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Kvetcher in the Rye by Greg Palast

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eleny Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 06:22 PM
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Kvetcher in the Rye by Greg Palast
In the sixth grade, the Boys' Vice-Principal threatened to suspend me from school unless I stopped carrying around The Catcher in the Rye I think because it had the word "fuck" in it. Since the Boys' Vice-Principal hadn't read the book - and I don't think he'd ever read any book - he couldn't tell me why.

But Mrs. Gordon was cool. She let me keep the book at my desk and read it at recess as long as I kept a brown wrapper over the cover.

I think J.D. Salinger would have liked Mrs. Gordon. She wanted to save me from the world's vice-principals, the guys who wanted to train you in obedience to idiots and introduce you the adult world of fear and punishment. Mrs. Gordon wanted to protect the need of a child to run free.

That's, of course, how the word fuck got into Salinger's book. For the 5% of you who haven't read it, the main character of the book, Holden Caulfield, tries to erase the f-word off the wall of a New York City school. He doesn't want little kids like his sister Phoebe to see it, that somehow it would trigger an irreversible loss of her childhood innocence:



I thought Phoebe and all the other little kids would see it, and how they'd wonder what the hell it meant, and then finally some dirty kid would tell them—all cockeyed, naturally—what it meant, and how they'd all think about it and maybe even worry about it for a couple of days.
Which is where the title came from. Salinger's Caulfield, pushed to the edge of his own youth and directed to prepare himself for the job market, could see for himself only one career: as a catcher in the rye. He imagined a bunch of kids playing away happily in a rye field, but a field on a cliff's-edge. Every time a child, lost in their game, would drift toward the edge, Caulfield's job would be to catch them before they fell.

Any other job would just turn you into a "phony," that is, an adult. All adults were phonies, even the nice ones, who took jobs they hated, taught textbooks and catechisms they didn't believe and lived lives of self-inflicted disappointments, while pretending it was all OK. Then with phony grins, they'd demand that you join their painful parade of delusion and decay.

Nearly half a century after I covered up Salinger's book in a carefully folded brown wrapper, I thought I'd read it to my twins. They were now eleven, in the 6th grade.

But I couldn't. In his 1956 book, Salinger had railed against a post-war world of boys in school blazers trying to get to "first base" with their steady dates. America itself was an adolescent, and despite the police beatings of marchers in Alabama, despite the "drop, tuck and don't look at the flash!" drills we did weekly in Mrs. Gordon's class to prepare for the Russian nuclear attack, America was still weirdly, optimistically child-like.

We knew then that the world could only get better: we would go to the moon and eventually, vacation there. JFK announced the Alliance for Progress and poverty would end in Appalachia; and Paul McCartney wanted to hold our hand. Every nasty meanie, like the police in Selma, was met by a legion of victorious innocents led by Martin Luther King. So we all held hands in a circle while Pete Seeger strummed "We shall overcome." Everyone would get a scholarship; and we really, truly believed we would overcome.

Even the social critics - Allen Ginsberg, Lenny Bruce, Jack Kerouac - were just big, mischievous kids.

Yes, there were a bunch of old phonies like Joe McCarthy and the Boys' Vice-Principal, but their days were numbered.

Then we fell over the cliff.

A bullet through the skull replaced Kennedy with Nixon. We shall overcome was replaced with the vicious "Southern Strategy;" the Cold War exploded in hot jungles; then came the idiot wasteland of the regimes of Ford and Carter and Reagan and Clinton and Bushes, a degenerative march as the machine of America rusted and died.

And here we are today, begging for spare parts from China and my daughter glued to YouTube videos of Lady Ga-Ga's crotch, and my son slicing off a cop's head in Grand Theft Auto and a President, telegenic and painfully hollow, playing the lost and ineffectual shepherd over an electorate divided between the terrified and the greedy. In place of prophets, we are offered a caravan of kvetching clowns piling out of the Volkswagen on MSNBC.

