I originality published this article in April of 2010, and after reading it again I thought: This a timeless piece. So I've decided to run it again with some updates.
By Rich Kozlovich
Spring is here and pest control is about the take off and there will be little time for reflection as there is during the winter months. Actually, I love weekends with really bad weather in the winter months. I can surf the web, read books, write articles, research information that interests me, watch movies, and no one bothers me.
I love watching movies, especially the old movies. My friend, well known writer Alan Caruba, who has now passed, wrote an article that discussed old movies from the "Golden Age of Hollywood", and that made me think back to my youth and my love for the old movies.
I loved everything that was a part of the old movie
scene, especially the great old movie theaters that we had in Cleveland. Even
in the small town in which I grew up the theater was special. The stars were
special then too; John Wayne, Clark Gable, Gary Cooper, and the greatest
swashbuckler of them all….Errol Flynn.
The lights would dim and finally darken, creating that wonderful anticipation
that comes when you know the movie was about to start at last. Even the
previews of coming attractions were great. At the end of the movie people
actually applauded. Actually applauding when the movies started and when
they finished, imagine that. I always thought that was a little stupid when I was a kid,
after all, the actors couldn’t hear it, so why bother? It’s funny, I still wouldn’t
applaud today, and for the same reason, but I miss it.
When the cartoons came on we kids actually cheered, and nothing
could get a rise out of a bunch of kids quite as much as seeing Roy Rogers
riding headlong into the screen atop Trigger followed by his friends chasing
the bad guys. An uncle took me to one of those Saturday matinee Roy Rogers
cowboy movies and swore that he would never make that mistake again. I always
loved the movie, “They Died With Their Boots On”, with Errol Flynn. Talk about
fantasy! That is so far afield from the truth about Custer someone should
have been slapped for it, and yet, I still love it!
Some of the old theaters were real palaces. Cleveland had a number of them slated for demolition. I am really pleased they refurbished them
instead. First, because they were magnificent like the Palace, and it really was
then, and is now, a palace! And secondly because so much of what was great is
torn down and replaced by buildings that are so forgettable, like the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame. Somehow the words Rock and Roll and Hall of Fame shouldn’t
be in the same sentence, but that's another story. Lastly, because they made
me feel great when I was there, and I get those feelings every time I go back.
The men would wear suits and ties and the women wore dresses with hats, and
matching gloves and purses and high heels. The children were dressed in their
Sunday best, because going downtown to the movies was a big deal, and everyone acted that way.
They must have had revivals of older movies even back in the 1940’s, because in
my mind’s eye I can still see the original Tarzan movies with Johnny
Weissmuller and Maureen O’Sullivan. They were originally made between 1932 and
1948. I was only 2 when Johnny Weissmuller made his last Tarzan movie. I must
have been about five when I saw the original 1932 movie in a neighborhood
theater and I never forgot the scene where the pygmies throw everyone down into
the pit to be killed by a gorilla that is later shot full of arrows.
Hopalong Cassidy was my ultimate hero though. I was even called Hoppy by my
childhood friends in those early years, at least until I moved to the farm.
Those years were a large part of my wonder years. I lived in Cleveland and
there were a lot of kids in the neighborhood. We were out and about all day
every day. Even now as I look back on those years, being as young as we were,
I marvel at the immense freedom we had to wander up and down the streets, play
baseball at the playground and best of all…the dump. There was always a
potential treasure to be found in the dump. The world was very different then.
I didn’t realize it then nor did I realize it for many years, but we were all
very much like the “Little Rascals”, which cannot be shown any longer, so I
doubt that younger people even know what I am talking about.
The world has changed. A lot! We don’t dare let the children roam too far too
often because there are so many unsavory and violent people out there. We don’t
dare leave our doors unlocked…even when we are home. In my youth people
actually left their keys in their parked cars with the windows open while they
shopped. Unbelievable today I know. Good manners were not affectations, they
were part of our culture. Please and thank you were expected, and most felt perfectly
content to do so.
