Communing with Rastus

Guest Post by Fred Reed

What happened was, I came to the Yankee Capital from where I growed up in East Needle, Tennessee, that’s so far back in the mountains that the sun don’t hardly shine and we don’t get too much news about what they do in the flatlands. Mostly people in East Needle just stays where they are. But I weren’t too normal, or anyways that’s what Miss Maisie Stovelid, the teacher lady in the county school said. She said I was smarter than the other kids and she hoped I’d go far, though I reckon she would have settled for the next county over. Most folk just thought there was something wrong with my head.

So howsomever that was, I set out for the Yankee Capital that’s Washington, DC, and I spent near on two years staying with my cousin Entropy McWilliams and learning what was going on in the part of the country that ain’t East Needle, that turned out to be most of it.

Well, I decided that flatlanders was crazier than the possums that used to eat the throwaway mash from my Uncle Hant’s moonshine still. Anyway, they was all upset about Rachel Tension. I figured she was out of the Bible. The Good Book is full of Rachels and Jezebels and the preacher in East Needle, that was the Reverent McBilly Oslieber of the Pure Bible Truth Baptist Church, was always talking about them ladies. But it turned out Rachel Tension was all about colored people, that we didn’t have none of in East Needle, and that seemed to work pretty good-

Anyways, I was there for about two years and maybe halfway understood people. That’s about all the understanding you can do with flatlanders. So then I heard about some preacher man called Al Sharpton who didn’t like white people, that I thought was pretty much all of us, and i figured out what was going on in the flatlands. so I called his office.

Well, I guess. The other day In the Washington Post that’s a newspaper, I found someone called the Reverent Al Sharpton honking and blowing about how bad white folks is, and how we needed to fess up about our sins, and we needed a open and honest conversation about race. It seemed like a pretty good idea, and it’s sure never been tried, so I called the Reverent Al’s office and said I’d meet him somewhere and we could try it.

Al’s office said he was too important to talk to me. They didn’t exactly say it but it was what they meant. They said they would send his assistant, Rastus Washington, and we could be open and honest.

Rastus turned out to be a black fellow who studied at Harvard, that’s a motingator school and real important. He seemed like a nice guy and so I helped him read the menu, and I told him I’d go first and be open and honest, and then he could take his shot. I got right to it and what I said was:

Now, Rastus, you talk about the lingering–it means leftover–effects of slavery and how awful they are. I agree with you, Rastus. Them effects is bad and I think we should do something about them. One leftover effect of slavery is that I have to buy a new bicycle about two times a year. That’s an effect that I wish would linger som less.

My neighbor Bill Fuse in Arlington, that’s outside of the city, he says he’s a engineer but they ain’t no trains in Washington so sometimes I wonder. He said another lingering effect of slavery was, “I can’t walk in the cities of my own country unless I wear a armored bathysphere.” I didn’t know what one of those was, but he said it was getting real hard to find a bathysphere in Washington.

I figured out that lots of cities in America was full of lingering effects of slavery, and most of them have guns and want your car. Well, I wanted my car too except I didn’t have one to want.

Now let’s talk about this slavery thing, Rastus. You want respirations for slavery. That makes sense,I thought, about like lug nuts on a birthday cake. You’ve done convinced me, Rastus. In this very moment I promise to go home and set loose all my slaves, ever blessed one, and they can scuttle in all directions and I won’t pay them no mind.

Just wondering, Rastus, how many slaves do you figure I own? I can’t hardly remember, I got so many. I don’t need a exact number, but just even hundreds, and I give my pledge to give all of them ten million dollars each. I reckon that might be pretty good respirations for a lot of slavery, what do you figure?

One day I read in the Washington Post that’s more honest even than the Bible that more’n nine hundred cars got carjacked in the city this year. It don’t sound too civilized. Let’s powwow a little about them cars. I reckon it was mostly old Asian women in walkers and probably on Social Security that done all that. It’s what usually happens. Sometimes they got poison chopsticks so you have to give them the keys. A white man would take a cab. But, you know how those old Asian women are. it’s better to steal a car.

