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books
Aug 12, 2023 6:58:38 GMT -7
Post by bear on Aug 12, 2023 6:58:38 GMT -7
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books
Oct 3, 2023 2:35:25 GMT -7
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Post by bear on Oct 3, 2023 2:35:25 GMT -7
Gomorrah by Roberto Saviano. Insane. The story of the modern Naples organized crime system. Here's an excerpt from the cement chapter.
I always try to quiet the anxiety that overcomes me every time I walk, every time I climb the stairs, take the elevator, or on a doormat and cross a threshold. I cannot stop myself from constantly brooding over how these buildings and houses are built. And when someone is willing to listen, it's difficult for me not to recount how floor after floor gets slapped together. It's not a sense of universal guilt that comes over me, nor a moral redemption for those who have been canceled from historical memory. Instead I try to cast off the Brechtian mechanism that comes naturally to me, of thinking about the hands and feet of history. In other words, to think more about the constantly empty plates that led to the storming of the Bastille than about the proclamations of Girondists and Jacobins. I can't stop thinking about it. It's a bad habit. Like someone in front of a Vermeer painting who, instead of contemplating the portrait, thinks about who mixed the colors, stretched the canvas, and made the pearl earrings. A real perversion. When I see a flight of stairs, I simply cannot forget how the cement cycle works, and a wall of windows can't keep me from thinking about how the scaffolding was put up. I can't pretend not to think about it. I can't see the wall without thinking about the trowel and mortar. Maybe it's just that people born at certain merid- ians have a particular, unique relationship with certain substances. Materials are not perceived in the same way everywhere. I believe that in Qatar the smell of petroleum and gas evokes sensations of mansions, sunglasses, and limousines. The same acid smell of fossil fuel in Minsk evokes darkened faces, gas leaks, and smoking cities, whereas in Belgium it calls up the garlic Italians use and the onions of the North Africans. The same thing happens with cement in the south of Italy. Cement. Southern Italy's crude oil. Cement gives birth to everything. Every economic empire that arises in the south passes through the construction business: bids, contracts, quarries, cement, components, bricks, scaffolding, workers. These are the Italian businessman's armaments. If his empire's feet are not set in cement he hasn't got a chance. Cement's the simplest way to make money as fast as possible, to earn trust, hire people in time for an election, pay out salaries, accumulate investment capital, and stamp your face on the facades of the buildings you put up. The builder's skills are those of the mediator and the predator. He possesses the infinite patience of a bureaucrat in compiling documents, enduring interminable delays. waiting for authorizations that come slowly, like the dripping of a stalactite. He's like a bird of prey who flies over land no one else notices, snapping it up for a few pennies, then holds on to it until every inch, every hole, can be resold for astronomical amounts. The predatory businessman knows how to use his beak and claws. And Italian banks seem made for the builders; they know to grant the builder maximum credit. And if he really has no credit and the houses he will build are not enough of a guarantee, some good friend will always back him. The concreteness of cement and brick is the only real materiality that Italian banks recognize. Bank directors think that research, laboratories, agriculture, and crafts are vaporous terrain, ethereal, and devoid of gravity. Rooms, floors, tiles, phone jacks and electrical outlets - these are the only forms of concreteness they recognize. I know and I can prove it. I know how half of Italy has been built. More than half. I am familiar with the hands, the fingers, the projects. And the sand. The sand that has constructed skyscrapers, neighborhoods, parks, and villas. No one in Castelvolturno can forget the endless rows of trucks that pillaged the Volturno River of its sand. Lines of trucks flanked by farmers who had never seen such mammoths of metal and rubber before. Farmers who had managed to stay on here, to survive instead of emigrating, watched as they carted it all away, right before their very eyes. Now that sand is in the walls of apartments in Abruzzo, in buildings in Varese, Asiago, and Genoa. Now it is no longer the river that flows to the sea, but the sea that flows into the river. Now they fish for sea bass in the Volturno, and there are no more farmers. Deprived of their lands, first they turned to raising buffalo, and then set up small construction companies, hiring the young Nigerians and South Africans who used to find seasonal employment on the farms. If they didn't join up with the clans, they met an early death. I know and I can prove it. Extraction firms are authorized to remove small amounts, but they actually devour entire mountains and crumble hills. Kneaded into cement, the mountains and hills are all over the place now, from Tenerife to Sassuolo. The deportation of things has followed that of people. I met Don Salvatore in a trattoria in San Felice a Cancello. Once a master builder, now he was a walking corpse. He wasn't more than fifty years old, but he looked eighty. He told me that he worked for ten years adding exhaust- fume dust to cement mixers. Companies connected to the clans use cement to hide waste, which is what allows them to come in with bids as low as if they were using Chinese labor. Now garages, walls, and stair landings sare permeated by poison. Nothing will happen until a worker, some North African probably, inhales the dust and dies a few years later, blaming his ill luck for his cancer.
