Thursday, July 9, 2009

Iran Strike on Hold


During the last days of George W Bush Israel practiced a long-range strike against Iran. Attack appeared imminent. GW Bush certainly was pro-Armageddon. Cooler minds in the military refused Israel passage over Iraq and refueling by US air tankers. Without this help the mission was out of the question for Israel and President Obama has publicly warned Israel that there is no 'green light' for a preemptive bombing of Iran's nuclear facilities, contradicting his Vice President's comments that Israel is a free nation and can do whatever it wants to protect itself.


This is the type of language which encouraged Saddam to invade Kuwait.


From New York Times


On Wednesday July 25, 1990, the U.S. Ambassador in Iraq, April Glaspie, asked the Iraqi high command to explain the military preparations in progress, including the massing of Iraqi troops near the border. The American ambassador declared to her Iraqi interlocutor that Washington, “inspired by the friendship and not by confrontation, does not have an opinion” on the disagreement which opposes Kuwait to Iraq, stating "we have no opinion on the Arab-Arab conflicts". She also let Saddam Hussein know that the U.S. did not intend "to start an economic war against Iraq". These statements may have caused Saddam to believe he had received a diplomatic green light from the United States to invade Kuwait


Maybe she should have kept her mouth shut and so should Joe Biden, if that's possible.

King Power Video


King Power at Cobra Swamp Airport received bad press from the media for supposedly extorting money from two innocent Travelers, however a recent video has shown the two entering the duty-free shop. The man looks at wallets while the woman picks out one to stuff in her pocketbook.


See video http://www.kingpower.com/2009/popup/pop_case2.html


King Power has yet to answer questions about the extra-legal aspects of the couples' detention, but for anyone thinking about ripping off a duty free or shoplifting anywhere else in the world, remember there is always someone watching you.


If you can't afford it, don't steal it.

Or at least don't get caught.

Bye Bye Michael

Michael Jackson has been laid to rest. The world seemed divided in different camps. Admirers, detractors, and the apathetic. I had planted myself in the latter camp. I have no Michael Jackson songs on my computer. I never saw him in concert. I didn't follow his tribulations with interest. He went his way and I went mine. My apathy was sacrosanct or so I thought until going to a restaurant in Uthaitanni.


Michael Jackson had been resurrected on a wide-screen TV. A concert before a stadium filled with frenzied fans. He sang their favorites on a stage costing millions of dollars. They loved him and I felt a sadness wrapped around my spine. Tears formed behind my sunglasses. My daughter asked what was wrong.


"A friend is gone." I said in English.


"Michael Jackson." She pointed at the TV.


"Yes."


"But he's still on the TV." At six Angie understood that sometimes you never can say good-bye to those we have forgotten to love.

Ka-Toeys versus Go-Go Girls


I was in the Wat Chai market looking for fresh shrimp. Those sold at the big stores (BIG C, Carrefour, or Lotus) are tasteless. After purchasing a kilo, I was heading back to my bike, when a voice called my name. It was Ort. Neither Jamie Parker nor I had seen her, since she hooked up with a farang at the Paris Go Go.


The Brit construction worker retired her from the bikini squad, bought a house in Prichit, gave her a brand new car and 10 baht of gold. “I thought you were going to England.” I glanced around the market for familiar faces. My wife was out-of-town, but she has spies or jah-rah-chon everywhere.


“No, my boyfriend leave me for a ka-toey.” Ort wasn’t wearing any gold. The odds were that she had hocked them to the jum-jam or pawn shop.


“Sure it wasn’t for seeing other men?” I had last seen Ort in the Marine disco. Her date wasn’t her muscle-building boyfriend. He had spies too.


“No, no, he leave me for lady-boy.” She seemed on the verge of tears and I led her into a t-shirt stall. I didn’t want people getting the wrong impression. “I not understand. I stop being pretty.”


Ort was never really pretty. But she was sexy with a sleek baby seal body. “No, you’re still beautiful.”


“Then why he leave me?”


“Your boyfriend goes to the gym?” I didn’t have the answer, but could with the right questions.