But then I read in this magazine, it was called Natural Geographic, about Africa and how people there did hunting and gathering. That means finding stuff and it don’t belong to nobody so you can just take it and it’s a instinct. It ain’t really stealing. They just can’t tell a car from low-hanging papayas.

And I reckon it’s kind of the same thing with all these blacks that get caught doing that plagiarism stuff, like Martin Luther King and that Claudine Gay woman that was president of Harvard until a while back when she stopped being. I don’t guess they mean to steal anything. It’s just more hunting-and-gathering, but it’s somebody else’s school papers instead of wild bananas. And anyway they aren’t really stealing it. They leave it where they found it, but just make a copy. I mean, if one of those Asian-lady carjackers made a copy of somebody’s car, would you call it stealing?

Now, Rastus, let’s talk about this cultural appropriation that you black folk fuss about. It seems like you do a lot of it your own self. Anytime you talk English, that’s cultural appropriation, though I know it don’t happen too often. Anytime you count more than ten or wear shoes, or talk on your telephone that we invented or drive on paved roads, or drive a car no matter who you stole it from. And when you steal all those cars you’re really appropriating a lot of culture or at least cars. I wish you would leave some for us so we can drive to work.

what i reckon is, Rastus. you ought to thank us for everything we invent and you get to use free. Saying thanks is just good manners. Get some binoculars, that’s’ like two telescopes stuck together like beer bottles, and go to Dupont Circle in the Yankee Capital, and climb up on the that thing that shoots water everywhere and looks like somebody crazy tried to make a faucet and it didn’t work too good, with all the water coming out every whichaway and look all around, and see if you can find anything, with a moving part, invented by American Africans.

I don’t know, Rastus. It really seems to me you ought to thank white folk for inventing all that stuff for you. If it wasn’t for us, what could you steal?

But what Bill Fuse, hes the engineer fellow that don’t have no train, says we could license you our civilization. That’s what Bill Fuse says. He says it would be like software, that sounds like those magazines you get in the bus station under the counter. He says it would take a lot of bookkeeping to license you everything separate–shoes, smartphone, dentists. The bookkeeping would be awful. But maybe we could let you rent the whole thing, for five thousand a year. Maybe we could have family licenses as a quantity discount. that’s what Bill says.

Sometimes I have to wonder about football, where you black folks get twelve million dollars a year to grab something and run with it. And we give you shopping malls to practice in. That looks like black privilege to me, Rastus. What you get twelve million for, I’d get twelve years.

I don’t know, Rastus. These is deep questions. But I reckon if we figure on them hard enough, we might come up with answers. My mother taught me to be polite, so I won’t say it looks like nobody in this whole damn city ain’t got the sense God give a crabapple. and anyway we’re having a open and honest discussion of race. I guess that’s something anyway. What do you figure?

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18 Comments
luke2236
luke2236
January 17, 2024 2:54 pm

I figure the author is spot on!

A cruel accountant
A cruel accountant
  luke2236
January 18, 2024 1:35 pm

When the facts and statistics are confirmed by anecdotal information it’s probably true

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 17, 2024 3:00 pm

Good points…painful vehicle.

Anon y mous
Anon y mous
  Anonymous
January 18, 2024 5:33 pm

I thought it was fun to read. It took a lot of thought to sound ignorant in writing

CCRider
CCRider
January 17, 2024 3:05 pm

I loved the meme that goes: Claudine Gay got hired because of the color of her skin and got fired because of the content of her character.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  CCRider
January 17, 2024 6:48 pm

And, yet, she kept her $900K salary at Harvard … so now she’s a ‘teacher’ … 

Anonymous
Anonymous
  CCRider
January 17, 2024 10:10 pm

She got fired for upsetting the Hebrews.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Anonymous
January 18, 2024 12:00 am

Most folks missed that angle … which is the biggest truth of all — (((they))) are the ultimate victim/protected group … all other groups are distant 2d at best …

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 17, 2024 3:59 pm

What have the Roman’s ever done for us?