It all changed, and not for the better. Since I'm now 76 I must confess that I was a part of
that change. They claim the Baby Boomer Generation started in June of
1946. I was born in July of that year. I was the beginning of the Baby Boomers.
As I said, I remember that I disgustedly thought that it was really stupid to applaud
movies and I said so. The older members of the family gave me a disgusted look
or just shrugged, as if to say: "I shouldn’t have to explain this to you."
Although I did get dressed up for some occasions, I didn’t want to get dressed
up to go anywhere, least of all the movies. A tee shirt, tennis shoes and blue
jeans were good enough for me and if it wasn’t good enough for everyone
else, well that was just tough! As if all of those goody-goody two shoes manners
really mattered. After all, that was just being a phony. A cover up for how
people really felt.
I didn’t realize it then, but all those “phony” manners and decent attire are
an important part of what allows for civilized behavior.
What had happened? Everything changed because this was the
first time in human history the young population became so large the adult
population couldn’t properly absorb them; and we created our own little
sub-culture. After all; we teenagers knew that even our few years experience in
life was worth far more than the decades of experience in life of all the
adults combined.
As this population trend continued this sub-culturing trend continued, and
every few years we had another downward spiral of values, until the American
culture was altered almost beyond recognition. Clearly beyond the recognition
of America’s founding fathers. The most successful culture the world has ever
known was now awash with irrational paradigms that are clearly destructive to
all of humanity.
What has this to do with pest control you're probably asking? Everything! This irrationality extends into every facet of our business and personal lives. The Green Movement, which became the most irrational movement of them all, was born in this crucible and it has now become one of the most corrupting dominant forces of thought and action in the world today.
The socialist monsters of the 20th century (fascism and communism are two side of the same coin, socialism) deliberately murdered over 100 million innocent people. The environmental movement most likely caused the death of that many with the ban on DDT alone.
Fortunately I grew up. I also cringe at many of the things I thought, things I said and things
I did in my youth. I always wonder at these
famous people who, on their death beds, claim that they “have no
regrets”. Well…..I have a lot of regrets. I hope it's because I grew up enough
to recognize my failings and made a determination to correct them and to avoid
repeating them. Part of that process is being able to see that which is real
versus that which is shadow over substance. If we are capable of seeing
ourselves as we really are, then we will have a lot less difficulty in seeing
the rest of the world as it really is.
Everything we are told in the newspapers and the electronic news media is a
lie. These aren’t necessarily lies of commission, (although they're guilty of
that also) they are mostly lies of omission. Even many of our history books
can’t be called anything less than propaganda in order to promote some view or other.
Read two different history books on the same subject from two different people
from two different philosophical paradigms and you wonder if they're reporting
about the same events, and the daily news has much the same problem, only worse.
Everything we are told should bear some resemblance to
what we see going on in reality, and mostly we're lied to. Virtually everything we
are told by environmentalists, and leftists in general, is a lie. If you have a problem with that then get
over it, because those are the facts and we need to start recognizing these people for who they are, what they are and the disasters they've heap on humanity.
A few years back I bought a CD of the original Broadway cast of Camelot and I still
love it. I first saw the original traveling cast of the Broadway musical
Camelot with Kathryn Grayson as Guinevere in 1962 at the Palace, and I walked
out feeling just great. I loved Camelot and it is still my favorite Broadway
production, and I think the greatest Broadway musical ever produced. I can
still sing some of the songs, at least parts of them, although not very well. I saw it again with Robert Goulet as King Arthur thirty years later, and I
walked out feeling just as great as I did after having seen the original
traveling cast, although I knew it wasn’t anywhere near as big, nor as good a
production as the original, with songs left out.
Being insatiably curious is its own reward and its own punishment. I know that
nothing can ever be the same once we are grown, and as we age it really
becomes clear that nothing was a good as we thought it was, and nothing else
can ever be that great again. It wasn’t just the movies that I loved, it was the
time, and it was a golden time. But Camelot really is a myth! Coming to that
realization may take some of the pleasure out of life, but once we can accept
that, it frees us from the shadow of illusion and allows us to see the light of
reality.
That's the reward, and that's the punishment.
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