Memories of Maiduguri

“Never shall I forget his deep-throated laughter as he told me that ‘the rascals’ would kill him.” – Taki 

DZ wanted to travel to Maiduguri in Nigeria, where his father was a visiting scholar at the university. I agreed to go with him, knowing nothing about Maiduguri and very little about Nigeria, except that it was an English-speaking country, not a Francophone country like Chad, where we were stationed as Peace Corps volunteers.

The first leg of the journey was by bush taxi – a smallish van with benches bolted on either side of the cabin. The big advantage of bush taxis was the price. Fares were less than a dollar each, which made them the usual choice for Chadians and Peace Corps volunteers.

To eke out a profit, bush taxis did not operate by a schedule, but idled at the station for as long as it took to fill the cabin.

Chadian-full was different from Fort Lauderdale-full, or even New York City-full. Bush-taxi-full was 20 humans, each with boxes and bags, plus at least a dozen chickens and one or two goats. And that was just the contents of the cabin. Tied to the roof rack, there was likely to be a six-foot-high mountain of bed frames and firewood and farm tools and motors and bags of grain… and who knows what else!

DZ and I had woken up at the crack of dawn and were at the station by about 6:00 a.m. By 8:00, the van was full. The driver put the transmission into gear, and the van began coughing, sputtering, and finally hobbling and clanking down the dirt road.

Moments later, we heard shouting outside in some tribal language. The driver stopped the van, and his assistant went to the back and opened the door. There was an elderly couple that wanted to get in. The assistant yelled at us all in yet another language, in response to which our fellow passengers began shuffling themselves around in an effort to make room for the additional passengers. But even after another battery of verbal abuse from the assistant, there was, at best, only six inches of bench space available to accommodate them.

The assistant shook his head in disappointment and yelled something to the driver, who then put the transmission back in gear. “Finally,” I thought to myself. “We are on our way.”

The driver floored the gas pedal and the van bolted forward. A second later, he slammed on the brakes, hurling us violently backward and crushed up against one another, but freeing up the bench space the assistant needed. He shoved the old couple on board and shut the door behind them.

That was “Part I of Our Adventure to Maiduguri.” The rest of the trip was more exciting and even stranger, which I will save that for another time. I’m telling you this now because I happen to have read this morning a reminiscence from one of my favorite reminiscers, Theodore Dalrymple (of Taki’s Magazine), whom I’ve recommended to you before.

Dalrymple’s essay is about some of his memories of this very same city of Maiduguri in the early 1980s, just a few years after DZ and I traveled there.

Africa is a continent unlike any other. Its landscapes, varied as they are, do not remind me of anyplace else I’ve ever been. That’s also true of its peoples and their cultures. They are not like any others in the world. And it (sub-Saharan Africa, that is) has changed very little since I was first there 40 years ago. It exists in its own time capsule. It still feels undiscovered to me.

Chad was not an easy place to live in – especially for a 25-year-old American who had never traveled overseas. It was not just different. Everything, from brushing your teeth to giving a lecture at the local university, felt like it had to be reinvented from square one. I managed well enough, but many others didn’t. A fair percentage of the Peace Corps volunteers that went to Chad while I was there returned to the States before their tour was up.

And I’ll bet that, apart from a handful of large, relatively wealthy cities like Marrakesh, Algiers, and Cairo in the north or Johannesburg and Cape Town in the south, that strangeness and difficulty is still true for 90% of sub-Saharan Africa today.

Notwithstanding the uncomfortable differences, there are some things I remember about Africa that made the experience of living there worthwhile. One of those things was a depth of intimacy among male friends that did not exist in the States. Another thing that impressed me deeply, which Dalrymple writes about in the linked-to essay below, was the capacity of Africans to joke about the vicissitudes of life… punctuated by their huge, bellowing, and contagious laughter.

Click here to enjoy Dalrymple doing his thing!

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Everyone Wants to Be a Victim in America Today – Even Skinny People!

It’s no longer cool to win a gold medal or graduate cum laude or start a successful business or climb Mt. Kilimanjaro. In today’s America, the only sure way to get attention is to figure out and complain about some way you have been victimized.

