Archive for May, 2021

Jack T. Chick’s Word Becomes Flesh

Wednesday, May 26th, 2021

I finally did it. I found a Chick tract in the wild.

Chick tracts, for the uninitiated, are small illustrated religious pamphlets originally created by one Jack T. Chick, who hoped that his comics would convert America’s populous to fundamentalist Christianity. Despite the downright hateful views expressed in some of these booklets and the controversy they still attract, they continue to be distributed by various means across the globe, carrying Chick’s messages beyond the grave (he passed in 2016). They have become a frequent target of lampooning by those infatuated and infuriated by their existence; they have been immortalized in films, CD booklets, and songs.

I have always found these tracts fascinating for their sheer lack of subtlety in their messaging as well as their iconic and immediately recognizable graphic style, which has inspired many a budding punk graphic artiste hoping to subvert the Mainstream. To me they serve as fascinating, living artifacts from America’s fundamentalist side, just one example of the persisting influence of the religious right in the west and beyond.

“The Word Became Flesh” is not as interesting as some of the other, more well known tracts—instead of an absurd cartoon story of a lost soul/dirty rotten sinner being miraculously converted to the Lord after a short conversation with another cardboard cutout of a person, it’s an illustrated retelling of portions of the Bible regarding Jesus’s word. But that doesn’t make it any less intriguing.

Actually, my first encounter with a Chick tract was in the wild, though it wasn’t as a found object. I was casually browsing the pants aisle of a local thrift shop hoping to find something tolerable in my size when a mysterious woman armed with a shopping cart manifested beside me. With long pale wavy hair and dark, flowing garments, she resembled one’s kooky, Wicca enthused aunt who always bakes a mean batch of cookies when you visit her every summer. However, her religious affiliation vastly differed from what her outer appearance implied, which I would soon learn.

She was feuding with an overwhelming armful of clothing hangers which she eventually lost control of, dropping the collection on the ground in the process. I naturally glanced over, expecting her to be bending down cleaning up her spill. Instead, she just stood there, looking somewhat bewildered. She may have been old, but she didn’t look so frail that she wouldn’t be able to pick up the mess. It was almost as if she had committed the act on purpose as a test of my will to help a poor old disheveled woman experiencing obviously monumental peril. Concerned but willing, I bent down and began to help pick the hangers up for her, placing them in her cart.

She thanked me for my help and asked me a few questions, with the most potent question being, “Do you attend church?” The moment my brain processed the inquiry, I knew something was different. I replied that I do not, as I would be lying if I said otherwise.

She made her exit by gifting me a “comic book” from her bag, immediately recognizable to me from it’s horizontal format and monochrome cover. Next to a crudely drawn image of a wailing nuclear family with “666” imprinted on each member’s forehead, bold white text spelled out “The Beast;” “J.T.C.” lingered in smaller print in the lower right corner. Baby’s first Chick tract.

Upon realizing what gold I was currently holding, I slipped it into my back pocket as discreetly as possible as feelings of unreality and ecstasy began to boil within my brain. There was no way I would ever have such a seemingly once-in-a-lifetime encounter—right?

But it was real.

Since then, I’ve found numerous religious pamphlets while shopping at Christian-run thrift stores in my area, usually lying on a table of goods or a bookshelf, including this amusing vandalized item. However, none of these had been a Chick Publications product, and all of them were much more generic. There’s something about the cartoony malice of a Chick tract that still holds, a blatant propaganda tool turned cultural icon.

…AND THIS BULLET MAKES SEVEN GO…

Saturday, May 22nd, 2021

…listen to this brand new song by one of music’s most intelligent provocateurs if you want to hear what modern music would sound like if it were unchained by forced “genreless” appeal to the lowest common denominator. So happy for this guy right now.

A Few Words On Hero Worship

Thursday, May 20th, 2021

It’s such a shame that succumbing to hero worship is becoming more and more common within human society.

The concept of putting faith in one individual is flawed in itself, yet it remains almost necessary for survival. Change can only be made via group efforts; putting one’s sole faith in a single individual makes it impossible for anything to get done, as one person cannot be a master of all trades. Some do hold many talents, yet there will inevitably be some area in which they flounder. In order for a group to work successfully, each member must play an active role in whatever region they happen to be specialized in; a machine needs many parts to operate.

