Android Meme's Xenochrony (Bob Dobbs diary)

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Here is the original unformatted (except for removing forced linefeeds) version:

Nov.10/83(Toronto). Dobbs: I say people are now largely patterns of information. So I like to use historical patterning to illustrate to friends how they became reduced or inflated to these patterns.
Marshall: We've been weaved?
Dobbs: Yes. We've been robots for five hundred years here in the West. The first phase was psychological automatism. Its icon is Newton. The second phase was biological automatism. The icon - Darwin. The third was hardware automatism. Two icons - Edison and Ford. The fourth was software automatism. Two icons - any President of the United States since World War Two and Walter Cronkite. The fifth phase is a paradoxical condition. I call it autonomy automatism - the robot confident in declaring its independence and in refining its sense of freedom. We have an endless supply of icons for this phase - any star in any demographic of any genre of entertainment or information. It's probably obvious to you we have not arrived at the sixth phase. So who are your icons?
Marshall: Well, they're pretty obscure. You probably never heard of them: Mae Brussell, Lyndon LaRouche, Marshall McLuhan, Cosmic Awareness. And, uh, Herbert W. Armstrong. What demographic does that make me?
Dobbs: I've actually heard of them all. You're in my demographic!
Marshall: No! I don't even know you!
Dobbs: That's because I'm in the obscure zone, too.

Dec.4/83(Toronto). Marshall: Bob, have you ever heard of Frank Zappa?
Dobbs: Sure have. Why?
Marshall: Just wondering. I think he's a genius - one of the few around today.
Dobbs: On November twenty-fifth, nineteen seventy-one I was in New York City to see Zappa's new movie Two Hundred Motels and I went over to the Guggenheim Museum to look at the James Joyce Liquid Memorial Theater. Besides running into Gerard Malanga - you know, the Warhol poet - I got to join the group onstage. I was up there dancing and ranting when something intangible nudged me and I almost fell off the stage. I would've been killed or at least paralyzed - the stage was that high. Anyway, about two weeks later, on December tenth, Zappa was pushed off the stage in London and incapacitated for about a year...
Marshall: Man, I remember that! I was really pissed off. But are you connecting the two events?
Dobbs: Perhaps. You see, Frank and I have been close friends for over twenty years.
Marshall: What?! You're kidding!
Dobbs smiled and pointed to the window of a used-record store where the front cover of the album sleeve for Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica held court.

Jan.16/84(Toronto). Dobbs: You see, Bob, this whole dimension - nature, the universe - is a spiralling doubleness. We did not create this doubleness - God did. But everything human beings created - what I call Second Nature - includes doubleness, but it's doubleness squared. It's a structure of fourness, but First Nature doesn't have fourness, only doubleness.
Marshall: Can you give me some examples?
Dobbs: The amoeba splits, DNA works with RNA, you've got two eyes, two ears, etc., you look at objects through the filter of memory - doubleness, it never changes in First Nature. But with Second Nature its artifacts' constituents change the structure of other artifacts which in turn respond and alter the original artifacts. Language registers these changes and then we recognize patterns in those changes.
Bob Marshall looked up thoughtfully from the pavement and caught the poster display of the Bloor Street Cinema in his gaze. Thieves Like Us. Next he saw his reflection in the shop window and quietly winced at how he looked an awful lot like Lee Harvey Oswald. Not long after that thought he shot his arm out to stop Dobbs' stride as a car turned and almost struck him.

Feb.1/84(Toronto). Dobbs: Bob, I'm going to let you in on a pattern nobody's noticed. It goes like this: The satellite prefigures the actual merger of First and Second Nature. You got that?
Marshall: Uh, yeah. The satellite prefigures the merger of First and Second Nature. I just said it but I hardly know what it means.
Dobbs: I'll give you a hint. Bucky Fuller used to point out that the satellite is a man-made environment that contains and miniaturizes a complete history of all the technologies we live with.
Marshall: That sounds like something McLuhan said. I think it was the satellite is an extension of the planet.
Dobbs: Well, now you have two hints. That should tell you something.
Dobbs then opened Connie's mail and pulled out two tickets to a Toronto Maple Leafs hockey game. He grinned mischievously at Bob Marshall.

March19/84(Toronto). Dobbs: Another factor, Bob, we have to consider is that history is largely a struggle between those who look at machines as analogies and those who look at machines as ongoing anomalies and insist on improving them.
Marshall: Analogies? Analogies of what?
Dobbs: Oh, analogies of the human condition in general, or of some human archetypal desire, or of some demon or invader.
Marshall: Why is the other side called... anomalists?
Dobbs: Because they don't accept the human situation. They feel it isn't quite right, there's something incomplete, that they can adjust the picture frame to diminish the perceived dissonance.
Marshall: Hmmm.
Dobbs: So who do you think is winning right now? Marshall: Well, the popular sentiment would favor the analogists, but no one can stop the anomalists.
Dobbs: Yes, that would seem to be the conventional wisdom. So what would be the escape hatch from that cliche?
Marshall: I don't know. I'm still in the nightmare, as James Joyce wrote.
Dobbs: Doesn't your friend Marshall McLuhan say the atomic bomb was the exclamation point of history? And that's forty years ago.
Marshall: I've always thought that was a brilliant analogy.
Dobbs laughed and turned away from the seawall, scanned the Toronto skyline, and rested his eyes on the CN Tower, his feet on Toronto Island.

April5/84(Toronto). Dobbs: Bob, people talk about ESP, yearn to have ESP, and will stop at no extreme to possess it. Yet, they fail to notice they live in a sea of it.
Marshall: You're going to have to explain that to me. Give me some details.
Dobbs: When you turn the sound off your television set, you can watch people's gestures in the silence. And they really speak volumes. So much so that most people would turn the sound back on. The silent screen is just too loud in its communication. Now, you're perhaps imagining just one person doing that. Just think if a million people watched the same content at the same time with the sound turned off. That's a collective experience of ESP, not just one-on-one ESP. TV really magnifies the ESP. Consciousness is a great deal more than a verbal process, so a collective consciousness is created immediately in any population that shares a couple of TV channels. That's what I mean when I say we live in a sea of it. I don't think we have the means to translate this experience. But notice the obsession with sports today. Games like football, basketball, and hockey move fast enough today to approximate and mimic a collective ESP in dramatic action. They're about the only means around today that can hope to translate the new ocean we're swimming in. Hence, the devotion to the collective possession.
Marshall: You should have been a poet, Dobbs! Now hand me that tape of Mae Brussell over there and let's listen to her ESP-take on the news.

