Saturday, June 26, 2010

WRITING BACK
By: Iris P. Concepcion

"The most interesting part of my job is that I get to observe powerful people at close quarters. Most people in government, I find, are there because they sincerely want to do good. But they're also exhausted and frustrated much of the time. And at these moments they can't help letting you know that things would be much better if only there weren't so many morons all around."---David Brooks--The New York Times

I actually had a personal encounter with someone who had challenged the insolubility of this prototype of an irresponsible gatekeeper: that third word from the last sentence of the quote.

While the rest of humanity brand me (like a beef cut) as a non-sequitor (I love it when they get mad; they actually show repressed images and I all I could think about is yawning), this challenger has actually better structured sentences up on his sleeves minus the dank (dunk) introduction of gore and vile. He is precisely interesting because he does not repeat himself.

Whenever I am on the verge of challenging status quos via evil text messages---they scramble for words and like a recorder, repeat their lines over and over again in badly simulated accents copied from their ecstatic hideaways. I do not know if they could even properly introduce Morcheeba (sample of jamming in: "I am the real *****ahhhh--you get my point---they now Google the name and impress you with copied intros).

They could not even leave their poor print properly on the street (roll the tabloid properly, with a cut of chocolate; it could improve readership quality).

I get hiccups instead. Hopefully can post pictures of aesthetic significance in this page soon. I have a picture of a building that was Erected in 1969 and it looks very impressive in that, it is Romanesque and clean. Respectable even.

I have quite a few of the remnants of these important visages: the fine print of promise.