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My
Mother and I Would Like to Know
by William S. Burroughs
[From
Evergreen Review Reader #67, June 1969.]
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The
uneasy spring of 1988. Under the pretext of drug control, suppressive
police states have been set up throughout the Western world. The
precise programming of thought, feeling, and apparent sensory
impressions by the technology outlined in bulletin 2332 enables
the police states to maintain a democratic facade from behind
which they loudly denounce as criminal perverts and drug addicts
anyone who opposes the control machine. Underground armies operate
in the large cities, enturbulating the police with false information
through anonymous phone calls and letters. Police with drawn guns
erupt at the senator's dinner party, a very special dinner party
too, that would tie up a sweet thing in surplus planes.
"We
been tipped off a nude reefer party is going on here. Take the
place apart, boys, and you folks keep your clothes on or I'll
blow your filthy guts out."
We
put out false alarms on the police short wave directing patrol
cars to nonexistent crimes and riots which enables us to strike
somewhere else. Squads of false police search and beat the citizenry.
False construction workers tear up streets, rupture water mains,
cut power connections. Infra-sound installations set off every
burglar alarm in the city. Our aim is total chaos.
Loft
room, map of the city on the wall. Fifty boys with portable tape
recorders record riots from TV. They are dressed in identical
grey flannel suits. They strap on the recorders under gabardine
topcoats and dust their clothes lightly with tear gas. They hit
the rush hour in a flying wedge, riot recordings on full blast,
police whistles, screams, breaking glass, crunch of night sticks,
tear gas flapping from their clothes. They scatter, put on press
cards, and come back to cover the action. Bearded Yippies rush
down a street with hammers, breaking every window on both sides,
leave a wake of screaming burglar alarms, strip off the beards,
reverse collars, and they are fifty clean priests throwing gasoline
bombs under every car - WHOOSH a block goes up behind them. In
fireman uniforms, arrive with axes and hoses to finish the good
work.
In Mexico, South and Central America, guerrilla units are forming
an army of liberation to free the United States. In North Africa,
from Tangier to Timbuktu, corresponding units prepare to liberate
Western Europe and the United Kingdom. Despite disparate aims
and personnel of its constituent members, the underground is agreed
on basic objectives. We intend to march on the police machine
everywhere. We intend to destroy the police machine and all its
records. We intend to destroy all dogmatic verbal systems. The
family unit and its cancerous expansion into tribes, countries,
nations, we will eradicate at its vegetable roots. We don't want
to hear any more family talk, mother talk, father talk, cop talk,
priest talk, country talk or party talk. To put it country simple,
we have heard enough bullshit.
I
am on my way from London to Tangier. In North Africa I will contact
the wild boy packs that range from the outskirts of Tangier to
Timbuktu. Rotation and exchange is a keystone of the underground.
I am bringing them modern weapons: laser guns, infrasound installations,
Deadly Orgone Radiation. I will learn their specialized skills
and transfer wild boy units to the Western cities. We know that
the West will invade Africa and South America in an all-out attempt
to crush the guerrilla units. Doktor Kurt Unruh von Steiplatz,
in his four-volume treatise on the authority sickness, predicts
these latter-day crusades. We will be ready to strike in their
cities and to resist in the territories we now hold. Meanwhile
we watch and train and wait.
I
have a thousand faces and a thousand names. I am nobody I am everybody.
I am me I am you. I am here there forward back in out. I stay
everywhere I stay nowhere. I stay present I stay absent.
Disguise is not a false beard, dyed hair, and plastic surgery.
Disguise is clothes and bearing and behavior that leaves no questions
unanswered... American tourist with a wife he calls "Mother"...
old queen on the make... dirty beatnik... marginal film producer...
Every article of my luggage and clothing is carefully planned
to create a certain impression. Behind this impression I can operate
without interference for a time. Just so long, and long enough.
So I walk down Boulevard Pasteur handing out money to guides and
shoe-shine boys. And that is only one of the civic things I did.
I bought one of those souvenir matchlocks clearly destined to
hang over a false fireplace in West Palm Beach, Florida, and I
carried it around wrapped in brown paper with the muzzle sticking
out. I made inquiries at the Consulate:
"Now
Mother and I would like to know."
And
"Mother and I would like to know" in American Express
and the Minzah pulling wads of money out of my pocket "How
much shall I give them?" I asked the vice-consul, for a horde
of guides had followed me into the Consulate. "I wonder if
you've met my congressman Joe Link?"
Nobody
gets through my cover, I assure you. There is no better cover
than a nuisance and a bore. When you see my cover you don't look
further. You look the other way fast. For use on any foreign assignment
there is nothing like the old reliable American tourist cameras
and fight meters slung all over him.
"How
much shall I give him, Mother?"