April14/84(Toronto). Marshall: So the last word in Finnegans Wake is the and I assume one is supposed to go back to the beginning of the book and continue the sentence with riverrun. So it would read The keys to. Given! A way a lone a last a loved a long the riverrun, past Eve and Adam's,.... The book's a circle?
Dobbs: Not necessarily. I think Mr. Joyce wanted us to go back to the last page of Ulysses, at the end of Molly's monologue- a parallel to Anna Livia Plurabelle's final monologue - where the last letter is s in the wordYes. Then, reading backwards, I would note the letter e - Joyce's symbol in his notebooks for Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker and Here Comes Everybody - which is us. Then - I repeat, reading backwards, just as Finnegans Wake flows in reverse on one level - the letters in the last word the would be the beginning of the word Theseus, and the would not be an article preceding riverrun. In Greek mythology Theseus was given a thread by Ariadne to unravel and later retrace for escaping from the Labyrinth after he killed the Minotaur. That's the meaning of the words The keys to. Given!. And metaphorically when the reader plunges out of the nighttime of Finnegans Wake and into Ulysses, he or she or it is back into the labyrinth of daylight, like Leopold Bloom, the adman. And Ariadne, as an anagram, would include the meaning I near ad.

March22/65(Los Angeles). Dobbs: I know the police in Cucamonga are setting our friend Zappa up for a bust in a couple of days. I hesitate to warn him for one reason. Can you guess it?
Connie Dobbs: That's easy! We know America is going to draft a lot of young men as it gets more bogged down in Viet Nam. We don't want Frank to be drafted, and that can only be prevented if he has some kind of crime on his resume. So you better not warn him. It'll be painful for Frank but he'll learn a lot about his society from it. He'll be the smarter for it and make better music to assist our purposes. Anyway, his father will get him out of jail very quickly. He doesn't take any guff.
Dobbs: Yeah, you're right. I have no choice but to let the detective do it.

June1/67(Los Angeles). Don Van Vliet(Captain Beefheart): Bob, we've been invited to play at this hippie festival up in Monterey in a few weeks. I don't know whether I want to be associated with such a crowd scene. What do you think I should do?
Dobbs: When does it happen?
Vliet: It starts on Friday, June sixteenth.
Dobbs: Aha, Bloomsday! Well, to me you represent the autonomy of the flesh under satellite conditions - free of all crowds and media. Obviously, to maintain that image, for me, you've got to avoid Monterey.
Vliet: But I don't think the band understands the purpose of my image - they're musicians and they want to be heard by as many people as possible.
Dobbs: Remember earlier when I told you about Rhyee returning to the Plane of Essence? And how there is no more doubleness in consciousness?
Vliet: Yes.
Dobbs: Well, with that in mind, isn't it interesting you have a band member whose name is Ry Cooder?
Vliet started to smile.
Dobbs: And since you're the great punster, why not have Rhyee - alias Ry - leave the band just before the concert. You'd make a situational pun on this historic moment in human consciousness, and you'd have the perfect alibi.
Vliet(laughing): Yes, that would be an impressive sculpture. But how am I going to convince Ry to leave without him catching on?
Dobbs: You'll think of something. You've got a history of eccentricity to exploit. He's young, he won't figure it out for a long time.

Dec.3/85(Toronto). Marshall: Have you ever heard of Krishnamurti?
Dobbs: Yes, we're friends. I last saw Krishnamurti at Saanen in Switzerland a few months ago and during the third talk I was struck at how he represented a replay of the moment when we evolved into a univocal matrix in the world.
Marshall: Univocal?
Dobbs: Yes, when we started to internalize on a cultural scale a serious division in the concepts of good and evil.
Marshall: You mean, the hundredth-monkey effect.
Dobbs: Yes, that's a useful way to put it. But Krishnamurti, in his talks, dramatizes the highest decibels of consciousness within that dilemma and tries to show how and why thought leads in that direction. It's probably at the Neolithic stage when human beings became more sedentary and more focussed on the mouth rather than the kinetic and proprioceptive forms of culture of the previous Paleolithic phase. Anyway, the idea of a participational Logos is the meme he is wrestling with. You can see him sliding up and down the spectrum that would later be divided up into grammatical, dialectical, and rhetorical approaches to the Word.
Marshall: But doesn't he represent the esoteric wisdom and mysticism of the oral tradition?
Dobbs: Yes and no. He is the Ur-moment that tries to avoid falling into the founding of the mystical teaching traditions. He wants to simulate the ordinary insights and pleasures of a penetrating, rigorous conversation conducted while walking with another even though he is forced to remain sitting and logocentric. He's trying to get you up on your feet again and moving around without creating conflict.
Marshall: I don't think that's ever been said before.
Marshall put down his fork, rose quickly from the table and left the restaurant. He came back about five minutes later and spoke about how it may start raining.

Jan.21/86(Toronto). Steve: So, Jamie, what do you think of this Bob Marshall on CKLN?
Jamie: Well, I'm glad you turned me on to his show. The International Connection! It's crazy stuff, but it's got me paying attention to the news again. I haven't followed the news in years because I've been trying to create news with my films. The kind of information Marshall presents gives me a whole new range of ideas I hadn't considered before. His show has actually got my creative juices going again.
Steve: I find it rather obsessive. I mean, he's on there twice a week explaining all the current news, and he never stops. It reminds me of a syndrome McLuhan once told me is characteristic of our time. He used the phrase the cognitive thrills of pattern recognition. I think that's what Bob Marshall is addicted to, and it's what his fans crave.
Jamie: No, I don't see that at all. He's giving us the information around current events that the mainstream press won't touch. That's important because it deals with the reality we're all hiding from.
Steve: When information is moved at the speed of light, news becomes fantasy, no matter what its source is.
Jamie: That may be how it looks because of information overload, but there's still a real world with real actions that determine whether we live or die or not. That's what the news refers to - something we're all actually involved in!
Steve: Again, I'm reminded of an aphorism McLuhan often repeated, depth involvement creates instant response.
Jamie: C'mon, can you stop parroting McLuhan just once? You're so involved with him that he becomes your instant response to any new ideas. Ha, got ya!
Steve grimaced but Jamie didn't see that facial reaction because the lights had gone down in the theater as the opening credits for Robert Altman's Secret Honor slid on to the screen.