“Yes.”


“He use a needle?” I had seen him twice. Muscles like his didn’t come naturally in Pattaya. Ort nodded to admit he was a steroid juice junkie.


“He likes to have sex?” I felt like a palm reader divining the truth. “Many times.”


“And ate Viagra.” Most steroid muscle-builders can’t get it up without it, but also use ketamine to get a buzz. All too chemically ugly for an old stoner like me.


“Yes, and he want sex too much. He hurt me too much.”


“And that’s why he left you for a ka-toey.” Thailand unlike the States didn’t have a real hang-up about transvestites.


The Miss Tiffany World Show is televised live and the presenter is usually Miss World Thailand. The greeter at the biggest hospital in pattaya is a ka-toey and the most beautiful women on Walking Street are the lady-boys hanging out at the Jennie Star Bar.


“I not understand.” She wouldn’t because she’s a woman.


“Your boyfriend is a sex maniac. He wants sex all the time. But a woman can only have sex 3-5 times a week. Not so a ka-toey. A lady-boy can have sex all day long, because she’s a man and has man’s muscles and wants sex like a man.”


“How you know this?” All women are distrustful of a man wanting to tell them what he thinks of as the truth.


“Because I’m a man too.”


“And you’ve been with a ka-toey?“


“No.” I’ve drank with ka-toeys." They’re crazy, but funny too. Back in 1978 I had been at a Halloween party for Paloma Picasso. Black-tie. I was ordering a drink when a gay boy bumped into me. He was being bullied by a jerk from Jersey. Bigger than the fag and bigger than me. I said, “You mind not pushing him around, while I’m trying to get a drink.”


The Jersey boy turned his attention to me. “What are you going to do if I don’t?”


The little queer took this as his cue to stage exit in any direction. The jersey boy clenched his fists. I wasn’t going to talk about this and popped him in the face. Blood spurt from his lip. It has been my best shot but hadn’t stopped him. I weaved through his punches and counterjabbed without success. Luckily the bouncers broke up the fight and threw him out.


Two ballerinas toasted my victory and invited me to a party uptown. I escorted them outside and hailed a taxi.


I never saw the Jersey Boy’s sucker punch to the back on my head. KO. He beat me senseless as I lay on the street like a discarded rag doll. Only the entreaties of Marcus Leatherdale, a gay photographer, spared me serious injury, although my face was bloodied by the chain worn around the thug’s fist. The ballerinas had pirouetted out of sight and I weaving near unconsciousness like a Bowery bum.


A beautiful woman in a satin gown and spectacular high heels washed my face with her scarf. Her TLC ministrations stung, because she had wet the scarf with vodka. Once the angel spoke, I realized she was no woman, though she called herself ‘Dove’.


We became friends after that night and she was always asking me to go home with her. “Other men aren’t so picky.”


“I don’t want to ruin our relationship.”


“It’s only sex and no one has to know.” I wasn’t too sure about that and remembered the old line about riding a Vespa.


“They’re a lot of fun until one of your friends sees you riding one.” It was equally applicable to TVs.


On New Year’s Eve I attended the opening of a transsexual circus club outside Times Square. The main act was TVs on the trapeze. Dove was dressed in haute-couture. She was every man’s #1 pick, but she was determined to seduce me with a jar of cocaine. I remained strong until seeing the Jersey Boy with two gay boys.


One was the boy he had been pushing against the bar on Halloween. They looked like lovers. My heart pumped out a tattoo of vengeance and I grabbed a beer bottle to break and slash his face.


“Don’t.” Dove stopped me. “I’ll take care of this.”


She lit a cigarette and walked up to the Jersey Boy, bumping into him clumsily. He turned to face her, ready for a fight, but not the cigarette she stubbed in his eye. No one had seen a thing and she came back to me and said, “That about evens the score. Now what about taking me home?”


I couldn’t rightly say no.


Nothing happened. I was too loaded to have sex. Saved by my drive for excess.


