Martians,
Killer Bees, Mutant Pigs and Hurricanes
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Not many of
us will remember, well, because not many of us were around, in 1938 in New
Jersey when Orson Welles adapted the H. G. Wells classic, “The War of the
Worlds” for a special Halloween radio broadcast over the “Mercury Theatre on
the Air”.
Since the
story of Martians invading earth seemed too silly and too improbable, more
suitable for comic books, Welles asked his writers to gussy it up a bit, give
it some bells and whistles. What they came up with was a minute-by-minute,
recorded at the scene, rendition of a fake-news bulletin, the best part being
the sound effects.
And panic
ensued. The radio station, the police, hospitals, the mayor, the governor were
deluged with phone calls. Otherwise sensible citizens armed themselves and set
up bunkers, in fear of being zapped to dust.
I’m certain
that we, being more knowledgeable and more sophisticated, would never be taken
in by such hogwash today. Right?
Really?
Martians armed with heat rays land on earth and conquer the whole planet. Well.
The only
logical thing to come from this story, seems to me, is evidence that fear is a
marvelous tool, easily manipulated.
Hot on my
musings of this bit of history, an email from one of my Canadian friends hit my
inbox.
He sent me
an article stating “researchers” announce that mutant wild pigs are invading the
cities of Alberta, (Just north of Montana, folks. Get prepared!) thus
announcement motivating hordes of otherwise staunch and stolid Canadians to rush
to the gun stores to arm themselves.
Two thoughts
came to me in quick succession. First I couldn’t remember the name of Wells’ novel
nor the year of the radio broadcast—was it in the 30s or the 40s? Secondly, I remembered
a few years ago when researchers announced that “killer bees” were moving north
wiping out everything in their path? Logically, I did some research.
Near as I can
figure, after five minutes on each topic with Google, (See above; see below.) the
Killer Bee craze started from a television show presented as a fake
“eco-documentary” I kid you not. That generated a series of ultra-silly movies
in the 70s and 80s, including a really dumb movie whereby the bees were sprayed
with “eco-friendly poison” (I lifted those words from a quote.), proving that
dumb has always been with us.
Then in the
90s, killer bee fear ramped up again, said bees still coming from South America
by way of Africa—don’t ask me. So we rushed to empty the store shelves of Raid
and other poisons. I don’t know why we didn’t think of scatter shot.
Gather
around, my friends, I have a solution.
TURN OFF THE
RADIO!
(“Radio”
used here to cover multiple forms of media.)
That was my
foray into “scientific research” and I promise to stay out of the research field
forevermore.
Since I
generally talk about things requiring no research, I’ll conclude with weather
observations, being obsessed like any good Montana transplant, with weather.
Hurricane
Agatha, our first of the season, kind of sneaked up on us. She grew up, matured,
from vague clouds in the morning to tropical storm in the evening to earning
her name overnight.
I confess to
ugly and utter selfishness here. When I see a hurricane that close to the
coast, I get excited. It means we will probably get peripheral rains in a few
days. Not cyclone rains. Just rains. Which we need badly.
What I
overlook (selfishly) is the devastation wrought upon the coastal towns, the
people who live there battling high winds and floods, who lose houses, jobs,
and often lives. None of those people in the path of Agatha are saying, “Oh,
good, a hurricane.”
Other than a
sincere Mea Culpa, that’s Latin for I’m really sorry, I don’t know how to
change my brain. I could say, “Oh, look, horrors. A hurricane!” And with my
grandiose superpowers, based on mutations of the Martians’ heat rays, try to
zap the hurricane out of existence before it wreaked havoc.
But I’d be
lying. I’d really be thinking, “Oh, look, a hurricane! Good, we’ll get rain.”
I’m human. And human isn’t always pretty.
Agatha hit
landfall early, saving me from an overload of guilt, may or may not bring us a
smattering of moisture. Meanwhile, I check the NOAA hurricane site daily.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
June 2, 2022
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