Postcards From The Edge – Indy to Chicago, 1st Leg of Train Trip to El Paso

10:11 PM 7/20/2012

I was surprised I could sleep at all before I headed for the train station — only about 4 hours, truth be told.  It was hot on the west side of Indianapolis last night. It had rained in some areas, but not enough to write home about. I’m sure the grass and trees were thankful for the drink even though it wasn’t top shelf. The humidity was making sleep difficult already, then I thought, ‘There’s a sour pickle we will all deal with eventually. When there is no AC? No fan?’ I supposed that life might move a lot slower, including people. I was immediately reminded of everyone I had ever met from New Orleans and couldn’t feel too bad about it — at least not today.

I arrived at the train station at 5:30 a.m. with time to spare and realized after looking at my tickets, I had a 3+ hour layover at Chicago’s Union Station. In my mind I heard a smarmy “Outfuckingstanding.”  To say I’m not a morning person is misleading. I love mornings — I am just not a ‘waking person’ — especially at 4 a.m with no coffee.

I penned this while sitting in Union Station — after a 4+ hour ride from Indianapolis. Napping, reading, chatting with fellow travelers or geeking without wifi were the options on that short trip. Though, at that early hour, not much chatting was going on. Except for a giggling gaggle of first grade teachers that sat across the aisle (they were headed to a conference in Chicago) and a young mother behind me.  She announced how excited she was at the prospect of turning 21 this year.

Her daughter was adorable and more quiet than mom, who insisted on listening to music so loud on her headphones that everyone within four seats could hear (including the teachers). With the added bonus of singing poorly and missing lyrics in sections.  It was a bit like listening to someone trying to perform karaoke to a skipping record.

One of the teachers chimed in to sing one of the songs. I realized if I wanted to nap, I’d better put on my own headphones. I’m a fan of music and singing; don’t get me wrong — but I’m a fan of non-corporate, non-commercial music. Hard to call most anything alternative anymore since that’s been mangled by the music/radio industry. Nothing on Clear Channel is alternative. It’s Radio Ga Ga — the alternative to Radio Goo Goo.

As Charlie Parker was constructing my musical bubble, I noticed an odd young man sitting on the left ahead of me — nervously reading aloud in whispers from his bible.  This at one point included hand flourishes which exposed a note and cash in his hand. He hadn’t bought his ticket but got on board anyway. Amtrak security really isn’t thorough if it exists at all; which is fine by me. The last vestige of travel without removing clothing in the U.S.? The ticket taker was annoyed with the young man for a moment or two.  He then asked him to move to the back of the car to figure out his ticket at the next stop.  I never saw him get back on again.

The last stop on the way to Chicago was a town called Dyer, Indiana, which when heard over the train intercom and viewed from the windows, may as well have been spelled Dire. I was surprised no one got on but that someone got off at that stop.  Dyer was the end of the line for someone. I wanted to hug the poor bastard.

There was only one other time I can report feeling that urge since I arrived in Chicago. Those few magical, passing moments with kids traveling with their parents.  The adventure and wonder in their eyes, all at once made me smile and inwardly melancholy. I know most of the country has no earthly idea what is coming.  And that is the strangest feeling I can name; to feel like a stranger no matter where I am.  To have started a conversation about peak oil or economic collapse would have yielded the same reaction the young man and his whispering sermon a seat over received.

I packed too much for me to handle comfortably. I’m sure it appeared visibly awkward hauling it through Union Station. Mental note : don’t travel solo with heavy luggage in mule sandals. With some time to find sustenance without dragging what felt like steam trunks around a giant mall, I tried to rent a locker. These are new-fangled, without keys and where you scan your fingerprint, pay, then the lockers open/closed based on your print. In theory…

After devouring my five dollars and scanning my fingerprint it wouldn’t open. There was no kiosk, no nice man with an official-looking hat, just a receipt with a number and website, with the instructions: “Pick up the blue phone for assistance.”  I scanned the immediate area and there was no blue phone. I felt like I was in the middle of a classic Candid Camera set up.  I just sighed and gave up. It was the first and least expensive lesson I had learned early on this trip about infrastructure and the technological failure of attempting to replace human contact with automation. Seeking another option, I found luggage carts which were also five dollars.  Automatic, enter money, push button, and ‘supposedly’ release the cart. I decided I didn’t need to go there. I’d lost at least one beer in that goddamned locker. I wasn’t about to give away my two drink minimum for visiting Union Station.

I thanked St. Christopher for the wheels on my luggage and good straps to keep it all secure.  Once I negotiated my donkey’s load, the first thing I set out to do was go outside for a smoke and mentally prepare for the crowd battle to find a good cup of coffee. At least before happy hour started to sound good before noon.

As luck would have it, I chose the right escalator.  The south side of Union Station on Jackson Street opened up to a canal view with the skyline right in front of me.  The Sears Tower monolith stretching toward the sky with its pointy devil spires, in all its phallic and ludicrous glory.  Several boats were making their way down the canal with tourists occupying the open decks.  There had been some rain earlier in the morning which cleared the haze away — a gorgeous breeze, bright blue sky and gulls floating by motionless as if on a mobile.

I secretly thanked Gaia for her postcard from the edge.

The coffee was less important.  I had been awake since 3:30 a.m. and was ready for lunch at that point. The food court was within distance of my boarding platform — the unhealthy choices reminded me of The Dead Kennedy’s album title, ‘Give Me Convenience or Give Me Death’.  In this food court, that was a two-fer.  Cheese bread was the least offensive in that roulette game.  It was too early for the bar and lugging that baggage around wasn’t going to get any easier with booze added.  As I waited for my order to come up, I saw two women begging for money at nearby tables — and I’m happy to report another two women got up and bought them something to eat instead.  All four were gracious about the exchange and smiling at each other.  After witnessing that, so was I.  Mental hugs.