So I’ve never really had a problem with TVs. I understand the medicines they take make them crazy. The psychological shift from man to woman isn’t easy either and I told Ort, “I wouldn’t trust one though. Not with money or your life, because they are between sexes and work with a different set of rules involving survival, but they tell me they can have sex all day long. Just what your boyfriend wants.”


“I hate ka-toeys.” Her eyes narrowed to daggers.


“You shouldn’t be too unhappy. You got a house, car, gold and let’s face you didn’t love him, right?” She was beyond listening to reason or excuses.


“Love him for what? He stupid farang.” Thai girls say that about a lot of men. “I go back go-go. Meet new farang. Not love no one. Only my baby. You want mia noi?“


Ort was 22. Her body was a solace for a middle-aged man search for youth. A fool I am, but not enough to fall for a girl thinking all men stupid. I wished her luck. Whatever man fell for her next would need it.


For a related article click on this URL


http://www.mangozeen.com/tornado-a-go-go-rip.htm

WALK LIKE A WOMAN by PEter Nolan Smith


I thought Billy Wilder’s film SOME LIKE IT HOT was funny, until my next-door neighbor asked in his basement, “Who you think is prettier as a woman? Jack Lemmon or Tony Curtis?”


“Neither.” This was 1964 and men in dresses weren’t supposed to be funny to 11 year-old boys on the South Shore of Boston.


“Yeah, but if you were on a deserted island and there were only you, Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon and they were wearing dresses, who would be your wife?” Chuckie sometimes wore his youngest sister’s underwear. He looked nothing like Addy, but more like Tony Curtis.


“I would kill myself before marrying either of them.” The Bible considered men dressing as woman as an abomination, however the priests wore long black cassocks. They called them robes. We knew better and kept our distance.

Chuckie and I remained best friends throughout the 1960s. Our knowledge of drag queens expanded with the Kinks’ hit song LOLA. “We walked like a woman and talked like a man.”


“You ever see a man walked like a woman and talk like a man?” Chuckie was a little hesitant about broaching this subject.


“Once at the Greyhound Bus Station.” I had been buying Levis at Walker’s Jeans on Boylston Street. “But he was obviously a man. Even had stubble like a man. And you could tell the high heels hurt his feet.”


“I tried walking in my sister’s shoes. They were murder.” Chuckie obviously had persevered with his closet cross-dressing.


“I only have trouble with new sneakers.” They burned blisters on my heels.


“Oh.” Chuckie sensed this was as far as we could go.


We grew apart after I went to university at Boston College. I drove taxi to pay for my apartment near campus. My last fares came out of the Combat Zone. Drag queens, go-go dancers, and drunks. They were all good tippers. None of the queens were attractive and I couldn’t understand why any man would take one home or to a hotel or a dark park.

Lou Reed’s WALK ON THE WILD SIDE had to be a lie.


“Candy came out from the Island, in the backroom she was everyone’s darling.”


I didn’t know what a back room. My move to New York in 1976 taught me the meaning. I became a punk. Sexual frontiers were blurred in a city where people changed their names to suit their desires. I went to gay bars to pick up fag hags. My gay friends told these girls I was queer. They wanted to convert me to being straight. I played hard to get, but they always had the cure.


One night I was at the Anvil, waiting for my friends to finish their excursion to the back room. No girls were allowed in the bar, so I was surprised when an attractive brunette sat next to me. She looked like a top fashion model, except skinnier in a pink tube top and hot pants. A long lacquered nail touched shoulder.”Can you buy me a drink?”


Her faux falsetto betrayed why the bouncer permitted her into the Anvil. She was not a woman, only the closest thing in this bar.


“Do I have to beg you?” She twirled a strand of long brown hair around her finger with a mockery of feminine guile. I almost laughed. She frowned and asked, “What’s so funny?”


“Nothing, just thinking back to an old song.” I wouldn’t be able to get LOLA out of my head for days.


“Something you want to dance to. I’m a good dancer.” She wiggled her shoulders like a go-go girl. This move sold the mirage and I signaled the bartender to give my barmate a drink. “My name’s Dove. How you like to go in the back room with me? You can do anything you want.”