I know and I can prove it. Successful Italian businessmen come from cement. They're actually a part of the cement cycle. I know that before transforming themselves into fashion-models, manag ers, financial sharks, and owners of newspapers and yachts, be- fore all this and under all this lies cement, subcontractors, sand, crushed stone, vans crammed with men who work all night and disappear in the morning, rotten scaffolding, and bogus insurance. The driving force of the Italian economy rests on the thickness of the walls. The constitution should be amended to say that it is founded on cement. Builders are the founding fathers of Italy, not Ferruccio Parri, Luigi Einaudi, Pietro Nenni, or Junio Valerio Borghese. It was the real estate speculators who with their cement works, contracts, buildings, and newspapers pulled Italy out of the mud of financial scandals.
The building trade is a turning point for affiliates. After working as a killer, extortionist, or lookout, you end up in construction or trash collecting. Rather than showing films and giving lectures at school, it would be interesting to take new affiliates for a tour of construction sites to show them the future that awaits them. If prison and death spare them, that's where they'll end up, spitting blood and lime. While the white-collar elite the bosses believe they control are living the good life, others are dying of work. All the time. The speed of construction, the need to save on every form of safety and every sort of schedule. Inhuman shifts, nine, twelve hours a day, Saturdays and Sundays included. A hundred euros a week, plus 50 more for every ten hours of Sunday or evening overtime. The younger ones even do fifteen hours, maybe by snorting cocaine. When someone dies on a building site, a tried-and-true mechanism goes into effect. The dead body is taken away and a car accident is faked. They put the body in a car and push it off a cliff or a precipice, setting it on fire first.
The insurance money is given to the family as severance. It is not unusual for the people staging the accident to also be hurt, at times seriously, especially when they have to crash a car into a wall before setting it on fire. When the boss is present, everything works smoothly. But when he's not, the workers often panic. And so they take the wounded guy, the near cadaver, and leave him on the side of a road leading to the hospital. They drive him there, place him carefully on the pavement, and flee. When they are feeling really scrupulous, they call an ambulance. Whoever takes part in the disappearance or abandonment of a near cadaver knows that his coworkers would do the same to him if it were his body that had been smashed up or run through. You know for sure that, in a dangerous situation, the person at your side will first help you, but then finish you off to rid himself of you. And so there's a sort of wariness on the site. The person next to you could be your executioner, or you his. He won't make you suffer, but he'll leave you to die alone on the sidewalk or burn you in a car. Every builder knows that's how it works. And the companies in the south provide better guarantees. They get the job done and then disappear; they fix every mess without causing an uproar. I know and I can prove it. And the proofs have a name. In seven months fifteen construction workers died in the building sites north of Naples. They fell or ended up under a power shovel or were crushed by a crane run by workers worn out from long shifts. Work has to be quick, even if it goes on for years; sub- contractors have to make way for the next lot. Make your money, call in your debts, and move on. More than 40 percent of the firms operating in Italy are from the south. From Aversa, Naples, and Salerno. Empires can still be born in the south, the links of the economy can be strengthened, and the balance of the original accumulation is still incomplete. They should hang WELCOME signs all over the south, from Puglia to Calabria, for the businessmen who want to throw themselves into the cement arena and be invited into the inner circles in Milan and Rome a few years hence. A WELCOME sign of good luck, since many come yet only a few escape the quicksand. I know. And I can prove it. And the new builders, bank and yacht owners, princes of gossip, and kings of whores hide their profits. Perhaps they still