{"id":157,"date":"2008-10-07T13:56:44","date_gmt":"2008-10-07T18:56:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/?page_id=157"},"modified":"2008-10-07T13:56:44","modified_gmt":"2008-10-07T18:56:44","slug":"does-someone-smell-a-rat","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/?page_id=157","title":{"rendered":"Does Someone Smell a Rat?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">Does Someone Smell a Rat? <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">Random violence is not cool. Arbitrary destruction and aimless vandalism  suck, and are sad comments on one&#8217;s inability to intelligently channel  feelings of anger and aggression. I say this not because of some sort of  Donnie and Marie family values seminar I recently attended, nor do I take  the high moral ground of `wrong for wrong&#8217;s sake&#8217;. I&#8217;ve just been the  recipient of enough of this junk to realize that breaking other people&#8217;s  stuff isn&#8217;t anarchy or chaos, it&#8217;s petty bullshit that makes life tougher  for other people, people you haven&#8217;t even taken the time to get to hate  yet. Far from promoting a sense of anger against The Man,  pointless  destruction does little more than transform everyone around you into a  grumpy asshole who thinks that there should be even more cops on the  street. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">This being said, cleverly targeted destruction is not something I&#8217;m all  together opposed to. I can&#8217;t say I agree with sneak attacks on people.  Bombs are boring, shootings are unoriginal, and hiding in the bushes,  putting a pillowcase over someone&#8217;s head, and beating them with the  claw-end of a hammer is downright cowardly. But if the creative  individual can target the property and deal with the enemy on a  psychological level, plenty of damage can still be done and no one has to  go to the hospital. Prison time, which I highly recommend be avoided  whenever possible, is also a lot less of a probability when you go after  property. Some might call this revenge, I call it justice. I call it  standing up for yourself as a human being. I also call it fun. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">Now, when I say enemy, I don&#8217;t mean someone who just pisses you off. The  enemy must have fucked you over pretty harshly, or else you&#8217;re just an  unhappy person being petty and stupid. You don&#8217;t firebomb the guy with 25  items, using coupons for things he didn&#8217;t buy, paying with a credit card  and getting money back  in the cash only &#8211; 10 items or less line, even  though he desperately deserves it.. You don&#8217;t hire a pack of thugs to  dismember the person you had a one night stand with that suddenly won&#8217;t  return your calls; that&#8217;s your own fault for hooking up with someone  lame. You don&#8217;t destroy a person defending themselves against an attack  you started, and you don&#8217;t send death threats to nice Internet writers  whom you happen to disagree with from time to time. Words don&#8217;t hurt, so  don&#8217;t let them. You must be innocently wronged in a serious way to embark  down the path of revenge. Your enemy must be clear, your attack must be  personal,  your will strong, and your gaze unflinching. And you should  make sure everyone else gets a good laugh out of it in the process. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">Back during a summer of my high school years, I worked as a lifeguard at  a city pool in New Orleans. Now, if you enjoy sitting under the burning  sun in 100+ temperatures, blowing a rusty whistle at little kids to stop  them from drowning each other and keeping the teenagers from drinking  beer in the bathrooms while their parents give you alternating lectures  on how you&#8217;re being too mean, too wimpy, and how you look like a slob, I  would suggest taking up a career in lifeguarding. It combines the  greatest elements of being a janitor, a chemical worker, a plumber, and a  traffic cop. 11 hour days at 5 bucks per hour,  it just can&#8217;t be beat.  The only good thing that can possibly happen is a thunderstorm, in which  case no one&#8217;s allowed to swim and you get to read until it blows over,  but even then you have three dozen surly 10-year-olds nagging you to let  them back in the water. Oh yeah, and if anyone drowns you can get sued.  Great job. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">Around this same time, a friend of mine named Pancho was having problems  with a bonehead named Keva. Keva was about 6 foot 3, a son of rich  parents, stupid as a board, and in love with Pancho&#8217;s girlfriend. Keva  would show up drunk at her house at 3 in the morning and try to break in  to see her. He followed her everywhere, and always tried to start shit  when Pancho was around. Pancho was pretty stocky, but he was at least a  foot shorter that his aggressor and had never been in a fight in his  life, so he just put up with it and tried to avoid Keva whenever possible  (not too easy when we&#8217;d all show up at the same punk shows). As the  incidents escalated, Keva actually tried to punch Pancho through the open  driver side window of a moving car. Things got out of hand once and for  all when Keva ended up punching Pancho&#8217;s girlfriend in the stomach after  she denied him another date. Pancho and I agreed, something must be done. