Genetic Manipulation News: The Longhorse Lives!

The longhorse on parade

Oft have we and many other notables of the blogosphere lamented the passing of the iconic Longhorse, most noble of beasts, most loyal of friends, most helpful of livestock, and, until now, most extinct of creatures.

We mourn no longer.

Inspired, perhaps, by the leg-lengthening operations so popular amongst Asians with high net worth and higher pain thresholds, or then again, perhaps by the spine-extension procedures perfected by Dr. Francois Charriere in his rotting and ghoul-haunted Providence house, modern science has dipped into the Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and re-created the noble Longhorse, offering it on a for-profit basis in what can only be described as a Frankensteinian nightmare of simultaneous triumph and horror.

Dr. Boli has the proof:

Longhorse Ad

Cautiously optimistic as I may be about advances in science, I think even the most coldly rational among us must pause and consider the implications of turning banal Dobbins into a tawdry modern similacrum of what was once one of nature’s most beautiful creations. Are we not all too familiar with what can occur when Man seeks to usurp the role of Creator?

Jocelyn Wildenstein, the Bride of Wildenstein!

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quiz: what kind of a redhead should you be?

Yet another nail on the head, although this time more literally. Thanks be to the seventy-fourth avatar of the goddess Feria I have now aligned my inner redhead with my outer and become as fiery on the exterior as my friends know me to be on the interior. Bring on the mens!


You Should Be a Fiery Redhead


Bold, head turning, and sure to show off your skin and eyes.

alarmed!

Fireman

So…I guess you’d call it a slow start to the day, being that I woke up at 8pm. It is, on the other hand, Saturday, and yesterday I thought ahead and set all the blogs to autopost for today, so nothing actually occurred that required my being up and awake until well after I actually was. This is just the way I like it on weekends.

And then I like to have a cup of coffee or two and brush my hair and then I like to look like an efficient, informed hero-type of woman in front of a great many good-looking uniformed officers, at least one of whom does an appreciative double-take, even though I was wearing my baggy plaid pj pants.

And so it came to pass…

It was a quarter to midnight and all through the house the alarm bell was going, but no fires to douse. As per usual, it has been raining a great deal and, also as per usual, this set the fire alarm off.

Vancouver is a very different kind of town.

Normally (this is normal, in Vancouver) what happens is, the rain leaks in because our building is covered with stucco and punctured with many holes through which the rain gains entry. Because it is stucco, it cannot easily get out again, so it seeps down through the walls to the lower levels, which is why my living room wall has holes eaten through it from which emerge bugs of the sort that were thought extinct since the Pre-Cambrian era, and why mushrooms occasionally break the surface of my carpet. The Co-op claims they will do something about that someday.

In any case, after a substantial or prolonged rainstorm, something on which one may certainly count in Vancouver in the depths of winter, the vast pool of water stored within the building invariably finds its way to the smoke detector in the South hallway on the second floor, from which it gushes in a joyous, gravity-powered fountain. Naturally, this causes the detector some considerable agitation, to which it responds in the only way it knows how: by setting off the fire alarm.

So it is not unusual to have a fire alarm go off in the middle of the night (even if it doesn’t rain in the daytime, you may be sure it will rain at night in this city) in response to a good wetting.

That, however, is not what happened this time.

That would have been normal.

Noooooo, this time I hear a large bang coming from the parking garage below my apartment, a second later comes the the alarm, I look up from the computer, decide this t-shirt won’t do and I should change into my cute polarfleece hoodie, which I do, slip on some socks that match, get into my sandals, and then make my leisurely way out to the lobby, which is crammed with my neighbors, only a small percentage of whom have English fluent enough to be used under the influence of sirens. One of them who does informs me that a section of the ceiling on the second floor has fallen in, along with the smoke detector. This does not surprise me, for I have seen that ceiling and, under the new coat of stucco it looks like the panties of a gigantic woman whose period has caught her by surprise.

Alas, this dramatic story is not true.

As I usually do, I patrol the hallways of all four floors, looking for any sign of actual fire. I’m confident enough that there IS none to take the elevator, that’s how confident. And there is none, not so much as some incense, Chinese New Year notwithstanding. Maybe that’s why we have all these false alarms? The Buddha is not appeased?

The only thing that’s actually out of place is the smoke detector at the south end of the main floor hallway, which has exploded.

“Ghosts,” says one of the Chinese neighbors, inscrutably. And then they all laugh. Maybe they know something I don’t?

In any case, I get to tell the firemen what’s what, what it usually is, where it is located, and what about the parking garage. They seem to have no notes or collective memory about our smoke detector/rain alarm issue, so I fill them in thereon. One bystander, who’s apparently lent them her keys so they can get in and out of the complex, asks if the Captain has them and it appears that he does not. And, at this point a remarkably good-looking and relatively youthful member of the force enters the building, probably just because standing out in the rain is unpleasant, even if you’ve got the suit and the cool hat.

“Do you have this lady’s keys?” asks the Captain.

“No,” he replies. “I think Joey has them,” and as he turns, presumably to go get Joey, he does an appreciative double-take in my direction and I give thanks to the goddess Feria for my newly-red hair and suddenly wish I had put on the good jeans. The tight ones.

I’d have given him my keys.

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Pic o’ the day: Dragonfly

Dragonfly with Dew

by Martin Amm, via Neatorama

Then how do you explain Joan Rivers?

Botox Babe

I think Joan Rivers must simply have had all the skin on her face removed and replaced with a lifelike latex substitute; that’s the only thing that accounts for the fact she can still pull any kind of an expression at all. When she relaxes, though, she does look like one of those aliens from Communion.

In one of the many, many millions of magazines I have lying around the house lies one article which puts Botox in its proper context. Just as Dominick Dunne put crime into a moral context (which is really the primary context in which those events take place) so this article, which I cannot find, by a woman whose name I cannot recall, looked at cosmetic surgery in a fundamentally meaningful, humanistic context. I do not know why this article is, as far as I can tell, alone in the world. I do not know why no-one else has examined the social and cultural impact of Botox. But I do know, it asked some very important questions.

First among those is:

What will become of a society in which women are unable to express negative emotion?

Do you remember when you were a child, and you’d watch your mother for clues as to what was going on and whether or not it was a problem? What if those clues never came? What if all you had to depend on were her words?

Botox is censorship of the body. You think you’re only banning the bad words, but like an over-aggressive spamfilter that won’t let you open the Breast Cancer Charity fundraising site, it cuts you off from things you may not realize are both negative and positive. How’d you like to discover that too late?

I can’t even imagine being a fortysomething man trying to date age-appropriate, financially secure women; there would be no clues at all in her face if you happened to say something that struck a nerve. You would never know when to back off. You would never see the vulnerability. You would, to a meaningful extent, be cut off from an important part of that woman’s basic humanity.

As would be all other people.

And what must it do to them?

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