July6/59(Seattle). Dobbs: Why are you stopping the car here?
Captain Alfred Hubbard: You see that house across the street? That's the Center of Integration. Some very interesting people live in there. It's my favorite experimental site for my studies with LSD.
Dobbs: Why is that?
Hubbard: Because very psychic and aware people are associated with the Center, and I think it's important to investigate the effects of the drug on that kind of sensitivity. Anyway, you stay here. I'll be back in a few minutes.
Dobbs watched as the Captain walked across the street, rushed up the front walkway, knocked on the door, and was greeted by a young man who appeared to be in his late twenties or early thirties. But Dobbs was startled by his face. He had seen that beaming moon-face while under the influence of LSD.

Nov.9/85(Seattle). Ian: Flaps, you've wanted me to feature LaRouche as a columnist in my newspaper ever since we met.
Flaps: Yeah. Why, have you decided to do it?
Ian: Not really. But I've been scooped. There's a journalist in Toronto who has a radio show and he regularly interviews LaRouche's associates from the Executive Intelligence Review.
Flaps: You're kidding. How could that be allowed in one of the Queen's cities? LaRouche would be assassinated if he ever went to Toronto.
Ian: I don't know about that, but this guy - Bob Marshall's his name - he's getting away with it.
Flaps: We don't even have a distributor in Toronto. I've gotta look into this. Do you remember any names of the people he interviewed?
Ian: Richard Freeman. He has Freeman on more than anybody else. Marshall even had LaRouche on once.
Flaps: Wow! We're on a lot of radio stations here in the States now, but getting into Canada is not what I expected. I've got old friends in Toronto. I'm going to call them and get 'em to listen to this guy!
Ian ordered another coffee from the waitress and proceeded to study the packaging of the news in various American dailies he had spread out on the table. Flaps returned to reading an essay in an old Campaigner on why the British hate Shakespeare.

May1/68(New York). Dobbs: Lyndon, are you aware of Bucky Fuller's architectural plans to put his domes over cities like New York?
LaRouche: Of course.
Dobbs: Would you support his ideas?
LaRouche: Not at first. I'm for building more cities. I fight for the Hamiltonian city-building circles and against the Jeffersonian country-bumpkin circles. The reason we don't build more cities and are afflicted by the sprawling suburbanization in the United States is the financier-rentier circles who pretend to grow an economy through land speculation and usury. Because this fraudulent growth depends on real-estate speculation and maintaining high property values in certain parts of New York, or any American city, we can't get investment in new cities using the latest technology because that would threaten the Wall Street financier oligarchy who reinforce this myopic tunnel vision that goes around in boom-and-bust circles. We should design our new cities around more efficiently beautiful infrastructure systems that have high-density populations who wouldn't lose the important role of urban classical culture that is being dissipated in the Playboy-magazine, leisure-society culture of the suburbs. Until the relevant government institutions get behind this kind of industrial policy I wouldn't waste my time with Bucky's beachball antics. They'd be fine for new cities but they'd only make this concentration-camp of a city more claustrophobic and paranoid.
Dobbs: Funny you mention Playboy. They just featured Bucky's designs in the January issue of this year.
LaRouche: Case closed!

June 28/84(Toronto). Dobbs: Look at this, Bob, on page 355 of Finnegans Wake, line 35, ... and, bespeaking of love and lie detectors in venuvarities, whateither the drugs truth of it, was there an iota of from the faust to the lost.
Marshall: Yeah... what about it? I don't see anything.
Dobbs: Lie detectors and drugs truth - Joyce is referring to using drugs as a means of prying the truth out of somebody. That's the MKULTRA agenda, that's what they used LSD and other drugs for.
Marshall: But Joyce wrote that before there was LSD.
Dobbs: The Nazis were doing similar experiments in the thirties and forties. Did you ever see the Bergman film The Serpent's Egg?
Marshall: No. But if that's what Joyce is referring to, no wonder he wrote Finnegans Wake in code. He would have had to self-censor more than just pornographic stuff because he was writing at a time when it was very dangerous in political terms - nobody knew whether the right or the left was going to win.
Dobbs: Yes, some critics might think he wrote in code to bypass the censorship problems he had with Ulysses, but maybe he was embedding information he had about more sinister levels of mind control. I know J. Edgar Hoover was keeping an eye on Joyce.
Marshall: Really!?

Sept.5/67(Seattle). Dobbs: David, have you ever taken LSD?
Worcester: Many times. Why do you ask?
Dobbs: Did you ever meet Captain Hubbard?
Worcester: Yes, I used to spend a lot of time with him. Do you know him?
Dobbs: Yes. I think I know when you spent time with him. Was it back in '59?
Worcester: Yes, that sounds correct. How do you know that? You're making me nervous.
Dobbs: The Center of Integration.
Worcester: You were a member!?
Dobbs: No, but I once waited outside in his car while Hubbard visited the Center. I'm now remembering you answered the door and Hubbard talked to you for a few minutes.
Worcester: You've got a remarkable memory.
Dobbs: Perhaps. But it wasn't hard to remember your face. On that day I was startled when I saw you because I had seen your very round mug when I was on an acid trip.
Worcester(laughing): Oh yes. Over the years several people, people I didn't know, have told me the same story after they met me. I seem to be a fellow traveller on the LSD road.
Dobbs: But I bet none of them had the word Rhyee in their heads before they met you.
Worcester: No, you're unique in that regard. I wonder what significance we might find in that strange occurrence.
Dobbs: Maybe it has something to do with the fact I knew Albert Hofmann.
Worcester: You're kidding! You knew Hofmann!?
Dobbs: When I was a young man, yes - when I lived in Europe. Curious, isn't it? The letters A and H are both Alfred and Albert's initials. And those letters originally were interchangeable and meant the beginning. But I want to know how you met Hubbard.
Worcester: It was through CIA people. Hubbard controlled all the LSD distribution in North and South America. We attracted attention at the Center of Integration. You know, Seattle has the smallest church-going population of any city in the United States. Anyway, Elliot Craig came around and gave me my first trip. He was involved with Hubbard. Then I later met Hubbard. He would visit us and interview me about my experiences with acid. We worked out the protocol for tripping, came up with the term session years before Tim Leary offered his maps. You know, I was the one who gave Alan Watts his first LSD trip - in San Francisco. I think it was early nineteen sixty-one. Tony LaVey was at that party.

