By Yale Kramer on 5.16.06 @ 12:07AM
New York Times editors yearn for a self-sustaining existence.
During the A.M. Rosenthal epoch of the New York Times,
the editorials were written by serious, educated people -- mostly
white, middle-class men -- who had transcended their adolescence,
concurred in a set of Western values that had stood the test of
time, knew what was important and who they were.
The Times has indeed changed. Its editorials seem to be
written by ignorant, feckless people, barely out of their jeans and
sandals and still in the sway of a social-political fantasy of
paradise.
Ever since Adam and Eve got kicked out of Eden for eating the
forbidden fruit from the tree of sexual knowledge and for that
reason cursed by God to earn "thy bread by the sweat of thy brow,"
some of mankind has engaged in a juvenile struggle to re-find
Paradise, where one would never have to work, where it would be
possible to sit all day in the neighborhood Starbucks fooling
around online while sipping their lattes and answering their
Hotmail. All play -- no work.
So it was that one of the little boobies they let write
editorials for the Times now that Abe Rosenthal is gone
decided to celebrate the world of the Nukak tribe last Saturday: "Perhaps you read yesterday's article
about members of the Nukak tribe...who walked out of the Colombian
jungle and renounced their ancestral ways....According to
witnesses, they say they are happy about it....None of which
explain the bittersweet feel this story leaves in the reader's [the
editorial writer's] mind....We have no clearer idea what it would
mean to live a subsistence life in the Colombian jungle than the
Nukak have of living even on the fringes of the modern world.
[Only, little booby, if you have no intelligent imagination or
sense enough to get some anthropological information, so readily
available on the Internet. See, presumably the difference between
you, and them is that you are supposed to be educated]....it's hard
to escape the feeling that their SELF-SUSTAINING EXISTENCE...WAS
HOLDING SOMETHING OPEN FOR US, SOMETHING THAT HAS NOW BEEN
LOST."
Ah, the romance of the "bittersweet" life of the
"self-sustaining existence"! Paradise regained, eh? Breadfruit
dropping from the trees; fresh, silvery, fish jumping out of the
sea into the waiting pan; the beautiful, brown skinned Gauguin
women in their colorful sarongs -- what a life awaits. Oh, yes, the
"self-sustaining existence"!
We will tell you what it's like, editorial writer, if you don't
have the smarts to get the information yourself.
Let's assume that you are a boy editorial writer and you wake up
one morning in the Colombian rain forest as part of the Nukak
tribe. You've gotten your wish. It's true that you don't have to
worry about that $600,000 mortgage anymore. Your new home is
whatever you can see before your eyes -- roots, vines, trees,
lizards -- all mortgage-free. You won't have to worry about whether
Social Security will last until you turn 65, because you won't turn
65. The elders of the tribe rarely get to be older than their
forties -- extinguished by malaria, fatal accidents while racing
through the jungle after tonight's dinner, and sometimes eaten by a
family of crocodiles while fishing.
You don't have to worry about losing your job anymore. Everyone
over the age of twelve in the tribe is employed. In fact in the
Nukak tribe life is employment and employment is life. That is all
you think about from sunrise until you lay your head on your leafy
pillow. There are thirty or forty people in the tribe; more than
half are women and children, so you and the ten or fifteen other
guys have thirty-five mouths to feed two or three times a day,
every day, day in, day out, seven days a week, 52 weeks a year.
Except in Nukak land there are no weeks or years, only one same day
after another. Sunrise, sunset. There's no Sports Monday, or
Science Tuesday, or Dining Out Wednesday. And certainly no Sunday
when you take a day off; or vacations. There is no leisure and thus
no such thing as play, or veggeing out, or hanging out.
There is only hunting, mostly small monkeys, and also some
chachalacas and toucans. In addition you will enjoy rodents,
armadillos, frogs and the weevils of wasps and caterpillars
prepared according to the time-honored recipes of the region.
But you can't just hunt. You have to have weapons with which to
hunt. And you can't just order your blowgun from the L.L. Bean
catalog, you've got to make it, and the darts that go into it and
the curare that you put on the tips of the darts that paralyze the
prey. All of that takes a lot of work and practice before you start
bringing home the monkey.
So when you come home from a hard day's hunting you want a nice
hot shower or bath, right? But no one's ever heard of soap or
heating water. Why would you want to heat water, your tribal
neighbors ask in amazement. So you go off to find a couple of roots
to make a bed between and dream of the old days when you owned a
$600,000 mortgage.
BUT WHAT IF OUR BOOBY editorial writer is a girl editor yearning
for a conflict-free paradise. A world free of sexual harassment,
a-----le men coming on to you, glass ceilings, biological clocks
ticking. Relief.
So there you are girl editorial writer, a lady Nukak in the
Colombian rain forest -- your bittersweet self-sustaining existence
awaits you.
Now you are really a member of the sisterhood -- fifteen or
twenty Nukak ladies who take care of a passel of children of all
ages even as you are pregnant with your own. Because that is what
you do in life from now on. Get pregnant, have babies, nurse
babies, take care of children -- day in, day out. But just so that
you do not feel unfulfilled you also have a career --
gathering.
What do you gather? Palm and many other fruits, honey from bees,
vegetal fibers to make your hubby's loin cloth, and stuff like
that. It's largely back-breaking work and even though there's no
glass ceiling here there is no way that you will ever get to be a
hunter. The guy Nukaks would laugh you out of the tribe. How could
you run after monkeys while you nurse your infant or are pregnant?
Maybe you're sent to the headman of the tribe and he sends you to
the headshrinker who yells at you and tells you to go back to the
women's part of the camp.
Also the men are not very good at small talk with women. They
just want to...well, you know what. Just like the guys back at the
NY Times. Which by this time is where you wish you were at
and hadn't written that moronic editorial.
AND HERE ARE TWO OR three monographs about life with the Nukaks in
case you boobies are still interested:
CABRERA, Gabriel; Carlos FRANKY y Dany MAHECHA 1999: Los
Nukak: nomadas de la Amazonia colombiana; Universidad Nacional
de Colombia, Sf. Bogota D.C.- ISBN 958-8051-35-5
CARDENAS, Dairon y Gustavo POLITIS 2000: Territorios,
movilidad, etnobotanica y manejo del bosque en los Nukak
orientales. Instituto Amazonico de Investigaciones Cientificas
SINCHI, Bogota D.C.- ISBN 958-695-035-2)
topics:
Social Security, Sports