Update:

What have white people given to a world full of ungrateful blacks?

jlw
jlw
January 17, 2024 6:36 pm

Being from the Great State of Tennessee (and an obvious racist), I sure wish most of our colored folks would move to the Yankee Capital for good!

Just Thinking
Just Thinking
  jlw
January 17, 2024 7:43 pm

I always thought the line that asked ” why didn’t they go home when they were freed?” was the best question.

You’re let out of “prison”- get paroled – and refuse to leave?

Uncle Alkali
Uncle Alkali
  Just Thinking
January 18, 2024 11:56 am

They couldn’t afford passage back between the lot of them.

Same way they’ll keep you in your 15 minute city.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
January 17, 2024 6:47 pm

Glenn knew Rastus … and the 3 of us got together and Glenn asked: ‘Rastus … what’s you like bestus? And Rastus replied: ‘I likes ass bestus’.

The True Nolan
The True Nolan
January 17, 2024 6:49 pm

Sixty years of special rights, special programs, special standards, and (worst of all) special excuses have given us the unfortunate answer that none of us wanted to hear. Africans are unable to keep up. They are unable to assimilate fully into a technological society. They are genetically (this has been proven over and over) unable to achieve an average IQ high enough to be productive or law abiding in a modern Western civilization. Of course there are the rare exceptions — but too few for the group as a whole to integrate into society.

I was a strong supporter of equal rights for all as a teenager back in the 1960s. Not an easy thing to do in the deep south. I was called N**ger Lover because of it. I had every hope and every expectation that if given a fair chance we could bring African performance up to the level of Whites. I was wrong. All we have done is lower standards for everyone so that Africans would appear to be succeeding.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  The True Nolan
January 17, 2024 8:20 pm

Professor Amy Wax of Penn School of Law said it best in this article … and the school has been trying its hardest to get rid of her ever since …

https://www.inquirer.com/philly/opinion/commentary/paying-the-price-for-breakdown-of-the-countrys-bourgeois-culture-20170809.html

august
august
  The True Nolan
January 17, 2024 10:09 pm

At least we now have a strong black middle class.

/s

bigfoot
bigfoot
January 18, 2024 3:46 am

Blacks are a small problem in comparison to the white elites who strive to “own the world” and fuck you, while creating favorable laws and give-aways to the poor fools of every color who would keep them in power.

Looking at the basic problem one cannot escape concluding that humans cannot be trusted to rule over other humans in any other manner than one of self-interest. In a small community of humans there is some chance of seeing accountability, but there’s no way that happens in a nation. And there is the problem, because a small community has no chance of defending itself against a much larger force coming from some nation state where the elite hold sway, as they always will.

We have met the enemy and he is us. Pogo
————————————————————–

The animal characters Walt Kelly created for his classic newspaper comic strip Pogo were known for their seemingly simplistic, but slyly perceptive comments about the state of the world and politics.
None is more remembered than Pogo the ‘possum’s quote in the poster Kelly designed to help promote environmental awareness and publicize the first annual observance of Earth Day, held on April 22, 1970:

“WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US.”

In the poster, under the quote, Pogo is seen holding a litter pick-up stick and a burlap bag.

He appears to be getting ready to start cleaning up the garbage humans have strewn over Okefenokee Swamp, the part of the planet where he lives.

Kelly used the line again in the Pogo strip published on the second Earth Day in 1971.

The words poignantly highlight a key concept of environmental stewardship: we all share part of the responsibility for the trashing of planet Earth, so we should all do our share to help clean it up.

Pogo’s quip was a pun based on the famous quotation “We have met the enemy and they are ours” — one of two famous quotes made by American Navy Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry on September 10, 1813, after defeating a British naval squadron on Lake Erie during the War of 1812. (Perry’s other famous quote that day was “Don’t give up the ship.” )

Kelly had used a version of the quote in the foreword to his 1953 book The Pogo Papers, but it was not as pithy or memorable as the line he coined for Earth Day.

Uncle Alkali
Uncle Alkali
January 18, 2024 11:53 am

I figure that city slicker, Fred Reed, ain’t never wrote “country” before. You gotta LIVE that shit, Boo.