March2/87(Toronto). Nelson: One of the most interesting things about my visit to Toronto is the tapes of that International Connection show you've been playing me. I have had a couple of friends die from AIDS the past year and the word on the street in New York is that AIDS was created by the government or somebody... you know, it's man-made. This Bob Marshall seems to use sources who believe that. Do you think your former employer Frank Zappa has the same information?
Dennis: Oh, you picked up on that when I was playing Thingfish the other day?
Nelson: Yes.
Dennis: I don't know Bob Marshall, but I've heard that Marshall knows Zappa and he's definitely mentioned Zappa more than once on his show in casual babble with other dj's. Zappa has always had references about CIA stuff in his music since the sixties. He did a song almost twenty years ago on Ronald Reagan as an Agency-controlled politician. And Zappa's always thought that LSD was a drug introduced into the youth culture by some part of the government. Did you ever see the booklet that came with the Uncle Meat album that shows a semi-human vegetable saying he's just been killed by the government because he knows too much? As a matter of fact, the themes in Thingfish are implied in the original script for the Uncle Meat movie.

July22/64(Dartmouth). Deane: Bob, ever since my mother died I've spent more time during the summer in Dartmouth than in New York City. But I still spend more time in New York during the winter - much more appealing than Nova Scotia. However, this year the mood was different. New Yorkers are a little more sombre. A little air has been let out of them. I think the Kennedy assassination has deeply affected Americans. It makes me a little sad, and if New York doesn't get out of these doldrums soon, I may spend more time all-year- round here in Dartmouth.
Dobbs: That may be true for the people our age, but the Beatles have jump-started the kids into a necessary floating ebullience.
Deane: If the Beatles are just a fad, then those American kids are going to be fed one hysterical fad after another for the next umpteen decades into their doddering old age if this dark Kennedy cloud isn't lifted.
Dobbs: You really think so?
Deane: Yes. And let me ask you a personal question. I don't think I've noticed any change in you since President Kennedy was shot. It doesn't seem to have affected you. Am I reading you correctly?
Dobbs: Yes, because the forces that lead to his death I had adapted to even before I met you ten years ago.
Deane: What forces?
Dobbs: I'd rather not talk about it today. Look at the weather outside. Let's go over to Banook Lake.
Deane: Oh yes, you are so wise, Bobby! The wailing of America will not touch our ears! We have the thickest wax in all of Camelot! Not for us the mast of Ulysses! We will walk with Aristotle's Peripatetics! To the lap of Neptune! Garrett and Bob rushed out the back door of Garrett's house and into the bright harbour air. But Bob knew Garrett had seen a new strange part of Bob that Garrett had not experienced before. The tables have turned and now I'm under the microscope, not Garrett, as has been the case up to now.

Dec.16/78(New York). Dobbs: Mr. Thompson, I found your seminar very stimulating.
William Irwin Thompson: Thank you. I noticed you during it and I thought you looked strangely familiar.
Dobbs: Yes, we met about six years ago when you first came to New York from your retreat in Toronto. We discussed the resonance of the Atlantean metaphor for our times.
Thompson: Oh, yes. I remember that because you emphasized Lemuria and I've never been able to get your point. I've actually puzzled over it several times since then.
Dobbs: Shall I attempt to explain it again?
Thompson: Be my guest!
Dobbs: According to my sources, the Lemurian culture in the Pacific Ocean about eighteen thousand years ago was so stratified that the king and his immediate circle could not see the citizens who lived below them. The king literally could not see them. So, for example, if a bridge collapsed, the king would request the bridge to reappear. Eventually, when the bridge was rebuilt, he thought he had manifested it because he couldn't see the engineers who had actually done the job.
Thompson: That's an original idea! Now how does it relate to Atlantis and today?
Dobbs: If we accept my description of Lemuria and the standard mythic image of AtLantis, then the current mixed corporate-media oligarchy centered in Los Angeles and New York is more like Lemuria because that simulated world can't recognize the world of industrial hardware and flesh, it can't stop and acknowledge what it does to those Lost Worlds or how it exploits them.
Thompson: Well, you've made your metaphor clearer, but I'm going to have to digest this for a little while. Let's talk about it later.
Just at that moment Gregory Bateson came over to Thompson, nodded knowingly at Bob, and escorted Thompson over to the other side of the room for a private tete-a-tete. Bob turned and bumped into Margaret Lloyd, a regular at the Lindisfarne seminars, who was the seventh-generation direct descendant, on the female side, of Benjamin Franklin.

Feb.1/86(Toronto). Don(via the telephone): Alan, do you ever listen to CKLN?
Alan: No, I don't listen to the radio.
Don: You're not going to believe this! A couple of weeks ago I heard that guy, Worcester, you used to tell me about being interviewed on the radio.
Alan: What!?
Don: He was in some kind of minor trouble, and he told the interviewer that, if he was bothered again, he was going to cause forty billion dollars damage. And then he was interviewed again a few weeks later after the Challenger space shuttle blew up, and the journalist believed Worcester had caused it.
Alan dropped his telephone he was laughing so hard.
Alan(recovering): I haven't talked to Worcester in years, but I remember a few times back in the seventies when he would make grandiose threats like that and some disaster would happen. I never knew what to make of it. But who is this journalist?
Don: Bob Marshall, but I don't think that's his real name because he features pretty wild information on his show.
Alan: When's his show on again? Which station is it?
Don: It's on Wednesday and Thursday, or Friday, at around eleven o'clock in the morning. It's called The International Connection. And CKLN is at 88.1 on the FM dial.
Alan: How did you find out about this show?
Don: You know your friend from Nova Scotia - Steve? His friend, Jamie, told me about it when I saw him at some film company's party around Christmas.
Alan: Is Worcester going to be on again?
Don: I don't know, but I get the impression he's a regular guest on the show.
Alan: I'm going to call the station and see if I can get Worcester's phone number from this Bob guy. Thanks for telling me. This is amazing!

