place
 new bets, build bigger casinos, build them inland and get it right
this time,
 so the Good News poker hands will never have to fold?  I say forget
about New
 Orleans and build a new city, in a new American place, maybe in
Iraq, where at
 least the imbecility is out in the open and not hidden in the barrio waiting
 for a hurricane to uncover it. Now that would be honest.  Infinite
casinos in
 the desert?we specialize in that, no?
           We began and continue our new millennium with the entire
prowess of
 flies, taking off and landing, repeatedly wherever we can, leaving our urine
 and feces behind.  The dissolution of New Orleans reminds us of our shit, we
 still refuse to take care of.
            Cash for the victims is a sign of the metaphysics of
Capital, where
 suffering is always bought and paid for.  New Orleans signifies the
lightness
 of our new locations, new Capital, new identities, all tokens that we are,
 unbeknownst to ourselves, still alive and reprogrammable--all we can
hope for
 is a hurricane to remind us.  Perhaps then, we can start again.  In
the eye of
 the ruin lies our hope and our souvenir of where we have been and
where we are
 going. But the survivors of the storm will instead be turned into the
 sacrificial bread to be broken at the mediated dinner table of the world,
 reminding us all of how "good" we've got it.
         If the ambiguity of New Orleans as an event leaves us
feeling a little
 light, a bit nauseated; there is always the laceration of Capital to wake us
 from our sympathetic malaise.  Positions have already been taken--go
long the
 builders, developers, clean-up outfits and architectural
face-lifters and short
 the casinos, retail setups and insurance companies with heavy
exposure in the
 Gulf. Just another day on the trading floor of our lives.  What New Orleans
 offers us is a bit of exposure?another crack in the surface of the
screen; 9/11
 made a similar offering.  New Orleans shows us that humanity prefers its
 empathetic compassion to be best delivered from the barrel of a gun?or at
 least, best dispensed when the police are on duty.  Chaos does not
envelop us
 during tragedy, rather chaos saves us from the banal machinations of
our undead
 lives.
      For those of us that are eternally watching the events unfold,
the screens
 of New Orleans show us all that nothing can save us from ourselves--like so
 many
 of the police that never showed when called for duty during those irregular
 days of our latest pandemonium. One might be tempted to say that the great
 white American underbelly lies exposed and fully parched in the full heat of
 the still-burning spotlights of that late, great city of New Orleans.





 --
 Nicholas Ruiz III
 GTA/doctoral candidate
 Interdisciplinary Program in the Humanities
 Florida State University
 Editor, Kritikos
 http://garnet.acns.fsu.edu/~nr03/<http://garnet.acns.fsu.edu/~nr03/>

 ----------------------------------------------------------------




--
Nicholas Ruiz III
GTA/doctoral candidate
Interdisciplinary Program in the Humanities
Florida State University
Editor, Kritikos
http://garnet.acns.fsu.edu/~nr03/

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