 Meghan Markle is doing it. So is Oprah Winfrey. In a recent New York Times article, I discovered a new way to climb aboard the victim train: Become a victim of “skinny shaming”!

The article, written by Gina Kolata, tells several stories of women that took Wegovy, one of a new class of drugs prescribed for obesity. One of those women, Katarra Ewing of Detroit, lost 90 pounds on the drug.

But there was an unintended and unexpected side effect: Many of her longtime friends, she said, abandoned her! Apparently, they preferred the 90-pound-plumper version. “Only my genuine friends are left,” she complained, “and that’s a very small number.”

Click here.

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The COVID Response: What We Got Wrong

The NYT’s COVID Tracker Is Back!

It seems that the NYT has resumed making updates to its COVID tracking pages. CA forwarded the first one to me, showing that there are still 684 deaths per week attributed to the virus.

But remember… that number is still based on the CDC’s original mandate that if someone dies with COVID, they are to be officially recorded as dying from COVID. Which means that people that were obese and/or diabetic and/or sick with cancer who tested positive for COVID when they were checked into the hospital are reported as having died from COVID. It also means – in theory, at least – that someone pulled out of a motorcycle accident with severe internal bleeding could be counted as yet another COVID death.

I know that that sounds preposterous. I’m sure you are thinking I’ve lost my mind. But it was the protocol adopted by the CDC.

Since this crazy protocol first came out, I’ve been looking for something to tell me that it was a hoax. I’ve found nothing. What I’ve found instead is several reports that tried to estimate by what degree it has exaggerated the COVID death count. According to those calculations, making up for the double-counting, the CDC reported count is a huge overstatement. If reported correctly, it would be reduced by about 70%. That means the weekly death count is about 200, not +/- 700 as shown in the NYT’s COVID Tracker.

That’s not nothing. It’s 10,000 deaths a year. But to put it in perspective, it’s about one-third the annual death count from the flu.

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More on the death of Cormac McCarthy: 

From AS…

“Last night, in honor of Cormac McCarthy’s passing, D and I watched The Road. We both read the book years ago and didn’t remember most of the details. As the movie rolled, my memories of the book slowly came back.

“It was so well done, and the acting was off the charts. Robert Duvall had a small part, but, as usual, his part was memorable. Somehow, the director made the movie darker than the book.

“I know you like movies that make you think and have questions that spill over to the next day. I’m glad I saw this one. It was terrific. But I prefer lighter movies. When it ended, I felt like taking my own life.”

My Response: I hear you. I have seen The Road and read the book. And I agree. The movie was a bit darker than the book.

As for “lighter” movies, I’m not against them. I watch my share. But I have to admit: When it comes to all forms of entertainment and amusement, I try to keep my consumption as healthy as I can bear. I do that not because I want people to look up to me (although I do), but because I believe 100% that the value one gets from entertainment is directly correlated to the mental and emotional work one must do to consume it.

And because, as everyone who knows me knows, I take enormous spectrum-like pleasure in sorting and arranging every aspect of my conscious existence, I’ve developed an informal (okay, I’m lying – an anally retentive) hierarchy for video entertainment that I use to decide what sort of movie to watch.

At the top of the list is, of course, big, dark, idea-laden dramas like Schindler’s List that have both tremendous verticality and horizontality, and that change me in some significant and lasting way.

When I don’t have quite enough mental and emotional strength for those, I opt for beautifully made and emotionally touching movies – domestic dramas, historical romances, lyrical adventures, etc. – that are smart and well photographed so that they leave me feeling like I’ve somehow raised my personal humanity somehow, even if it only lasts a day or two. (For my taste, the best of these are made in China and Japan. Shoplifters, for example.)

When I feel too lazy and/or sloppy for those, I go for spoofs like Monty Python’s Life of Brian or comic family dramas – particularly Indian domestic comedies like Monsoon Wedding.

And sometimes, not often, but sometimes, I have an appetite for junk. On the recommendation of MM recently, I watchedDirty Grandpa with Robert De Niro. I could give you a dozen ways Dirty Grandpa is juvenile and pandering, but I laughed out loud at least a half-dozen times.

From DF…

“You did a great job on your piece on McCarthy – better than the obits I’ve been reading in the big publications.”

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