Aug.2/62(New York). Sidney Gottlieb: You think we've gone off track? What's wrong with it?
Dobbs: This MKULTRA project is very misguided. You'll never be able to control the private citadel of consciousness. Oh, you can disorient it for a while, but you're never going to know if it has recovered the ability to distort what it's presenting to you. London and Tavistock have figured this much out, and I've been instructed to tell you so your team doesn't fall behind. And you will if you continue pursuing your present objectives.
Gottlieb: What is the advantage that Tavistock has over us?
Dobbs: They're looking into the structures of language itself, exploiting the differences between metaphor and metonymy - basically, the shaping of collective archetypes. I think this is the cause of Dr. Leary's restlessness. He sees how misguided and futile your interests are.
Gottlieb: Ha! Dr. Leary's opinions are useless as far as my work is concerned. Let him and his associates drift wherever the archetypes take them. Good riddance! The zeitgeist now bespeaks the rise of the individual and we have to remain on top of that.

Oct.17/85(New York). William Irwin Thompson: We meet again! The man from Lemuria! How are you doing, Mr. Dobbs?
Dobbs: Fine. I was looking over your old book Passages about Earth the other day when I came across the part on your stay at Findhorn in Scotland. It suddenly occurred to me that perhaps the quality and productivity of their famous garden was because they used the D-cell.
Thompson: The D-cell? What's that?
Dobbs: It's a water purifier and energizer. It has remarkable beneficial effects on our bodies and nature in general.
Thompson: I never heard of it, and I never saw anything along those lines at Findhorn. They used elves and nature spirits to energize their garden. Can I get some of this stuff?
Dobbs: Not easily. The man who makes it, Joe Dun Sloan, doesn't try to make the world notice it. He just produces it for those who already are lucky enough to use it.
Just at that moment the Dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, Jim Morton, came over to Thompson, nodded knowingly at Bob, and escorted Thompson over to the other side of the room for a private tete-a-tete. Bob turned and bumped into Peggy Harrington, a regular at the Lindisfarne seminars, who was the wife of Alan Harrington, the well-known author of The Immortalist.

April2/79(Zurich, Switzerland). Jeanne de Salzmann: Mr. Dobbs, in the few times I've heard you talk privately to Krishnamurti, I'm always struck that you bring full sentences out of him - he doesn't mumble syllables shyly as he usually does in private conversation. He even uses the word I when he talks to you. Do you realize how unusual that is?
Dobbs: I don't think so. He's always talked that way around me, which is the same way he talked to my father years ago when I first met Mr. Jiddu through Rene.
Salzmann: So your father is to blame.
Dobbs: I hope so.

June17/87(Toronto). Myke Dyer(broadcasting on CKLN-FM, 88.1): As regular listeners to my show here at CKLN know, I have been playing tapes from the Church of the SubGenius the last few weeks. At the same time, listeners know that Bob Marshall's show, The International Connection, has been taken off the air here at the station. Well, surprise, surprise, the two seemingly unconnected events, unbeknownst to me, have a meaning none of us could have foreseen. It turns out that J. R. Bob Dobbs, the mascot of the Church, was not assassinated on January twenty-first, nineteen eighty-four, has left Dallas, has resurfaced in Toronto, and is sitting across from me in the studio. Good evening, sir.
Dobbs: Good evening, Myke... good evening, Mr. Mulronrey... good evening, Mr. Bobby Fulford. In the broadest sense your introduction is true, but in the particulars I want to make a few adjustments. I am Bob Dobbs, not J. R. Bob Dobbs - J. R. is a cartoon version of me that I inspired back in February of 1978. I have nothing to do with the creation of the Church of the SubGenius per se, nor with any of its commercial activities such as the tapes you've been playing. In fact I left Dallas in nineteen eighty-two after the failed attempt to start Nuclear War One. I've been skulking around Toronto for about four years now spending more time with my wife Connie who has been living in Toronto the last nine years.
Dyer: And you know Bob Marshall?
Dobbs: Yes, after I met him here in Toronto, I encouraged him to create a show on CKLN. I continued to advise him behind the scenes as his show became a success and assumed a high profile in Toronto. But thanks to the Iran-Contra hearings in Washington and other events, I decided that Bob Marshall should step aside and I make my move to reveal my long-planned agenda.
Dyer: And because you've impressed me over the last week with your credentials, I've made a tentative commitment to assist you with your plan even though I don't fully understand it, yet. I am not guaranteeing you anything. We'll just see how it goes. I'm as curious as the listeners probably are.
Dobbs: I sincerely appreciate that, Myke. So let's get the ball rolling.
Myke then played some excerpts from one of the Media-Barrage audio tapes composed by Church members and at various points Myke stopped the tape and allowed Bob to explain the real knowledge that inspired these hallucinated interpretations of Dobbs.

