Wait till next year?
The best and worst of 1999 -- an undeserving
finale to the century, never
mind the millennium
by Barry Crimmins
AND THE STORY of the year for 1999 was . . . the year 1999! As we
await the click that will change the fourth column in the calendrical odometer
for the first time in a thousand years, there is no doubt that preparing to
celebrate the 2000th anniversary of Christendom's successful effort to decide
when and how we count sunrises was, itself, our biggest news.
Of course, as countless bores have impatiently pointed out, a millennium
doesn't really end until the thousandth year expires. We are now just
completing the 999th year of the second millennium, and the 99th year of the
20th century. So wait until 2001 to get your real ya-yas out. But this New Year
is, and should be, a big deal anyway, because at the stroke of midnight, we'll
leave the years that begin with "19" and enter the years that start with "20."
Very few human beings other than a couple of yogurt pitchpeople from what was
once Soviet Georgia, Bob "The Human Stigmata" Hope, and perhaps a US senator
from South Carolina (Strom Thurmond jokes are getting mighty old, aren't they?)
have any recollection of anything other than the 19s. So it's boorish to
quibble.
That said, I will stick with the nitpickers on the technical point that it is
not yet the century's or the millennium's end. As terrible as the past 1000
years have been, I'm not budging from my little turf in time before it's
absolutely necessary. So while you all advance boldly into the brave new world,
I am going to spend the next 12 months absorbing the old, storing up memories
of those long-gone pages on the calendar that were so incompetently peeled away
by 20th-century humanity.
Besides, once we make the move into the next 1000 years, we will all start
aging faster than dogs. An immutable law of nature is about to be compounded:
the older you are, the more quickly your life evaporates.
Part of the reason I don't want to call 1999 the capper of the century is that
it really wasn't much to look at or live through. Even we natives of this
passing era will be amazed when we look back at the frail superstitions and
hearty fears from which we formed our world-view waaaay back in '99.
Nineteen-ninety-nine began while the world watched breathlessly to see whether
President Bill Clinton's career would climax prematurely, but he held firm and
maintained his grip on the rudder of state while beating off impeachment
proceedings (please let us now leave the crotch double-entendre on the ash heap
of history). At the darkest moment on the very eve of the trial that would
decide his fate, this selfless leader took the time to order the bombing of
Iraq, a whim about which he had rattled sabers for several months but indulged
only at the exact moment the Iraqis were distracted by the proceedings in
Washington. And to think people once questioned his competence to command the
military!
And command Clinton did again and again throughout the year, directing US-led
NATO forces in strikes that resulted in bombs being dropped everywhere from a
New Jersey forest to a Belgrade television station. It appeared the president
might have finally found something he likes better than sex. Many secretly
hoped that he would relieve his itchy trigger finger once more to punish
Indonesia for its decades of murder in East Timor, but, alas, the president
restricted his wrath to Southwest Asia and Southern Europe.
Cyber-bucking the system
Speaking of megalomania, in '99 Bill Gates and his Microsoft empire were put on
trial by the US Justice Department and found to be a monopoly (first Reagan's
Alzheimer's and now this!).
That the government even remembered that there was such a thing as an
anti-trust suit was remarkable, considering how many corporations have been
absorbed by other corporations. As '99 ends, and ExxonMobil becomes a reality,
we have to wonder how long it will be before we start filling up our Fordrolets
at their self-service stations.
In a videotaped deposition for the Microsoft case, Gates provided a stark
reminder of why O.J. didn't testify at his criminal trial. Gates's lame attempt
to explain away his corporation's sinister efforts to force the entire world to
use Microsoft's obscenely non-cooperative operating system and clunky Internet
Exploiter Web browser was easily the funniest video on the Net since the
original South Park Christmas bootleg. I'd write more about it, but Word
keeps crashing.
On the other hand, it was equally humorous to see outfits such as Sun
Microsystems and Netscape portrayed as gallant little underdogs. But then,
compared to Microsoft, the European Union is a gallant little underdog.
