Thursday, November 06, 2025
The Hand That Rocks The Cradle (2025)
Saturday, November 01, 2025
Ballad of a Small Player (2025)
'Reinvention' is perhaps the key word on the poster below.
As we were watching it the word 're-jigging' popped into my head — a re-jigging of one of my favourite contemporary novels, a result of which a lot of what I took to be the meaning of the story has somehow fallen away.
Wednesday, October 29, 2025
All the things that don't belong here...
When I first came to Central America there were many more ways for an outsider to suddenly find themselves completely out of their depth, particularly outside the major towns. These days the whole environment has become markedly shallower.
Thursday, October 23, 2025
Task (HBO)
What bugs me a bit about the kind of biker gangs featured in Task, is that they are dealing in millions, but where exactly does all the money go, other than in corrupting the cops?
Social mobility certainly doesn't seem to be their thing.
The Perfect Neighbor (2025)
The villain of this piece is a textbook example of a stone cold soul, lacking any kind empathy...precisely the kind of uber-creepy presence you would never want to turn up in your own neighbourhood.
There are obvious lessons for Florida police here, for their 'I have to believe both of you' / 'kids will be kids' approach undoubtedly fed into the final escalation.
(If you watch attentively, of all the cops who came to deal with her complaints, there was ONE who applied the correct approach.)
The Long Walk (2025)
Based on Stephen King's very first novel, which he began at college in the sixties and eventually published in 1979 under the pseudonym Richard Bachman.
Sunday, October 19, 2025
Pas de Rois?
Further to all that No Kings exuberance in the former colonies yesterday, a tiny slice of history from Merry Old England...
Saturday, October 18, 2025
Mental Maps
Thursday, October 16, 2025
The Tourism Whirlpool
“Vandals in sandals” was how the Consul memorably referred to tourists in Under the Volcano.
Perhaps the definitive text on how this Vandal invasion tends to pan out each time, is R. W. Butler’s The Concept of a Tourist Area Cycle Evolution: Implications for Management of Resources (1980). One wonders whether Wetback at INGUAT has read it.Butler identified a set of stages, each one leading inexorably to the next...
1) The Exploration Phase > a small group of visitors show up. There are almost no facilities specifically catering for their needs. Transportation, and much else, is rudimentary. They depart or assimilate.
2) The Involvement Phase > word of mouth has increased the numbers and locals have spotted an opportunity to provide a range of new services.
3) The Development Phase > well-funded and well-organised groups, sometimes from outside the country, but almost always from outside the specific location, start to muscle in on the market, displacing the pioneers.
4) The Consolidation Phase > tourism becomes the dominant part of the local economy and people involved in the sector now outnumber everybody else. (A subset of locals and longer-term assimilated outlanders enters the increasingly ‘Pissed Off’ phase.)
5) The Stagnation Phase > a peak has been attained and there are all kinds of associated environmental and social issues emerging, along with unsettling economic distortions across the community.
Of this particular phase Butler noted, “The area will have a well-established image but it will no longer be in fashion.” Nostalgia has become chronic, seemingly endemic even amongst comparative newcomers.
6) The Decline Phase > the writing is on the wall and some of the existing facilities attempt to swerve back to catering for locals or the more permanent kind of outsiders with apartment blocks, gated communities and retiree ghettos.
This is God’s Waiting Room on almost every level; terminal. Yet for a select few there is an available epilogue, a Rejuvination, more like the undead state than a whole new phase of life. (Some of Britain’s old seaside resorts achieved this transition by pitching to niches: Tech in Bournemouth, Gay in Brighton.)
I think most of us can quickly spot which phase any given destination in Central America is currently experiencing.
Though the world has changed a bit overall in other ways since 1980, and I might add some additional (or perhaps just intermediate) phases to the cycle.
Such as ‘Influencer Phase’.
Influencers are tourists who want to be taken for travellers, and they are unquestionably the very worst kind of vandals in sandals.
Their role is to arrive at a place that has already hit one of the later phases and act like the Explorer Phase is still chugging along nicely and to use their social media platforms to propagate this illusion.
I think I first became properly aware of this subculture back at the end of the last decade when I was on a minivan in Oaxaca state.
Many of my fellow 'travellers' were dressed like the pioneering explorers of old, but you could immediately tell that neither physically nor intellectually were they in any manner equipped for the journey.
With a grimace they were enduring its arduousness solely because of the selfie op they anticipated at its conclusion.
The shuttle had to stop several times so that they could be sick.
Tuesday, October 14, 2025
Saint Johnny Foreigner?
Friday, August 29, 2025
Invaders be invaders...
History works on the basis of chosen identity not DNA, inevitably, because for most of history nobody knew about DNA.
It’s why the Battle of Hastings in 1066 was between Anglo-Saxons and an invading army of Frenchmen, even if it wasn’t, not really.
It’s why Obama is an African American and not any other variety of American.
It’s why so called Palestinians are Arabs, because they tell us they are. (And, if they then also claim to be indigenous to their current location, we need to call them out for trying to have their cake and eat it.)
And thus, even if the fanciful notion that Jesus, Mary and Joseph were Palestinians appeals to you, in spite of the fact that the timelines make it impossible that they might have self-identified as such, the one thing they absolutely could not have been was Arabs.
