Recently, I received a model of DS9
which I had ordered through e-Bay,
which was wrapped up in an old copy of
the New York times, which is a
newspaper. I saw an alarming article
stating that large chunks of masonry
were falling off some of the older
buildings. As bad luck would have it
in such a crowded city, several of
these chunks, tragically, failed to
land on the boss of Paramount. The article quoted experts as saying
that the solution to the falling-chunk
problem was to inspect old buildings.
With all due respect, that is the
stupidest thing I have ever heard.
Inspections are not the answer. With
falling chunks, as with so many
problems afflicting modern urban
society, the only lasting solution is
to identify the "root cause" of the
problem. And that cause is: gravity. I have been following this issue for
many years, and in my opinion gravity
is getting worse than ever. For
example, last year I read several
articles from various publications
concerning an incident in the Sea of
Japan wherein a Japanese fishing boat
was allegedly sunk by a falling cow.
Yes. According to these articles,
which I swear I'm not making up, what
apparently happened was the crew of a
Russian military cargo jet had stolen
some cows in Siberia and were flying
them home when the cows became upset,
perhaps because there was no in-flight
movie. So the cows stampeded, and the crew,
fearing that the plane would crash,
opened the cargo door and let the cows
run out of the plane at an altitude of
30,000 feet, which is somewhat in
excess of the Recommended Safe Falling
Distance for Cows if 1.3 inches. So
you had these cows raining down on the
Sea of Japan, and one of them,
unfortunately, failed to land on the
boss of Paramount. But it did
allegedly strike the Japanese fishing
boat, which sank. The fishermen all
survived, although I'm betting they
had an unpleasant talk with their
insurance agent. I don't know about you, but when I
read about a tragedy like this, the
phrase that comes to my mind is "major
motion picture". I'm thinking of
something along the lines of Titanic.
You'd have a pair of star-crossed
Japanese fisherpersons played by Kate
Winslet and Leanardo DiCaprio, and
just when you think they're going to
overcome the obstacles facing them,
they hear, in the distance, the
chilling sound that mariners
throughout the ages have always feared
most of all..."moo"...and then WHAM,
the boat is struck by a hurtling
Hereford travelling in excess of 100
miles per hour. For the remaining 125
minutes of the movie, the lovers float
romantically around on the wreckage as
Leonardo proclaims his undying love
for Kate and tenderly brushes chunks
of brisket from her hair. But getting back to the worsening
gravity problem: I wish I could tell
you that it's limited to cows. But
unfortunately I cannot, not in the
light of yet another article which
states that on Aug.25, last year,
Gloria Daniels, 68, was working in her
garden with a young neighbour boy when
she was hit by a falling tomato. Then
the boy was hit by a tomato. Then
tomatoes, more than 30 of them, came
raining down all over her yard.
Friends, neighbours and the media were
called in to investigate, but nobody
could figure out where the
tomatoes...which appeared to be
falling straight down out of the
sky...were coming from. Rob Terry,
the reporter who wrote the article,
states that, while on the scene, he
personally was struck by a tomato, and
although he quickly investigated, he
could find no evidence that it was
hurled by pranksters. I called Gloria Daniels recently and
asked her if anybody had come up with
an explanation for the falling
tomatoes, and she said nobody
had..."It's a mystery," she said. I
asked her if she had been in touch
with anybody at The X-Files, and she
said she'd never heard of it. This is
a shame if you ask me because this
incident could be the basis for a
terrific episode. Of course, to make
it sufficiently dramatic, they might
have to alter a few facts slightly.
They'd have some scene in an abandoned
warehouse, wherein agents Scully and
Mulder, their faces tense, their guns
held out in front of them, are going
from darkened room to darkened room,
stalking...and being stalked by
a...mutant bloodsucking zucchini the
size of Shaquille O'Neal. But my central point is that, wherever
these tomatoes were coming from, they
would never have represented a threat
to innocent people, and neither would
the cows, and neither would the New
York building chunks, if they had not
been attracted to Earth by gravity.
FACT: Gravity is a contributing
factor in nearly 73 percent of all
accidents involving falling objects.
And yet the so-called "government"
does nothing! So I guess it's up to
you and me. Me, I'm going to lie
down. End.