“No thanks.”


“Why you think I’m unattractive?” Her lips pouted with disappointment. “I know you’re straight. That’s why I sat here.”


“I thought it was to hustle me for a drink.”


“Fresh.” She slapped my hand. “I have my own money.”


A roll of twenties. Dove explained how a US senator was her sugar daddy. She wouldn’t say which one. Her story about going to the inaugural ball for Jimmy Carter was funny. “No one thought I was a man. At least none of the men seemed to care. especially the Republicans.”


After an hour my friends were still buried in the Anvil’s snake pit and I settled my bill to leave. I almost kissed Dove good-night, but shook her hands instead.


“So I guess this means you’re going home alone?”


“Sorry.”


“Don’t’ be sorry, one night you and I will get it together. I’m patient.” She waved good-bye and stood up to twitch a hip as a calling card for later.


Dove was not only patient. She was persistent, despite my continual refusals to push our relationship any further than friends. I told her no at the Mudd Club, Studio 54, CBGBs, Hurrahs, Xenon, the Kiev, Dave’s Luncheonette, but she kept asking and I kept saying no.


One evening in 1980 I was at a Paloma Picasso party. It was black tie. I was bored after the first hour and went to get my leather jacket from the coat check. A young man fell into me and I turned around quickly since he had stepped on my foot. The thin gay boy’s clumsiness was not from too many drinks. A brutish six-footer was shaking him by the lapels. The stitching was giving way and I slashed my arm down on his aggressor’s wrists. This broke his grasp and the gay boy ran away.


“Why you do that?” The thug demanded with red eyes. He was on something. My guess was speed.


“Because I didn’t feel like being bumped into, while you beat up on a fag.” My brother was gay. My friends were fags. I didn’t like bullies.


“And what are you going to do about it?” His hands clenched into fists.


Boys from Boston didn’t back down from fights and I wanted a right to his mouth. The punch seemed to stagger him, then he spit a tooth in my chest. This was going to be a fight and not a good one. I threw lefts and rights faster than his counters, but he outweighed me and I backed up to the wall. Luckily the security broke us up. They knew me and threw him out. Two ballerinas thought I was hero for standing up against this gaybasher. I felt like one too and accompanied them into the street, where I waved down a taxi. My hand never reached the air, because something hard struck the base of the skull.


I fell into the gutter and pulled my arms over my head. A second later my id was floating through a green emerald which pulsated with lightning every second. This was not a good sign. Finally someone asked with a Jersey accent, “Have you had enough?”


I had had enough after the first sucker punch. It was the thug. A chain was wrapped around his fist. I nodded yes and he strode away the victor. I got to my feet. My teeth were intact and my nose was unbroken. I looked at my face in a car mirror. Blood was dripping from a dozen cuts and for the next week I resembled a welcher on a bet to John Gotti’s gang.


New York’s a big city, but the night life then was a small scene. Maybe 3000 people. I would run into the thug again and carried a long stiletto for that moment. It wasn’t long in coming.


A transvestite trapeze bar opened in Times Square. GG Barnums. Dove was part-owner. Her senator the secret other half. We were sitting at the bar. She bought me drinks. Dove had heard about my beating. She thought I was a hero.

“Hero’s don’t get the snort beat out of them.”


“Well, you’re a hero to me and I’d love to show you how much.” The cut of her Chanel dress cut showed off Dove's Mia Farrow figure.


“Thanks, but I’m not really in a romantic mood.”


“I could change that in a second.” Her hand caressed my thigh. I knocked it away. She was hurt. “What wrong?”


“That guy who beat me up just walked into the bar.” I grabbed the knife in my pocket.


“I know what you’re thinking.” Dove stopped me from standing and lit a cigarette. “I’ll take are of this.”


She moved through the crowded bar like a serpent seeking its prey. She puffed hard on the cigarette. The ember a bright red. She tapped the thug on the shoulder. He turned around and Dove stuck the cigarette in his eye. He dropped to his knees on the floor. Dove returned to me and said, “Will you go home with me now?”