In '99 the Internet loomed large, dominating headlines, inflaming the stock
market, and allowing us to make our bad last-minute holiday-gift decisions from
the comfort of our homes.
At least we understand how to use the shopping sites. It used to be that once
in a while you'd see an ad on TV and think, "Now who the hell is going to buy a
mainframe computer because they saw a commercial for it during a football
game?" Nowadays we get one commercial after another for Web sites and products
that seem to have only one thing in common: it is nearly impossible to tell
what the hell they are.
These elaborate and expensive TV commercials usually start with a rainy-night
scene or a shot of the desert in the baking sun. Then the voice-over starts
lamenting about cutthroat competition and how dizzy you can get trying to
figure out the future. Then, with a slamming noise, they plug a Web site:
www.slagsource.com! And you think, "What in hell is a slagsource?" When you're
next at your computer, you don't remember to check out slagsource.com, and you
don't really think about it again until you read in the paper the next week
that the 26-year-old multibillionaire who founded slagsource.com has just
purchased the Rose Bowl and plans to convert it to one of those places with the
ramps for those X-Games weirdoes.
How anyone can make money selling unidentifiable services, much less find
enough extra scratch for saturation advertising during the World Series, is
baffling. We may figure out what has happened only when this whole thing goes
bust and venture capitalists find themselves out on the street selling Apples
and dodging people jumping from Windows.
As easily as the 1999 bread rose for dot-commerce entrepreneurs, there was
still a group of capitalists who profited more mightily in a few weeks than all
of Silicon Valley's 250,000 millionaires have since the dark days of the
segregated circuit. Who'd have guessed that the most profitable businesses of
the year would be flower stands in the late John F. Kennedy Jr.'s SoHo
neighborhood?
JFK Jr.'s spectacular crash was not the only mishap off the New England coast
this year; an EgyptAir flight also apparently was taken directly into the
concrete-hard ocean. The only explanation for the disaster that has been
(forgive the term) floated is a somewhat dubious "Allah is my co-pilot" theory
that a religious-zealot crewman intentionally crashed the plane.
Rudy loves New York
It was a shame that someone didn't think to leave canned food or clothing for
New York's homeless population in front of the Kennedy brownstone. The sorely
beset could have used a break, considering the hell they were being put through
by New York's mayor, Rudolph Giuliani, my choice for 1999 Thug of the Year. Not
only did Mussliani take the bold step of making it illegal for the city's
disenfranchised to sleep on the streets, but he also did it at a time when
homeless people who move into the city's overcrowded and dangerous shelters are
subject to indentured city servitude at far from living wages in exchange for
subhuman lodging.
The nicest thing you can say about the Dictator of No-Fun City is that he is a
close personal friend of George Steinbrenner.
The myth that Republicans are opposed to frivolous lawsuits was exploded when
Mussliani attempted to close a show at the Brooklyn Museum of Art because a
dunged-up rendition of the Virgin Mary offended him. Rudy lost the suit, but it
didn't stop him from continuing to splatter the Bill of Rights with his own
feces at every opportunity.
Alas, Rudy's NYC is an oversize microcosm of this country in 1999. Almost
everywhere, the poor are oppressed and the wealthy are over-represented. The
wealthy's paranoid fears are appeased while the poor's basic needs and rights
are ignored and trampled. In fact, the mistreatment of the poor in New York is
almost at the direct behest of the highfalutin who got tired of having their
days impinged upon by glances of impoverished misery from, as well as
. . . shudder . . . actual contact with, homeless people.
What once was a city full of diverse people and businesses is slowly losing its
individuality as it is made over into a mall in which suburban Repubs like NY
governor George Pataki feel safe and at home. Where isn't that happening?
Here's some good news. Giuliani is headed out of New York and into the national
arena if he can beat Hillary Clinton in a likely match-up for Senator Daniel
Patrick Moynihan's Washington barstool . . . er, US Senate seat.
There should be a huge voter turnout because everyone hates at least one of the
candidates, who have more negatives between them than the Kodak archives in
Rochester.