Dec.31/87(Dartmouth). Alan(turning off the tape recorder): Well, there you have it. It turns out we grew up with two people in our midst, here in little old Dartmouth, who were in disguise and way more important than we could ever imagine.
Steve: Where'd you get that tape?
Alan: It's from a series of broadcasts in Toronto on a community station there - CKLN.
Steve: I listen to that station. It had that show with Bob Marshall - The International Connection.
Alan: Yes, and apparently Bob Dobbs had something to do with Bob Marshall's show. Did you know that Marshall was kicked off the air?
Steve: I wondered what had happened when I noticed it wasn't on its regular time slot. I only listened to it occasionally.
Dennis: Alan, are you saying that Bob replaced Bob Marshall's show?
Alan: It seems something like that happened because this Myke Dyer who has Bob on his show used to help Bob Marshall by playing Mae Brussell tapes on his own - meaning Myke Dyer's - show. The three of them seem connected.
Dennis: So you've played us excerpts from more than one show?
Alan: Yes, Mr. Dobbs has been on every two weeks since June. And he's apparently explaining the purpose of his life up to this moment. He's in some kind of struggle with an intelligence organization called the Secret Council of Ten.
Flaps: But, Alan, you see Bob in Toronto more than any of us here tonight. Have you talked to him since he's been on the radio?
Alan: No, I've been so shocked by this situation that I'm too embarrassed to call him. I don't know if he's gone crazy or what.
Nancy: Well, I used to visit Connie a lot a few years ago when I first started working as a lawyer in Toronto, but she's become so busy and famous in her medical practice that she hasn't had much time to socialize the past few years. So I certainly didn't know about this. However, I did know of Bob Marshall's show because I've become friends with Mae Brussell and she told me that she was on the radio in Toronto. But I get her weekly tapes by subscription so I don't need to listen to her on the radio. I wouldn't have the time anyway.
Sue: And I heard that Bob and Connie have kids now.
Alan: Yes they do.
Nancy: Yes, they adopted a teen-aged boy and girl - they're twins. Really nice kids. I wonder what they think of what their foster father is doing.
Randy: This is all too weird, Alan. Connie's helped me with my medical practice with great advice by telephone over the years. But I haven't seen her and Bob since Alan hosted our reunion back in '83. I haven't talked to Bob since then.
Kristen: Yeah, but it kind of makes a little sense to me because whenever I saw Bob in New York he was always ahead of me by being part of the fashion trends that it was my job to detect. He was always there first. And I always wondered why he was even involved in any of those scenes when he seemed so indifferent to fads back in Dartmouth. I never had the opportunity to tell you guys all the outrageous things I shared with him in New York over the last ten years. I bet none of you knew he was a lifelong friend of Marcel Duchamp.
Randy: You've told me a lot of those stories but I thought he just loved New York - like a hip tourist.
Sue: I wonder what Garrett would say if he heard this tape.
Randy: We invited him over tonight but he said he didn't think he could make it. You know how he always spends New Year's Eve with Jovanna? And I didn't push it because I didn't know what Alan was going to drop on us tonight.
Flaps: Alan, do you realize the significance of who Bob talked about when he wasn't blowing his own horn? In the various excerpts you played us he at one point or another praised Frank Zappa, Marshall McLuhan, Lyndon LaRouche, some medium...
Alan: Cosmic Awareness, who I know...
Flaps: That's the point! Steve, you got into McLuhan; Dennis got into Zappa; I'm a LaRouchie...
Sue: I heard Herbert W. Armstrong mentioned - my hero!
Nancy: Bob referred to Mae Brussell at one point - a big influence on my life.
Flaps: Collectively, Bob's talking about the people in this room - our lives! What's going on here? He always criticized LaRouche whenever I mentioned him back in the seventies. I knew about LaRouche before he did! He had never even heard of LaRouche!
Dennis: I could say the same for Zappa and Bob!
Steve: Ditto for me, McLuhan, and Bob!
Nancy: I remember Connie telling me she had never heard of Mae Brussell!
Alan: Bob always made fun of Cosmic Awareness! But, dig this! All these sources of information were used by Bob Marshall, and in fact, made Marshall notorious and well-known in Toronto and environs.
Sue: And the first part you played - from Bob's first show, if I recall correctly - Bob said he had guided Bob Marshall all those years Marshall did his radio journalism.
Steve: All of us in this room together make up the contents of Bob Marshall's head.
Randy(yelling over everybody's laughter): All except me and Garrett!!
Alan: Guess what, Randy! I didn't bring it with me, but Bob has even talked about Garrett! And not only that! Bob Marshall has played tapes of Garrett talking on the phone with him!
Kristen: Does Garrett know that!
Alan: I doubt it.
Kristen: This is getting spooky.
Randy: Yeah, and from what I've heard on Alan's tape, Bob is claiming to be the greatest spook of all time.
Alan: So now you know what I've been dealing with for six months. I could barely contain myself until I had this ideal opportunity tonight.
Flaps: Why didn't you tell us before?
Alan: Who would have believed it? Not to mention the expense of a lot of phone calls. I can hardly meet my monthly rent.
Randy(standing up to get some food off the buffet table): So what are we supposed to do now, Alan?
It was getting near midnight. Alan didn't know how to answer that question, and neither did anyone else. So they all slowly followed Randy to the beckoning banquet. About five minutes later, Flaps and Alan slipped into a private conversation.
Flaps: I've been living in Seattle for the last couple of years. Didn't you used to live out there?
Alan: Yes, but it's been over five years now. It's an interesting city - the lowest population of churchgoers in the U.S.
Flaps: Yes, in my work there, I've noticed that Gnosticism is rampant in the city.
Alan: What do you mean?
Flaps: In our organization we've uncovered in history the war of elites that is essentially a battle between the Platonic tradition and the Aristotelian, or Gnostic, tradition. During the eighteenth century the Platonic stream was best represented by Leibnitz while the Gnostic river carried people who created the Enlightenment, such as Voltaire. After the great earthquake occurred in Lisbon, Portugal, in, I think, 1755, Voltaire used that disaster as a symbol to satirize Leibnitz's this-world-is-the-best-of-all-possible-worlds idea...