“I don’t think I can refuse.”


Nothing really happened between us. We kissed a little. Nothing more and she said that it was our little secret. GG Barnums lasted a half-year. Trapeze transvestite shows went out of vogue. She started dressed like a Palm Beach divorcee. Her hair went nova blonde. She said she was moving south. The Senator had divorced his wife. I wished her luck. She said she had been born lucky.


I didn’t see her again, except in my mind every time I heard WALK ON THE WILD SIDE. Dove was everyone’s darling in the right mood and beat out Tony Curtis as choice #1, but I couldn’t have foreseen that in 1965. Not even in my dreams.

Shi Pei Pu RIP


I could probably be tossed out of the business for telling you this — it violates every journalistic principle in the book — but once, long ago, in the course of my work as a reporter, an international man of mystery pressed upon me a gift of rare jewels, and to my shame, I accepted.


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Associated Press

MONSIEUR BUTTERFLY Shi Pei Pu, circa 1965.


Related

Shi Pei Pu, Singer, Spy and ‘M. Butterfly,’ Dies at 70 (July 2, 2009) The man’s name was Shi Pei Pu, the Beijing opera singer and spy who died in Paris last week. True, he was not out of the James Bond mold of international men of mystery or even the Austin Powers mold: He was a delicate, theatrical, otherworldly little man who beguiled an employee of the French Embassy in Beijing into espionage during the Cultural Revolution by claiming to be a woman. In the course of their affair, he even produced a child.


I was working as a reporter at People magazine, back in 1988, when I saw the Broadway show the case inspired, David Henry Hwang’s wonderful “M. Butterfly,” and it raised many questions: How could a guy make love to another guy for months and not know? Where had the kid come from? How could I get to Paris, where the two men were now living after spending time in prison, on somebody else’s dime?


There were also Shi Pei Pu’s own singular demands: He wished to promote himself as a Beijing opera star (though there was no evidence he had ever been one in China). He would do an interview only if the magazine arranged for him to perform on television. As luck would have it, People was about to launch a television show, so this was not a problem.


Also, this story happened long, long ago, at a time when there was money to be made in journalism. Especially at People magazine. Arriving at work, one had to wade through it in specially made money boots, so as not to stain the feet. In keeping with that spirit, the photographer and I checked into the Lancaster Hotel, on the Right Bank, where Richard Burton and Liz Taylor once shacked up. We were soon joined by a TV producer, TV reporter, interpreter and video crew. Even by People magazine standards this was getting to be a pricey enterprise. It got pricier as the days passed and we waited for Mr. Shi (pronounced Shuh) and his retinue to show up.


One hates to speak badly of the dead, but it has been now five, maybe six days, and I think I may be forgiven for saying Shi Pei Pu was one of the more maddening subjects I have ever met. It took him days to admit he had a physical affair with Bernard Boursicot, the embassy worker, and although police records showed otherwise, he denied that he had pretended to be a woman. He could, however, have taught a course on charming manipulation. Despite his ordinary masculine dress, the baggy turtleneck and blue trousers, he managed to convey the impression of a tragic, exiled and fragile porcelain princess who, pushed too hard, might shatter.


Also, he told great stories; flowery, Chinese-French bodice rippers. He and Bernard in the days of the Cultural Revolution, when it was forbidden for Chinese and foreigners to meet, sitting across Changan Avenue and staring at one another; or Bernard so in love with Pei Pu that he ran waving and yelling after his bus. Later, Bernard would tell the same story with Pei Pu running after him, but no matter.


Shi Pei Pu’s televised Beijing opera recital turned out to be a major production: The hotel rooms the magazine had arranged were deemed too small, new space had to be found and paid for, fittingly in the town of Versailles. Pei Pu’s musicians had to be paid. Finally, it was over. Pei Pu, in the manner of wanna-be divas to whom attention has finally been paid, was giddy with delight and appreciation.


Finding me in my room at the Lancaster later that day, Pei Pu told me, through the translator, that he wished to give me a gift; then, with a delicate but mesmerizing flourish, he presented me with a long string of pearls. They were his grandmother’s, Pei Pu said. He wished me to have them.