There's no way to wipe the fuck off this smeared planet. I'm supposed to try. I'm an investigative reporter, meaning I have a professional commitment to the childish belief that if I shout loud enough, I can warn people away from the cliff's edge.

Well, it's better than a real job, but no less "phony," no less of a petty illusion.

I'm holding this book, the brown wrapper lost who the hell knows when, and I know it would just be laughable, inscrutably ancient to those wisened, worldly children of mine.

I've put it back on my shelf.

You stand on the cliff edge and there's no one left to catch.

Jerome David Salinger 1919-2010.
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mdmc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 06:28 PM
Response to Original message
1. well written
enjoyed reading it..
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cali Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 06:32 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. it is well written, but I feel sorry for his kids.
it sucks to grow up with a gloom and doom father. it pervades everything.
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mdmc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 06:33 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. this I know
yupyup..
old Strong and Steady pop..
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jotsy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 06:40 PM
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4. Doesn't sound like he's too appreciative of where things are at.
Without a catcher, we learn or we fall.
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flyarm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 06:43 PM
Response to Original message
5. Greg should listen to "UPRISING" AND RESISTANCE " by Muse..and fill his kids Ipods with those songs!
Because i fear in their lifetimes they will need to know what to fight for and how ..with some kind of arsenal.
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Octafish Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 07:05 PM
Response to Original message
6. !
I feel like crawling around on all fours...
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Gregorian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 07:11 PM
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7. Wow. That fifty years of history and culture summed up in a few words.
Somehow it makes me feel good. Like being in the sandbox on a sunny afternoon in grade school. I never was truly innocent.
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TheUnspeakable Donating Member (960 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 07:23 PM
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8. k &r-very powerful!
"Then we fell over the cliff" ....that hit me like a hammer.
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glitch Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 07:57 PM
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9. Wow, one of the best eulogies for Salinger I've seen. Thanks for posting. nt
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BeFree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 08:03 PM
Response to Original message
10. well
FUCK !>>!
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NNadir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 08:04 PM
Response to Original message
11. Um, my kid isn't playing Grand Theft Auto, nor looking at Lady Gaga's crotch.
Edited on Mon Feb-01-10 08:06 PM by NNadir
If someone's kid is, um, doing those things maybe the problem doesn't lie with the parent and not the, um, for instance so called "President, telegenic and painfully hollow, playing the lost and ineffectual shepherd."

Basically my kid spent his after school afternoon trying to learn C++ commnds to program robots.

I suspect that he's doing this because his parents give a shit about what he does.

Palast is an intellectual lightweight which is why he is so obsessed with yuppie angst like "Catcher in the Rye."

It was a novel and not a particularly great one either, mostly held up by a myth about the mythology.

It wasn't, um, Dostoyevsky or Camus or even Vonnegut.

What a loser.
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boobooday Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 09:30 PM
Response to Reply #11
13. Dostoyevsky . . .
Love Vonnegut too, but Fyodor's idiot is my all time favorite literary character.
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NNadir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 09:44 PM
Response to Reply #13
14. You know, I know, having read his books only in translation, that I am merely
seeing a shadow of the true work.

If I had my life to live over again, I'd probably learn Russian to read it properly.

I recall that when I began to read German, I read Hesse's Demian in the original, and compared it with translations I had.

I was in awe of what I was missing.

Camus in French, I notice, is pretty much the same.

It must be unbelievable to read Dostoyevsky in Russian. My niece is taking Russian in high school. Her Russian sounds good to me - similar to what I've heard on the streets - but I really am clueless about what she's saying.

I wish my kid's high school - and it's generally a very good school - offered Russian, and for that matter, Chinese and Japanese.

We're stuck with Western European languages. It's my major complaint about my son's schools.

I think the United States is really shooting itself in the foot by not encouraging our young people to learn languages other than English and - if you're lucky - Spanish.
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boobooday Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 09:28 PM
Response to Original message
12. If you still want to move people, there is hope
But in the meantime, FUCK!
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HiFructosePronSyrup Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-01-10 10:24 PM
Response to Original message
15. What a phony.
Sounds just like the phonies from 50 years ago.
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