Alan: Hey, I know about that! According to the Servants of Awareness, that earthquake was triggered off by a conflict among the principalities of that time. The Carmelite nuns were involved and some bad decisions were made that led to the manifestation of a natural disaster. Many members of the Servants of Awareness had past lives at that time as these Carmelite nuns, and they were working out their karma from 1755 in Seattle. They actually went to Europe in the middle of the sixties and visited these Carmelite sites to remember and resolve the karma from that particular past life.
Flaps: Now that's Gnosticism!... And you know these people!?
Alan: Of course. I was a member of their organization fifteen years ago.
Flaps: Have you ever read Plato?
Alan: No. Why?
Flaps: I live by Plato. Our organization fights on behalf of the Platonic tradition against the Gnostics. If you're still influenced by this Seattle Awareness group, then we would probably have a deep disagreement on many issues with each other.
Alan: We'd better tip-toe around each other or we'll be in a giant earthquake.
Flaps(laughing): You know, this Bob Marshall guy used to have political associates of mine on his show.
Alan: Did he? Well, he interviewed my friend David Worcester, the trance medium for the Servants of Awareness, several times.
Flaps: Really!? Then maybe the earthquake took place in his head.
Alan: And Mr. Dobbs is the sole survivor.
In another corner of Randy's living room, Kristen asked Dennis a question.
Kristen: Did you go back to work for Frank Zappa again?
Dennis: No, I moved back to Toronto and got into the Queen Street art scene. I write for a magazine called Impulse. Have you ever seen it?
Kristen: Oh yes. But I bring up Zappa because my boss, Andy Warhol, God bless his soul, always complained about Frank. Do you have any idea why?
Dennis: Yes, it came from the fact that Zappa made fun of Warhol's band, The Velvet Underground, when they first played in California in nineteen sixty-six at a club called The Trip. Then Zappa came to New York and had a popular run at the Garrick Theater. I think Warhol and Lou Reed were either intimidated by Frank or just didn't understand him.
Kristen: I always liked Frank.
Dennis: And now Andy's dead. Did Bob and Connie know Andy?
Kristen: Bob did. I introduced him to Andy once. I don't know about Connie. But after hearing Alan's tape, I'm even wondering if Bob knew Andy before I got them together and he didn't tell me. When I think about it now, he and Andy were surprizingly casual with each other that night.
Dennis: What did Andy die from?
Kristen: He didn't go to Prince Thurn und Taxis' party the summer before last.
Dennis couldn't get past Kristen's practised New York deadpan so he could only smile, nod knowingly, and tune into Steve and Sue's tete-a-tete.
Sue: Steve, you live in Toronto, did you ever hear this Bob Marshall's show?
Steve: Oh yeah, I listened for a while, but I found it too addicted to the transient content of the Now.
Sue: Aren't you interested in what's happening in the world?
Steve: You don't have to listen to the news to know what's happening if you can confidently predict what's going to occur.
Sue: Oh, and you can do that?
Steve: Yes.
Sue: What's going to happen next?
Steve: We'll continue to simultaneously centralize and decentralize while being showered with more and more violence.
Sue: Centralize? How will that increase?
Steve: Through satellites, computers and the chip as more and more pressure is put on the credit agencies to know more about us in a less amount of time.
Sue: You're predicting the Mark of the Beast.
Steve: Mark who!?
Sue: You know, Revelations 13:17.
Steve: Oh, I get it, you're quoting the Bible - Northrop Frye's Great Code. St. Mark didn't write Revelations.
Sue: The Mark of the Beast is a huge computer being built in Brussells by NATO to control all economic transactions. It'll be the means for creating the cashless society.
Steve: Yes, the chip does seem to threaten people's sense of privacy.
Sue: Privacy!! I'm talking about the greatest tyranny and slavery ever known to humanity. Where've you been, Steve!?
Steve: Well, we've just heard a tape featuring a mutual close friend, almost family for both of us, and he sounded like he was personally creating this Mark of the Beast
you're so concerned about.
Sue: Hmm... I hadn't thought of that, but if I recall what he said on Alan's tape with your interpretation in mind - yeah, he does claim to be involved with people who run the world.
Steve: Yes he does.
Sue: I missed that because I identified with him citing the authority of Herbert W. Armstrong, the man who taught me about the Beast. This is getting scary.
Steve: Only if you believe that the Beast threatens more than our privacy. If it's only privacy at issue, and if you have nothing to hide, it's not so drastic.
Sue: I think there's more at issue than privacy - a lot more. What's frightening is that if Bob's telling the truth, then the Beast is right here in Dartmouth. Excuse me, Steve, but I've got to sit down and think about this.
Meanwhile, in the kitchen, Randy and Nancy caught up on each other's lives.
Randy: Who's this Mae Brussell you mentioned when we were all reacting to Alan's tape?
Nancy: She's a journalist who analyses the motives and origins of the people you work for.
Randy: My patients?
Nancy: No, the drug companies. They control medicine now, and according to Mae, they've done so for a long time. Ever heard of I. G. Farben?
Randy: Yes. A chemical company in Nazi Germany, right?
Nancy: Yes, but it was built up before Hitler and survives to this day. Most people, if they even know about it, think it was dismantled, broken up, and scattered to the winds. Mae shows us how that is not so.
Randy: This is interesting and I'd like to know more, but I've got to tell you that I don't use regular allopathic drugs in my practice - at least as little as possible. And ironically, it's thanks to Connie that I don't. As I said earlier I hooked up with her at Alan's reunion and I subsequently learned from her how to treat my patients in a way that I. G. Farben wouldn't have appreciated.
Nancy: That sounds great! And your patients get better?
Randy: They sure do, and very quickly, too. But you know, Connie has never told me the kind of history that you say Mae is an expert in.
Nancy: And if Bob is telling the truth, and I'm highly suspicious of what he's saying on that tape - I think it's some kind of elaborate joke - then Connie knows a lot of that murderous history.
Randy: You know, in a perverse sort of way, I hope what Bob is saying is true. Because that would add an exciting and surprising dimension to our little lives here in Dartmouth that I, for one, could handle.
Nancy's laughter was interrupted by Kristen who came in to the kitchen to get Randy to help her prepare for the countdown to midnight and the New Year - due in five minutes.