Reporters are forbidden to accept gifts; in extremis the general rule is that one can accept something if the worth is under $25. A 20-inch string of antique pearls was definitely out. I tried explaining this to the translator. There was a great deal of flowery back and forth which, with subtext, went something like this.


Me: “No, no, no, no, I could not possibly. Especially because you have not yet told me how you hid the fact you are man, you devious little snake.”


Shi: “Yes, yes, yes, you must. After all, it was you, cher Madame, who got me on American television. I guess it would be too much to hope you know an agent.”


Finally, the translator, in a private aside to me, said: “You must accept. If you do not, it will be a great insult.”


I saw no way around it. If this kept up much longer, the Lancaster would hit us up for another night. I accepted the pearls, thinking I would figure out a face-saving way to return them — maybe turn them into a bracelet and send it to Pei Pu’s son when he married. When I got home I put them in a drawer where they languished for years. I wrote a book about the case, but Shi Pei Pu wouldn’t speak to me for it because he hadn’t liked the People magazine story. Too much sex.


Then one day, heading up to the Diamond District to have a bracelet repaired, I remembered the pearls in the drawer.


“Tell me these are under $25,” I told the man in the repair booth.


His examination barely required a glance.


“They’re not only fakes, they’re very bad fakes,” he said.


“Perfect,” I said.


I had them made into a three-strand bracelet: the Pei Pu pearls. I wear them sometimes to the theater. They’re very bad fakes, but for sure, one of a kind. Rest in peace, Shi Pei Pu. You told a helluva story.


By JOYCE WADLER


NY Times

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Naps of Thailand


When a Chinese general was asked about the defeat of the People's Army by the Vietnamese in 1979, he replied, "We get up at 5am and they get up at 4."


That industry seems to be sapped from the blood in climes furtehr south. Thais and Laotians are epic sleepers. Finding comfort in conditions better suited to a CIA rendition camp. Some farangs attributed this hyper-sleeping habit to lassitude. Their observation is way off mark, because most Thais wake before dawn to work in the rice fields until the heat hits treacherous temperatures. The retreat from the sun means a good meal followed by a better nap or ngêep before hitting the fields for the late-afternoon. This tradition has been lost in the cities where workers labor from dawn to dusk six days a week. Farangs laugh about the urban proletariat's ability to sleep within seconds of finding a comfortable position. Few westerners know the hold of total exhaustion and I often defend the Thais and other Asians' sleeping habits.


"So explain to me why bar girls sleep 20 hours at a clip," One bar-goers asked in Pattaya. He had been here for years. His vocabulary in Thai was limited to ordering beer and sex.


"Only can be several reasons." I'd been in the Orient 20 years. I didn't have all the answers. Just some of the right ones.


"Like what?" The bar-goer was eying his date. She seemed alert for the moment.


"First is that she's exhausted from having sex with you." Most farangs in Thailand live on a diet of Viagra and alcohol.


"Could be." The bar-goer smiled with pride.


"Second, she could be on ja-bah and crashes after sex." The girl was fat and I doubted she was into speed.


"No way. She's clean. The cops piss-tested her at Marine Disco the other night. She came up clean."


"Well, that leaves only one other explanation and this comes from a Mama-san of a go-go bar. She said the reason most of these girls sleep so much is that they're trying to escape the reality of having to have sex with a fat farang and would rather live inside a sleep world until they have enough money to rejoin other Thai people. Of course this couldn't pertain to you since you're such a sex hero."


He tipped the scales over 250 and his age was a 20th of Methuselah. No one had called him


'sexy' since he was in his teens and that had probably been a priest. For Englishman he had good teeth. At least half the front ones.


"I'm not so sure about that." Even he knew he was no Apollo. Me neither, but I like hearing girls tell me I'm the best I ever had. It's a lie that makes me feel young and sleep in peace. It's a talent an old man can improve upon with age.


There is nothing like a good nap.


“No day is so bad it can't be fixed with a nap.” Carrie B Snow