Indeed, if you are the sort of person inclined to regard people of European descent in places like the Americas and Australasia as inhabitants of stolen land, then so too are the Palestinian Arabs in the so called West Bank. This is not something you should be permitted to play both ways for reasons of political convenience.
Invaders be invaders. And we are all of us invaders, one way or another. You possibly need to drop your sanctimonious and frankly moronic historical polarities and start trying to think about how people in general could be convinced to live harmoniously without them.
Nothing good or bad that happened in the past becomes less good or bad over time. There is no virtue (or indeed vice) in temporal proximity. Every one of our deceased historical ancestors is equally dead. It's a level playing field.
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
An idea containing unthinkables...
Earlier this week BBC Mundo published an article about the brave resistance of the people of Gaza in the face of invasion by an army led by Alexander the Great. Fascinating as it was, rather like the recent Metro piece on the 'cultural appropriation' of Hummus, one could sense the underlying determination to distract us from the one historical narrative that the hyper-liberals seem hyper-determined to suppress at all costs, that of Arab theocratic colonialism.
For those of us who long for peace in the Near East (not least for the peace and quiet that this might engender) it seems evident that the realisation of Palestinian Arab national aspirations will be a prerequisite for longer-term concord.
Yet these national aspirations, such as they are, have become bound up with the idea of Palestine, itself a composite of the aforementioned unmentionable historical narrative, indeed a version of it in modern, radicalised format, and thus so infused with both Jihadist extremism, anti-westernism and antisemitism, it is truly hard to see right now how they might be realised any time soon without feeding the fascist beast, so to speak.
And the worst part is of course that this rather toxic supremacist idea has fostered a mirror image of itself within Israel, such that a nation which was essentially tolerant and socialist for much of its early history has adopted a virulently defensive posture comprising its own undeniably supremacist gestures.
This has of course only enhanced the fundamental incompatibility at the heart of the conflict, and even if some territorial solution could be found along the lines that the majority of European bien pensants have long hoped for, there is an unwillingness on their part to acknowledge that the idea of Palestine contains additional incompatibilities with the formalised collective fictions which currently prevail in the Arab and wider Islamic world, and that the Jews and their doggedly-defended civic rights are really not the sole problem here.
Many of those who currently self-bamboozle with the idea of Palestine are out there calling out the worst effects of Israel's 'self-defence', often mis-appropriating historically-specific and highly-loaded terms like Apartheid and Holocaust, and one is inclined to surmise that they do so to a large extent in order not to have to pause to consider that their own central idea promises all these supremacist side-effects in a radically purer form: genocide, ethnic cleansing, discrimination, gangsterism and state-sponsored evils of the more obvious varieties.
To appreciate what a sovereign Palestinian state might portend, one only has to consider the already marginalised and oppressed state of several highly vulnerable minority communities in Gaza: LGBTQ+, facing intimidation and worse, Christians, facing forced conversion and a pressure to leave, and black Palestinians, descendants of the African slaves that the Ottomans kept in to the 20th century (another stream of history that the mists have enveloped) who face all kinds of systemic racism and exclusion and are predominantly concentrated in a Gaza City neighbourhood sometimes referred to as al-Abeed, “the slaves.”
Indeed anyone who rushes to denigrate Israel as an 'Apartheid state' should pause to ponder the fuller implications of From the river to the sea, Palestine will be 'FREE'.
Today the 'Nakba' is primarily used to refer to the displacement and ethnic cleansing of Arabs by Israel after the 1948 war, or so says Wikipedia, at best an over-simplification of what actually happened, but at the time the tragedy referred to was not the loss of land, but the cosmic shame of failing to wipe out the 'zionist entity'.
And the fact that a greater number of Jews were simultaneously ethnically-cleansed from locations around the nearby Islamic world is yet another unmentionable in progressive circles today.
The displaced Palestinians, most of whom were complicit in a failed attempt at radical ethnic cleansing in 1948, were 'rewarded' with permanent, heritable refugee status. The displaced Jews' equivalent reward was, in effect, Israel. Neither have had anywhere else to go since the Arabs' ill-advised attempt to bypass the UN compromise.
Even if the competing supremacisms are now somehow suppressed and the Palestinians accept a territorial compromise, simultaneously surrendering that seriously problematic 'right of return' (as once did those many millions of Germans shunted lastingly westwards at the end of WWII), there would remain the matter of how they would treat the Jews of Judea, a continual presence in that particular geographic space since both it and they acquired the name.
One is inclined to think that this population would end up being lumped in legally with the so-called settlers, and their eventual fate marked by the merest of shrugs by the 'international community'. Though the zombie-progressives would surely cheer on a successful 'de-colonisation' event with guttural enthusiasm.
(With regard to Elica's last point in the text with the white background, I'll add that the most gobsmackingly racist society I have ever encountered on my travels is socialist Cuba, where people of predominantly African descent have long been formally excluded from certain sections of the economy and where one constantly hears racist tropes being openly shared in 'polite' conversation.)
Saturday, August 16, 2025
Together (2025)
A fork in the road...
Blame Game
The vast majority of positions people are taking regarding the conflict in the Middle East are basically silly and unhelpful.