Book 'em
All year, from coast to coast, the rich conspicuously consumed to the point of
engorgement. If poor people were caught on the streets with just a fraction of
the drugs that could be found in an audit of most any penthouse gathering, they
would be swooped up by racial-profiling police departments and put away until
it was safe to drink tap water. When the Man isn't busy arresting vagrants,
he's putting adolescents into a system that spirals them ever downward until
they're just more pained faces among the more than two million
incarcerated Americans.
Poor kids who avoid the lure of drug-provided artificial distraction still have
to negotiate city streets filled with armed thugs who have a state-sanctioned
mandate to ignore these children's human rights and shake them down because
they make the neighborhood less attractive to the moneyed few.
As we enter the last year of Millennium II, jails have become the waste
receptacles of America's campaign of economic cleansing. Penal institutes seem
the only hope of economic redemption for burned-out mill towns that have been
abandoned by multinational companies in their desire to drive the work force
harder and longer for less and less money. So poor boys from the country become
prison guards and get paid to ride herd over their impoverished urban brethren.
The upside of this is that there is manufacturing happening again in America's
mill towns -- in prisons, where workers are knocking back upward of 11 cents an
hour and corporations are profiteering from their de facto slave labor. Come to
think of it, maybe I should leave this century now.
Even lesser evils
There is a presidential election headed our way, and it took itself out for a
1999 shakedown cruise that narrowed the field of viable candidates to replace
Clinton to four men (see "Game, Set, Match," page 8).
Texas governor George Dubyahoo Bush played rope-a-dope for the first several
rounds of the fight for the Republican 2000 presidential nomination. It proved
to be a wise strategy because no matter how many blows Bush sustained, it was
obvious he's ineligible for brain damage. More important, he held off
participating in debates until former family employee Dan Quayle withdrew from
the race. After seeing Dubyahoo's performance in his first few clashes with the
rest of the Republican field, it was obvious that Quayle had rejoined the Bush
team -- as a debate coach.
Perhaps Bush's lackluster identity is an asset in a field of GOP candidates
that includes such borderline personalities as the poster child for
self-loathing, Alan Keyes; Gary Bauer, who is Pat Buchanan without the social
skills; and Steve Forbes, the homophobic heir to a homosexual's fortune. Along
with Bush, the only other legitimate threat to win the executive branch is the
ill-tempered Senator John McCain of Arizona, who, like Bob Dole, thinks
Americans owe people with bad luck in wars and good connections in the
corridors of power a home at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Governor Bush has been accused repeatedly of having been a major cocaine user
in his younger days, but we must remember that when he was allegedly doing a
lot of blow, most everyone who lived at the CIA director's home was knee deep
in the stuff.
In a recent appearance, Bush cited Jesus Christ as his greatest influence.
Apparently the death-penalty-happy Texas governor figured that if execution was
good enough for Christ, it's good enough for a measurable portion of the
citizenry of the Lone Star State. "The sparks at night are big and bright --
ZAP-ZAP-ZAP -- deep in the bowels of Texas
penitentiaries. . . ." Oh, wait, the electric chair is in
Florida, and it's Jeb Bush's specialty, isn't it? Apparently the
lethal-injection chamber is the one place where Dubyahoo is happy to admit to
having a major drug habit.
Current vice-president and noted pro-war environmentalist Al Gore had to
reinvent himself in 1999 after he began to lose ground to Bill Bradley for the
Democratic presidential nod. Faster than you could sing a chorus of "Tennessee
Jed," Gore relocated his campaign to his euphemistic home state, even though
the Washington-raised politician has spent less time there than the average
cask of Jack Daniel's.
Former senator Bradley is the Wall Street darling and former Nicaraguan contra
supporter who not so long ago wasn't even sure he was a Democrat anymore. He
shouldn't have worried. Nobody is. After eight years of Clinton and Gore's
welfare baiting, conscience-free trading, military escalating, fat-cat
fellating, and administrating, it was hard to find anyone anywhere who could
even remember who made up the traditional Democratic voter base. As ever, the
problem with the upcoming presidential election is that someone will win the
damned thing.