have a soul. They're ashamed to declare where their earnings come from. In their model country, the USA, when a businessman becomes a top name in the financial world, when he has fame and success, he summons analysts and young economists to show off his skills and reveals the path he took to victory. Here, silence. Money is only money. And when asked about their success, the big businessmen from a land sickened with the Camorra respond shamelessly, "I bought at ten and sold at three hundred." Someone said that living in the south is like living in paradise. All you have to do is stare at the sky and never look down. Ever. But it's impossible. The expropriation of every perspective has even removed the lines of sight. Every perspective hits up against balconies, attics, mansards, apartments, intertwined buildings, knots of neighborhoods. Around here no one thinks something could fall from the sky. Around here you have to look down. Sink into the abyss. Because there is always another abyss in the abyss. And so when I tread up stairs and across rooms, or when I take the elevator, I can't help but notice. Because I know. And it's a perversion. And so when I find myself among the best, the really successful businessmen, I feel ill. Even though these men are elegant, speak quietly, and vote for leftist politicians. I smell the odor of lime and cement emanating from their socks, their Bulgari cuff links, and their bookshelves. I know. I know who built my town and who is building it still. I know that tonight a train will leave Reggio Calabria and at a quarter past midnight it will stop in Naples on its way to Milan. The train will be packed. And at the station the vans and dusty Punto automobiles will pick up the kids for the new construction sites. An emigration without a fixed point that no one will study or evaluate since it survives only in the footprints of cement dust, nowhere else. I know what the real constitution of my day is, and the wealth of companies. I know how much of the blood of others is in every pillar. I know and I can prove it. I take no prisoners.
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books
Oct 4, 2023 13:02:58 GMT -7
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Post by bear on Oct 4, 2023 13:02:58 GMT -7
I finished "Gomorrah" and have moved on from the Campagnia region to the toe of Italia. Further south in Calabria, "The Good Mothers" details how this regions' mafioso took over the decline of the Sicilian clans in the wake of the notorious 1992 bridge bombing of prosecutor Giovanni Falcone. A gross miscalculation of anti-mafia resolve, the clans outed themselves as an international crime syndicate and drew significant scrutiny and crackdowns. Another clan took advantage of this vacuum and swooped in from the mainland across the Strait of Messina...
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books
Oct 16, 2023 13:14:54 GMT -7
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Post by bear on Oct 16, 2023 13:14:54 GMT -7
Incredible stuff. I'm tired of TV (Except for Loki and One Piece). Now I'm reading "The Lost Dogs" about Michael Vick's dogfighting ring written by Sports Illustrated's Jim Gorant.
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books
Nov 17, 2023 4:11:38 GMT -7
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Post by bear on Nov 17, 2023 4:11:38 GMT -7
The Lost Dogs was good but part 2 is tedious. I did some serious skimming in the individual dog rehab stories once they got past the investigation and trial. One of them was quite sad though and had a tragic ending after lots of great progress.
Now I'm reading A Concise History of Malta. Pretty interesting to learn about this sizeable chunk of Mediterranean history.
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books
Nov 17, 2023 21:06:20 GMT -7
bear likes this
Post by thecosmicbandito on Nov 17, 2023 21:06:20 GMT -7
Been reading (off an on for like 3 months) Confederacy of Dunces. Good book but gotdamn is the main character a humongous turd.
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books
Nov 18, 2023 21:27:55 GMT -7
bear likes this
Post by thecosmicbandito on Nov 18, 2023 21:27:55 GMT -7
Might fuck around and start Dune. Never read it and haven't seen the movies. My entire knowledge of it is that if you walk without rhythm you won't attract the worm, thanks to Fatboy Slim.