I
can sidle up to any old bag, she nods and smiles it's all so familiar
"must be that cute man we met on the plane over from Gibraltar
Captain Clark welcomes you aboard and he says: 'Now what's this
form? I don't read Arabic.' Then he turns to me and says 'Mother
I need help.' And I show him how to fill out the form and after
that he would come up to me on the street this cute man so helpless
bobbing up everywhere."
"What's
he saying, Mother?"
"I
think he wants money."
"They
all do." He turns to an army of beggars, guides, shoe-shine
boys, and whores of all sexes and makes an ineffectual gesture.
"Go
away! Scram off!"
"One
dirhem Meester."
"One
cigarette."
"You
want beeg one Meester?"
And
the old settlers pass on the other side. No they don't get through
my cover. And I have a lot of special numbers for emergency use...
Character with wild eyes that spin in little circles believes
trepanning is the last answer pull you into a garage and try to
do the job with an electric drill straight away.
"Now
if you'll kindly take a seat here."
"Say
what is this?"
"All
over ina minute and you'll be out of that rigid cranium."
So
word goes out stay away from that one. You need him like a hole
in the head. I have deadly old-style bores who are translating
the Koran into Provençal or constructing a new cosmology
based on "brain breathing." And the animal lover with
exotic pets. The CIA man looks down with moist suspicious brow
at the animal in his lap. It is a large ocelat its claws pricking
into his flesh, and every time he tries to shove it away the animal
growls and digs in. I won't be seeing that Bay of Pigs again.
So
I give myself a week on the build-up and make contact. Colonel
Bradly knows the wild boys better than any man in Africa. In fact
he has given his whole life to youth and, it would seem, gotten
something back. There is talk of the devil's bargain and in fact
he is indecently young looking for a man of sixty odd. As the
Colonel puts it with engaging candor:
"The
world is not my home you understand here on young people."
We
have lunch on the terrace of his mountain house. A heavily wooded
garden with pools and paths stretches down to a cliff over the
sea. Lunch is turbot in cream sauce, grouse, wild asparagus, peaches
in wine. Quite a change from the grey cafeteria food I have been
subjected to in Western cities where I pass myself off a one of
the faceless apathetic citizens searched and questioned by the
police on every corner, set upon by brazen muggers, stumbling
home to my burglarized apartment to find the narcotics squad going
through my medicine chest again. We are served by a lithe young
Malay with bright red gums. Colonel Bradly jabs a fork at him.
"Had
a job getting that dish through immigration. The Consulate wasn't
at all helpful." After lunch we settle down to discuss my
assignment.
"The
wild boys are an overflow from North African cities that started
in 1969. The uneasy Spring of 1969 in Marrakech. Spring in Marrakech
is always uneasy each day a little hotter knowing what Marrakech
can be in August. That Spring gasoline gangs prowled the rubbish
heaps, alleys, and squares of the city dousing just anybody with
gasoline and setting that person on fire. They rush in anywhere
nice young couple sitting in their chintzy middle-class living
room when hello yes hello the gas boys rush in douse them head
to foot with a pump fire extinguisher full of gasoline, and I
got some good pictures from a closet where I had prudently taken
refuge. Shot of the boy who lit the match he let the rank and
file slosh his couple then he lit a Swan match face young pure
pitiless as the cleansing fire brought the match close enough
to catch the fumes. Then he lit a Player with the same match sucked
the smoke in and smiled he was listening to the screams and I
thought my God what a cigarette ad: Clam bake on a beach the BOY
there with a match. He is looking at two girls in bikinis. As
he lights the match they lean forward with a LUCKYSTRIKE CHESTERFIEIDOLDGOLDCAMELPLAYER
in the bim and give a pert little salute. The BOY turned out to
be the hottest property in advertising. Enigmatic smile on the
delicate young face. Just what is the BOY looking at? We had set
out to sell cigarettes or whatever else we were paid to sell.
The BOY was too hot to handle. Temples were erected to the BOY
and there were posters of his face seventy feet high and all the
teenagers began acting like the BOY looking at you with a dreamy
look, lips parted over the Wheaties. They all bought BOY shirts
and BOY knives running around like wolf packs, burning looting
killing it spread everywhere all that summer in Marrakech the
city would light up at night human torches flickering on walls,
trees, fountains all very romantic you could map the dangerous
areas sitting on your balcony under the stars sipping a Scotch.
I looked across the square and watched a tourist burning in blue
fire they had gasoline that burned in all colors by them... (He
turned on the projector and stepped to the edge of the balcony)...
Just look at them out there all those little figures dissolving
in light. Rather like fairy land isn't it except for the smell
of gasoline and burning flesh.
"Well
they called in a strong man Colonel Arachnid Ben Driss who cruised
the city in trucks rounded up the gas boys took them outside the
walls shaved their heads and machine-gunned them. Survivors went
underground or took to the deserts and the mountains where they
evolved different ways of life and modes of combat."

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