Posts Tagged ‘fifties’

Chapter 31

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

ANOTHER IDEA PROMOTED, ALTHOUGH NOT CREATED, by think tanks and talk radio bullies was that everything ever reported by the media was slanted. It was liberal. It was suspect. And tainted. And if the so-called news was only the opinion of a bunch of East Coast elites, then everything in the news was just their damn opinion, anyway. And if it’s just a matter of opinion, then Rush’s opinion, and people who liked Rush’s opinion, had just as good opinions as anyone in the liberal news.

With factual history broken down into a contest of who could yell the loudest, anything was rhetorically possible. Now, any fact could point to any conclusion. Republicans could believe the sky was green and no one could stop them. And once the foundations of a shared reality were swept away, those with the loudest voices got to have their way with history, too.

And a voice in Wisconsin, echoed the indignation: “Just like a liberal to complain about the fifties.”
“Oh, but those liberals sure loved the Sixties, didn’t they?”
“Everyone knows that the Sixties are when the company – I mean country — went bad.”
“Everyone but the liberals.”
“In their post-modernist, PC world, the Sixties are when things turned good.”
“For them, race riots are a positive thing.”
“For liberals, hippies swarming the Pentagon were good for America.”
“For liberals, children conceived in the mud of Woodstock are the ultimate concert souvenir.”
“Yes, to liberals, tripping your balls off on tabs of brown acid while sliding naked down mud paths in the rain is what we should do every weekend.”

Chapter 27

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

THE VOICES CATERWAULED AND WAILED across the American night because their listeners knew they were right. They knew they were right and winning was fun. And with a whoosht! Dennis said to Will:

“As if a white liberal should feel guilty about enjoying the Fifties!”
“Just because the South was segregated!” Will said.
“But liberals make a big show of their guilt!”
“They do it for effect!”
“They do it for votes!”
“They do it because it wouldn’t be PC not to!”
“They do it but it’s fake!”
“Because what kind of white people really feel guilty about how things were in the good old days?”

And up high, in a small room on the 16th floor of a high-rise over Cleveland the cheery, outraged voice boomed in miniature from Randy’s small radio. Ben recognized Rush’s voice. How could he not? That bright bluster of incredulity. He’d recognize the voice anywhere.

“What’s an investment firm, anyway?” Ben asked aloud.
“Huh?” Randy said.
“What’s an investment firm? I’ve worked here for months and I don’t even know what an investment firm actually does.”
“It’s a big pile of money,” Randy said, shrugging.
“A big pile of money.”
“Yeah, a big pile of money that people invest in. Mr. Towers and his partners take that money and invest it in companies.”
“Why don’t investors just invest in the companies themselves?”
“I dunno. Because they don’t know what Mr. Towers knows. He’s about to launch a venture capital fund.”
“Really?” Ben didn’t know what a capital venture fund was either.
“Mr. Towers and his partners must be doing something right. This is one of the best investment firms in the country.”
“Oh, yeah.”
“One of the top five.”
“So is this something I can put a couple hundred dollars in?”
Randy smiled. “This isn’t for a couple hundred dollars.”
“Oh.”
“Yeah. It’s for a couple millions dollars. Tower Investments owns whole companies.”
“Oh.”
“Yeah. This isn’t a small time operation.”
“I guess not.”
“Look at an annual report.”

Ben stood up and lifted up his monitor, while Randy pulled one of the annual reports off the stack elevating Ben’s monitor. “Here.”

Ben took it and sat back down. As Rush ranted and railed through the Thursday afternoon, Ben inspected Tower Investment Partners LLP’s 1995 annual report.

He learned Mr. Towers and two other board members had gone to Yale. He learned the firm had invested over three million dollars in website companies alone, taking positions in what they envisioned to be “cornerstone players” in industries. There was the insurance company in Illinois. Regent Insurance. There was the 64 percent of a semiconductor chip company in Thailand.

After a few minutes of careful study, Ben learned he really didn’t care for this kind of thing.

“You see what kind of operation this is,” said Randy. “Mr. Towers even knows Warren Buffett.”

“Who’s that?”
“Only one of the richest men in the world.”
“Oh.”
“Yeah. So you can see why when they call they expect you to come running?”

“I guess so.” Ben flipped the pages. Randy was right about it not being a small time operation. $7.2 million for a company. $21.0 million for another. The firm was worth $6 billion in total? The numbers didn’t even seem real. Especially not compared to the $590 he paid in rent every month.

And because the numbers seemed unreal, they somehow didn’t impress him. The amounts belonged to another world. Ben couldn’t imagine what these guys talked about every day sitting on their pile of money.

He supposed they decided what to buy and what to sell and the rest of the day was just reading reports and watching interest add up. It was as if there was Tower Investments; the people who cared about what Tower Investments did; and then there was Ben.

Not only did Ben not care for the firm’s work, he didn’t even care for people who cared for it.

Everything was so battened down and hush-hushed and done behind closed doors, there was nothing to look at. Nothing to see.

“So you see how big these guys are?” Randy asked.

Ben nodded, feigning reverence. Really, he’d just concluded there was nothing for him at Tower Investments in the long run. Ben knew that his job here could never be anything more than the absence of unemployment to him. Randy watched Ben, apparently waiting for his exclamation of wonder.

Then the phone chirped.

Ben looked: it was Mr. Towers.

“I.T.” Ben said, “I.T!” once he’d gotten the phone to his mouth.
“Can you come over here right way, please?”
“Right away, Mr. Towers.”
Ben turned to leave.
“Take a mint,” Randy said.
“Why?”
“Mr. Towers hates to smell anyone’s breath.”

Don wasn’t sure who was worse: Rush Limbaugh or his callers. They were the same people who thought blacks should have stayed in their place. That’s what those callers had in common. He didn’t trust the white businesses that advertised on his program. They enabled guys like Limbaugh; they condoned him.

The owners of Gold Bond Medicated Itch Cream could forget ever winning Don Attwood’s business.