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Post by bear on Jan 10, 2024 4:26:54 GMT -7
I just bought Dune in the airport. Then I fucken left it on the plane. So I bought it again at the next airport.
I read Fancy Bear Goes Phishing about computer hacking and security. Very insightful book from a Yale Law prof about the history of the most famous/damaging hacks and the nature of security from the first computer worm in the 80s, T-Mobile hacked in the 2000s aka the Paris Hilton leak, to the DNC hack by Russia.
I started On China by Kissinger this morning before I got called in to work early. I read like 10 pages and learned something new on just about every page so far.
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books
Jan 10, 2024 5:14:00 GMT -7
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bear likes this
Post by danimal on Jan 10, 2024 5:14:00 GMT -7
I'm reading Serena by Ron Rash. It's about loggers and and their employers in western NC during the depression. Pretty good so far. I read a book of short stories by the same author a while back and they were quite good. The last chunk of that book is a follow up chapter to Serena which I started but then I lost the book somewhere.
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books
Jan 12, 2024 12:03:27 GMT -7
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Post by bear on Jan 12, 2024 12:03:27 GMT -7
"On China" is wild af. Stalin started the Korean War by pitting Kim and Mao against eachother. He was fucking around with both of them at the same time.
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books
Jan 16, 2024 6:32:19 GMT -7
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Post by bear on Jan 16, 2024 6:32:19 GMT -7
Chinese history cliff notes: Make China Great Again for 2500 years. They've been using that playbook for a loooooong time
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books
Jan 16, 2024 6:54:15 GMT -7
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higs likes this
Post by bear on Jan 16, 2024 6:54:15 GMT -7
Mao gets pissed off at Khrushchev. The next day Mao schedules their meeting at the pool knowing that homeboy can't swim. Khrushchev is forced to put on those little floatie arm things and resume negotiations. These are the foolish machinations of statesmen setting policy for an entire continent.
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books
Feb 5, 2024 15:36:15 GMT -7
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ferd likes this
Post by bear on Feb 5, 2024 15:36:15 GMT -7
This book is incredible. It's a monster because it's so dense. Kissinger's insight is stunning and thorough, but there are also some naive takes as well which is incredibly surprising. He is almost sympathetic to the despotism and human rights abuses of China and seems to occasionally adopt the lofty condescension of a philosopher-king that Mao Zedong employed which resulted in the deaths of millions and does so with an arrogant disregard for the life of everyday people. Ever the long-winded professor, at times I wish I read the epilogue first so I would have the roadmap of the previous 500 pages when it rendered droll and droned on with aggrandized tales of self-involvement and of course never including any reflections on his own misdeeds, previous cultural ignorance, and bad advice. It's like he wants to be seen as a academic observer as if he wasn't dick deep in the mud giving poor counsel on Cambodia and Vietnam.
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Post by chickenpoop on Feb 5, 2024 15:38:18 GMT -7
I just started reading Intercourse by Andrea Dworkin. I've gone to the dark side just for a peek.
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Post by higs on Mar 8, 2024 8:07:39 GMT -7
I went into a used bookstore looking for Vonnegut and grabbed this. It sucked me in quickly, but damn it got dark. It's a really fast read. I'm curious to see where he's going with it. The first 54 pages have been fragments and the plot has yet to reveal itself.
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books
Mar 8, 2024 9:34:43 GMT -7
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bear likes this
Post by higs on Mar 8, 2024 9:34:43 GMT -7
30 more pages in and this is just how this book is written.
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books
May 7, 2024 11:10:56 GMT -7
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Post by bear on May 7, 2024 11:10:56 GMT -7
A Period of Juvenile Prosperity by Mike Brodie is one of the best books I have ever read. The pages are not numbered. There are 4 pages of text. It's filled with photographs and none of them have captions. Stunning.
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