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">Not only was Keva was pretty big himself, he had tons of big friends who  had nothing going for them other than the fact they were big, a condition  that usually manifests itself in belligerence, nastiness, and physical  violence to everyone else. A frontal attack was out of the question. We  needed a weak link in the chain of power. Property. Something that was  beloved by the enemy, almost an extension of the enemy himself. We put  our heads together. A bit of reconnaissance yielded a target, and  synchronized evil smiles spread across our faces: Keva&#8217;s pride and joy;  his brand new BMW 850I. It sat in his parents driveway every night,  begging for a little attention. It was up to us to provide that much  needed affection. But with so many options, what to do? <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">Two days later, as I stumbled into another day work and opened the fence,  I saw that the generous and all-giving Lord provided me with what I  needed floating belly up in the pool: 3 and a half pounds of pure,  drowned, Louisiana water rat. I fell to my knees and gave thanks, stood  back up, got the skimming net, scooped and dumped the dead rodent into an  empty airtight chlorine bucket. I sealed the bucket and put it in the  back of the guard house to let it `ripen&#8217;. The guard house, more of a tar  paper shack filled with pumps for the pool, always reached a good  temperature of 140 degrees by noon, letting the rat slowly steep in it&#8217;s  own juices. After a day, the guard house started stinking, so I put the  pail in 3 plastic garbage bags. That lasted for another day before it  started stinking. I put it in a bigger plastic airtight pail, and 4 more  garbage bags. It still stunk up the guard house, so I hid the bucket in  the woods behind the pool, and forgot about it for a week. When I saw  Pancho again, he asked about our plan. &#8220;Pancho, Keva&#8217;s about to get  another rat for a friend&#8221;. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">We waited until about 2 in the morning, taking the bagged and bucketed  rat to a shopping center near Keva&#8217;s house. Pancho&#8217;s girlfriend had  conned this girl from the city to drive out and help us so no one would  recognize the car. I took off the first bags and opened the largest pail.  The smell made me gag, it  was like rotten garbage boiled in bloody  garlic and horseshit. I opened the second layer of bags. The smell got  worse. I borrowed some perfume from one of the girls to spray on the  collar of my shirt and pulled it up over my nose (to this day, whenever I  smell `Paris&#8217; I think -&#8216;dead rat&#8217;). I finally got to the main pail. The  smell was unbearable. I left the main pail shut and put it in the trunk  of the girl&#8217;s car. Pancho and I ducked down in the back seat and we  pulled out of the shopping center. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">We pulled up across the street from Keva&#8217;s house, a white pillared  mini-mansion in an upscale neighborhood. His dad was a big man at one of  the gas companies, and his mom sat at home and had ugly babies in-between  tirades against the minorities, the environmentalists, and the decline of  American values (I suppose she was too busy preaching values to raise a  son with them). Keva&#8217;s car was parked in the driveway with the, gasp, sun  roof partially open. I said another quiet prayer of thanks, got out of  the girl&#8217;s car, ran around to the trunk, and grabbed the bucket. Pancho  ran into the street to serve as lookout. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">I sprinted over to the car with the sloshing bucket in my hand. I pulled  open the lid and looked inside. The rat was hairless and bloated, stewing  in about 3 inches of rat water. I grabbed the bucket by the bottom and  turned it upside down, dumping its entire contents through the sunroof  onto the beige leather interior of the Beamer.  As I pulled the pail  back, some rat water ran down my arm. I started gagging and threw up all  over the outside of the car, no small mess considering how many bean  burritos I had choked down at Taco Bell previous to the mission.  I  grabbed the lid and put it back on the bucket as I ran back to the  getaway car. The girls had smartly turned the vehicle around to speed our  escape. Pancho was already back inside. I threw the bucket back in the  trunk, jumped into the car, and we took off. Everything went without a  hitch, the getaway was clean. I, unfortunately, wasn&#8217;t very clean, so we  all drove to the pool and went skinny dipping to celebrate. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: helvetica,ariel;\">So what did this act of destruction solve? Not much. Keva freaked out. He  and his friends started an inquisition to find out who did the deed, but  never got more than a laugh from the people he tried to interrogate. The  car was totally ruined. From what I heard, they sold it for cheap and got  some insurance money. Keva eventually gave up on Pancho&#8217;s girlfriend and  began stalking another girl who ended up ODing on speedballs while hiding  out from him. I haven&#8217;t talked to him since, but my friends back home  said that the girl&#8217;s death fucked with him enough to shock him out of  whatever asshole coma he had been in for all those years. Although we  were prime suspects for the rat incident, it was never proven. The four  of us never told anyone what happened. That&#8217;s another thing about  revenge, don&#8217;t brag about it, or if you do, at least until the statute of  limitations  runs out. Then put it up on the Internet for thousands to see. Give  everyone a good laugh; that&#8217;s the best revenge of all. <\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Does Someone Smell a Rat? Random violence is not cool. Arbitrary destruction and aimless vandalism suck, and are sad comments on one&#8217;s inability to intelligently channel feelings of anger and aggression. I say this not because of some sort of Donnie and Marie family values seminar I recently attended, nor do I take the high [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":61,"menu_order":19,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-157","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/157","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=157"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/157\/revisions"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/61"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/blindwino.cyberphreak.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=157"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}