Making my exodus back to the boarding gates, I found an open chair to observe a room full of travelers waiting on their trains.  It is packed.  Kids everywhere, the smell of engine exhaust lingers weirdly like a fireworks display just occurred underground.  And they worry about smokers?  Everyone waiting — well off folks and large families on budgets, even a large group of Mennonites feasting on McDonald’s, which I found almost surreal enough to photograph but I refrained.

This second train doesn’t have a smoking car and I’m unaware if any of them do now.  Seems a shame to me to marginalize more customers when you can simply add a car.  It would be guaranteed full in the midwest and south.  Some of the most interesting people I’ve ever met traveling were smokers, especially on the train where the night owls and misfits showed up — the story tellers.

Not that I am skeptical about meeting interesting people in the next 48 hours — but it isn’t a big train and two days in this universe is like the blink of an eye.  Here’s hoping it will be a wink instead. ~ Gabrielle

Did The Lord Say To Be A Greedy A$$hole?

contributor Lee Camp

Are being rich and Christian mutually exclusive?  I did the research so you wouldn’t have to.  I’m not usually into Bible quotes, but you have to hear these!

"We Forget That Dinosaurs Go Extinct"

Bill Moyer talks to scientist and philosopher Vandana Shiva, who’s become a rock star in the global battle over genetically modified seeds.  These seeds — considered “intellectual property” by the big companies who own the patents — are globally marketed to monopolize food production and profits. Opponents challenge the safety of genetically modified seeds, claiming they also harm the environment, are more costly, and leave local farmers deep in debt as well as dependent on suppliers.  Shiva, who founded a movement in India to promote native seeds, links genetic tinkering to problems in our ecology, economy, and humanity, and sees this as the latest battleground in the war on Planet Earth.

Moyers remarked that Shiva is facing an “uphill battle,” being one woman against some of the most powerful corporations on the planet.  Shiva replied that under the teachings of the sacred Hindu text, the Bhagavad Gita, duty comes before any thought of outcome.
“You do not measure the fruit of your actions,” she said, “You have to measure the obligation of your actions.  You have to find out what’s the right thing to do.  That is your duty.  Whether you win or lose is not the issue.”

 

This Is The Hour

‎”You have been telling the people that this is the Eleventh Hour, now you must go back and tell the people that this is the Hour.  And there are things to be considered . . .

Where are you living?

What are you doing?

What are your relationships?

Are you in right relation?

Where is your water?

Know your garden.

It is time to speak your Truth.

Create your community.

Be good to each other.

And do not look outside yourself for the leader.”

Then he clasped his hands together, smiled, and said, “This could be a good time!”

There is a river flowing now very fast.  It is so great and swift that there are those who will be afraid. They will try to hold on to the shore.  They will feel they are torn apart and will suffer greatly.

Know the river has its destination.  The elders say we must let go of the shore, push off into the middle of the river, keep our eyes open, and our heads above water.  And I say, see who is in there with you and celebrate.  At this time in history, we are to take nothing personally, least of all ourselves.  For the moment that we do, our spiritual growth and journey comes to a halt.

The time for the lone wolf is over.  Gather yourselves!  Banish the word struggle from your attitude and your vocabulary.  All that we do now must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration.

We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.”

~ Hopi elder
Oraibi, Arizona

Max Keiser at SPIEF 2012 – Why He’s The Most Dangerous In Financial Media

TRC editor/contributor Gabrielle Price
“While other news personalities report on the Greek riots from the shelter of a luxury hotel’s rooftop, Max and Stacy are down in the square with flak jackets, gas masks and a camera rolling despite the bedlam taking place all around them.  When other pundits lament the lack of regulation, Max and Stacy call for the bank executives’ heads to roll.  No one speaks with more candor and no one speaks with more courage on behalf of all of us – the victims of the most infamous unpunished heist in world history.”  ~  excerpt from The 25 Most Dangerous People in Financial Media by Huffington Post’s Joshua M. Brown, author of Backstage Wall Street


Max Keiser and The Keiser Report on RT was voted number one on this list. There’s a reason Hillary Clinton is worried about the US ’losing the information war’, and named RT as one thorn in their side. Her testimony was chilling during a time when Occupy was just getting started and the message it sent  was a signal to all of us in free press.  Hillary’s words were, by proxy, the words of this administration and proved to be brazenly unpatriotic and servile to the interests of the 1%.


This clip of Max at SPIEF 2012: European Crossroads highlights exactly why the man makes the elite writhe in their chairs.  The truth hurts and Max delivers it with relaxed, scathing precision and a good dose of humor at the incredulous ponzi scheme that everyone seems to know about from free press sources – but the US media never covers.

It’s important to note that most of the guests on The Keiser Report are ignored to the extent of virtually being banned from mainstream media. The fact is, this man gives those voices space to present viewpoints that we would never see on CNBC or CNN Money.  It is exciting to watch Max get the opportunity to challenge junk economics in this open forum and in neutral territory.

You don’t even need to understand the details of this global crisis.  In fact, most of the details are only there to confuse the public and steer the conversation away from reasonable discourse and more importantly, full disclosure.  That is where Max shines out for the rest of us.


The Refreshment Center applauds Max Keiser and RT.
We’re pleased to share episodes from The Keiser Report and OWS Week regularly.