March1/75(Halifax). Harry Whittier: The students in my class don't usually get it until years later. Then they will call me up and we'll celebrate their new understanding.
Dobbs: So the newly-sophisticated yokel goes to the city to find reality, to escape the unreality of the country. But the city-dweller finds only the image of reality in the city. Meanwhile, the country bumpkin finds only reality in the rural milieu and yearns for unreality.
Whittier: Yes, that's the essence of every story in Western literature. That's what I repeat every day in my classes.
Dobbs: Do you ever use the Bible as a text in your class?
Whittier: Yes, every other year.
Dobbs: Then you would have to suggest to the students that the first words In the beginning was the Word... should be changed to In the beginning was the Pun....
Whittier roared with laughter as he unlocked the door to his office and Bob entered behind him eager to get a look at Harry's library. They were both relieved there were no students waiting to discuss difficulties with their courses.
Bob and Harry needed time to interpret whatever discoveries they made.

July14/37(London). Wyndham Lewis: Bob, let me suggest to you how to penetrate a fascination you will have in about ten years. Every generation is obsessed with the events and dramas of the immediately preceding generation. If you study the debate James Joyce and I had in our writings a decade ago you will have a front- row seat and a healthy close-up on our concerns.
Dobbs: Well, I know one of my father's great obsessions is the book Mr. Joyce is supposed to be writing right now. Is he still debating with you?
Lewis: He certainly is. I'm familiar with what he's working on now and I can prove to you that I am one of the main protagonists in his new book. One of the main images I used on my side of the debate was the insect. I expressed the fear that our society was beginning to turn into a giant mechanical bug. And if you read the parts Joyce has published in Transition magazine, you will see the main character is a man named after an insect - an earwig, to be specific.
Dobbs: What's his name?
Lewis: Earwicker.
Bob giggled as he peered more closely at the colour of the brushstrokes Mr. Lewis was adding to his portrait of Rene.

Nov.30/85(Toronto). Bob Marshall: Have you read any books by Robert Anton Wilson?
Dobbs: Yes, the Illuminatus Trilogy.
Marshall: He seems to have the same intense interest in Finnegans Wake as you?
Dobbs: Yes, but his approach to physics is the opposite of Joyce's. Wilson's a nominalist who is very influenced by his quantum physics pals in San Francisco - guys like Saul-Paul Sirag, Fred Wolf, and Jack Sarfatti. They basically argue over the names of Satan. But Joyce viewed language as the real constituent of matter and bet on the propensity for us to become our names. Wilson's friends wrestle within the arena built by the Bohr-Bohm polarity. Joyce spars with Einstein over which medium is the message - Joyce doesn't agree with Einstein on where the arena is located and what time the fight should take place. Joyce countered Einstein's E=MC2 formula with his own 1132 formula.
Marshall: That pipe-smoking guy in the Book of the SubGenius you showed me seems to be modeled on Wilson's Hagbard Celine.
Dobbs: Yes, your intuition is correct because Doug Smith had read Wilson's books before he met me. When he and Philo encountered me they thought they had met the real Hagbard. The result of the alchemy between the two images is J. R. Bob Dobbs - Finn the Eskimo.
Marshall: The All-Canadian Boy.
Dobbs(laughing): Yes - you, my Pygmalion.
Marshall: You wish!
Dobbs: By the way, why is Wilson on your mind?
Marshall: I thought of him after I performed with Rosi Fan Tutti. It's the whole thing about presenting my information in the counterculture milieu. It was a little disconcerting and it reminded me of his audience when I saw him speak here in Toronto.
Dobbs: Small is beautiful!
Bob and Dobbs turned off Yonge Street and aimed for the CKLN radio station on the Ryerson Polytechnic Institute campus.

Jan.13/88(Toronto). Dobbs(on the air at CKLN): Myke, we can consider Krishnamurti's technique of talking meditation, McLuhan's technique of suspended judgement while probing, and LaRouche's technique of Socratic Reason, or Nature's path of least resistance, as all means of bypassing the argument between the Apollonians and the Dionysians in order to perceive the ineluctability of the drama of cognition.
Myke Dyer: Bob, we have another caller on the line. Go ahead, caller.
Caller: I don't know who this Bob-guy is, but he makes a lot of sense... I think... I just don't understand him... but maybe that's not the point.
Dobbs: Yes, caller, you're on the right track. Just observe how the cookie crumbles. That's where the slack is.
Dyer(smiling ecstatically): Oooh, you're hot today, Bob, and the calls just keep comin'. Let's go to another caller.

June7/68(Dartmouth). Dobbs: Randy, there's a significance in the date of your birthday you should be aware of. I've told you before that you and my father were born on the same day - June the fourth. But listen to what happened the other day. On Monday, June the third, Andy Warhol was shot. On Tuesday, you had your nineteenth birthday. A few hours later, in the first hour of June the fifth, Robert Kennedy was shot. You wouldn't know this but the ambulance carrying Andy's severely-wounded body moved along nineteenth street in New York City. If you add up the letters in the word Bob, b equalling two and o equalling fifteen - their positions in the alphabet, you get nineteen.
Randy: Why are Warhol and Kennedy so significant?
Dobbs: For nineteen sixty-eight Andy is the pope of software Art - mixed media, and Robert is the pope of hardware Art - politics.
Randy: And I'm Mr. In-Between Art.
Dobbs: You don't know how true that statement is!
Randy: But Andy lived and Robert died.
Dobbs: Yes, that's because hardware is kaput but software still has a few years to go before it dies.

Nov.30/86(Toronto). Bob Marshall: Bob, it was a year ago when I performed with the band Rosi Fan Tuti. Do you remember that night?
Dobbs: Yeah, you did O.K., if I recall correctly.
Marshall: I just found out that Andy, the lead singer for the band, moved back to Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. That's where you lived for many years, right?
Dobbs: Right. Why did he do that?
Marshall: It seems his wife is from there.
Dobbs: No kidding. Well, that's more evidence of xenochrony.
Marshall: Xenochrony? What's that?
Dobbs: When one does everything in one's power to avoid merging in synchronicity... and fails.
Marshall(a little puzzled): Hmmm.
Dobbs: Xeno means strange. So xenochrony means strange synchronicity. I don't mean that synchronicity is a strange phenomenon. I mean the failure to willfully avoid synchronicity is strange.
Marshall: Is Nova Scotia a place where xenochrony occurs a lot?
Dobbs: It certainly has been for me.

Jan.22/70(Seattle). Worcester: All magicians have previously used a formula to achieve their ends. Now, formulas - any formulas - don't work anymore.
Dobbs: That statement reminds me of the time you told me about your magician friend, Robert Carr. How he was doing his magic tricks for an audience and he noticed he was manifesting more cards than he had and he couldn't fathom why - he was quite puzzled and amazed.
Worcester: Oh, you remember that story? Yes, that's a good example of discovering the choiceless awareness of New Being and operating without a formula.
Dobbs: Is that what caused Carr to get interested in Krishnamurti?
Worcester: Yes, I think so. It certainly moved him into experiences he had not anticipated.
Upon hearing this Bob ever-so-subtly withdrew into a reverie of conversations he had had with Rene overlayed with images from his activities on November the twenty-second, just over six years before. Worcester got up out of his chair very quietly to look for some matches.
Wikisource has a version with more links (easier to edit than on this blog).

My wiki has it now that the Wikisource one was deleted by wiktators.

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