Underdog bite
In 1999, McCarthy-era fink film director Elia Kazan was honored with a
lifetime-achievement award at the Academy Awards ceremony. Kazan remained
collected, and his tail swished behind him only a few times as he spoke. As he
accepted the award, hundreds of people who coulda been contenders in Hollywood
but had their careers trashed because of the cowardice and duplicity of
quislings like Elia Kazan had to be thinking, "It was you, Elia."
Bullied underdogs make good copy as noble victims, but now that we're in a time
of electronic and technological equalizers, it is becoming clear that, given
the chance, dorks are just as likely to be bullies as any other clique in
school. Several times in '99, the Net was fouled with viruses intended to wreak
havoc with millions of unsuspecting people's computers. A life's work gets
destroyed, a small business is ruined, art is trashed, just because some
seething dink decides to terrorize less expert, unsuspecting computer users. I
am pretty soft on crime, but people who maliciously set out to vandalize and
destroy other little people's work and property just because they couldn't get
a prom date deserve whatever they get.
And 1999 proved to be a dangerous year for people at random in places much less
virtual than the online world. High-school students in Colorado, day traders in
Atlanta, Baptists in Texas, and children at a Jewish Community Center in Los
Angeles all saw their lives go from mundane to mayhem in just a few insane
seconds. Even a Xerox office in Hawaii was shot up by a copycat criminal.
This year, the revenge of the nerds became more and more dangerous. Anyone who
feels wronged or slighted can amass enough firepower with his allowance or
severance pay or credit card to hold off the Mexican army for a few days. I
guess it could have been worse. Had the deadly dorks from Columbine High (I
won't gratify their lust for fame by using their names) funneled their
dorkiness into capitalist Net venturing, they might have gotten lucky and,
after an initial public offering of stock, had billions and billions to put
into weapons of mass destruction. Then we'd all be dead. For that matter, I
don't know when Bill Gates's next high-school reunion takes place, but I
promise I won't be within three time zones of the soirée.
E-hope
Of course, not everything related to computers and the Net is weird and
foreboding. As I wrote this, I received an e-mail from a friend telling me
about the United Nations online project to battle hunger. All you have to do is
go to this site and click a button that leads you to a page with some banners
for some corporate sites. Every day that you return to that site and click the
button, another hungry person receives a meal from funds collected from the
advertisers. It costs you no more than the time it takes to see some banners on
your Bill Gates-controlled Web browser. So bookmark
http://www.thehungersite.com -- and spread the word.
The electronic revolution that continued unabated this year wasn't just about
corporate greed, mysterious Web ads, and Ponzi-scheme stock deals. The
corporate behemoths have sold us a lot of stuff that we can now use to supplant
the sanitized version of the world we receive from networks and publications
that are nothing more than house organs contrived to spin everything with
corporate English. Average people can now actively record and comment on
history by using the computers, modems, video and digital cameras, and software
that we have been told we couldn't live without. For once, the corporate
pitchpeople were on to something.
In late 1999, when the World Trade Organization came to Seattle and the police
acted like Hessians by attempting to quash free speech, legal assembly, and
legitimate dissent, we were able to learn the real story via the Internet. So
instead of seeing the Battle in Seattle as just a riot by fringe lunatics, we
understood that there was a broad coalition of protesters there to raise
awareness about the lowered environmental, worker-safety, and medical standards
that come with the WTO's planned wave of unbridled greed without borders. When
the mainstream press showed us images of crazed activists, we were able to
learn that those who did become crazy did so after the police started the riot,
just like in Chicago in 1968. And again, the whole world was watching, but this
time it had a whole hell of a lot better footage.
The protests and the electronic grassroots networking from Seattle furnished
the most hopeful political news that has shaken this country in years. As much
as I will miss this screwed-up century, I know I will enter the next with at
least a few people who not only will tell the devil he's a liar, but will be
able to prove it.
Happy Old Century! Happy New Year!
n
Barry Crimmins is a monologist, social commentator, and frequent contributor
to the Phoenix.