However, everyone likes to cheer on a lead singer, a pretty face, an icon. Some need to. There’s a reason why monotheistic religions are still such a large influence in today’s world.

If one gains a significant amount of faith in another, that faith can become difficult to completely let go of. This erects a moral concern should the hero fail in some regard.

Once one obtains power, the urge to maintain that power by any means necessary takes form. Paranoia sets in, instilling a fear of others who may try to take the crown. Prestige and glory must be defended at any cost. The football player who uses steroids and the CEO whose workers are severely underpaid have similar reasons behind their actions. If eyes are not on them, they are nothing.

A hero does a Very Bad Thing, the Very Bad Thing is publicized, and criticism arises. Those with faith can take one of two routes: they can accept that their so-called hero is a flawed human being just like anybody else and make a decision regarding whether continued support is worth the effort or not; or they can continue to view the hero as superhuman, elevated. By choosing to maintain the myth of the superhero one opens up two more paths: they can spiral into a depression at the realization of anything that contradicts with the hero’s preconceived facade, not unlike the preteen girl bawling over her favorite pop star getting married; or they can wage war against the slightest criticism, as the superhero is to them impenetrable and any negative analysis is the untruth. Common sense too often takes a backseat to blind worship and obsession. One’s brain must maintain a healthy amount of skepticism alongside a degree of openness in order to cut through the crap and see things for what they really are, not what one desperately wants them to be.

My Side Of The Story…Again

Tuesday, May 4th, 2021

Today marks the fifty first commemoration of the 1970 massacre at Kent State, where four students were murdered by the National Guard at a peaceful anti-war protest.

I had first learned of the massacre in a book about the 1970s that I had rented from a library as a middle schooler. It shocked me, as did reading of other protests and more subterranean movements of rebellion that came into fruition in reaction to the Vietnam War, and I never forgot about it thanks to the ever-striking image of a young teenager kneeling over the body of Jeffrey Miller. Down the line, I would become more familiar with the event after learning that one of my greatest role models, Jerry Casale of the musical group DEVO, was present at the protest and was forever altered by it; he had been acquaintances with two of the students killed that day. [Last year, coinciding with the event’s fiftieth commemoration, I wrote on my Instagram about the great influence that Jerry’s story had on me; it is a much better read than this post.] It was only then that I became exposed to the true horror of May 4th’s aftermath—misinformation campaigns brainwashed the majority of America into believing that the students were to blame for their deaths while Kent locals flashed each other four finger signs—”at least we got four of them.”

Not much has changed in terms of illegitimate authority silencing the voice of reason and filling the masses with pro-complacency propaganda. To this day, some still consider the protesting students to blame for not being armed, even though it would have been even easier for those in power and the public at large to demonize those students had they been given the ability to fight back, and who knows how many more would have died that day had both sides been exchanging gunfire. (Ah, the irony: the oppressed can only rise above via force, yet that force gets them an even worse beating from their oppressors, who have the power to use the same tactics scot-free.) Even more people continuously bend over backwards to excuse the abuse of power and proliferation of idiocy that has become the status quo. Popularizing and normalizing alternatives remains difficult; not many have the guts to nip the hand that slaps. Some brave souls do, even if mainstream acceptance seems out of reach. Jerry Casale himself, who obviously has much more authority on this subject than I do, has been outspoken against injustice in all forms through his work; see this essential article from last year’s commemoration. Many more also worked to promote the truth about Kent State, such as Alan Canfora, who was shot on that day and passed earlier this year. Others across the planet who were not there, including myself, cling to a similar fire of urgency, militancy, and passion, having never fallen prey to the mainstream’s program.

Not many, but some.

It’s a bit surreal observing the commemoration this year, as I have plans to visit Kent State this summer as a prospective student. Having been aware of the university’s history for a while now, I always wanted to step foot on campus to at least pay my respects; simultaneously, I do find the university appealing as a place of higher learning to attend. I’ll admit, it would be pretty neat to help keep the memory of Kent State alive from Ground Zero.

But no matter where I attend college, I still plan on continuing the legacy of those brave individuals who came before me, even if I know it won’t be easy.

My deepest respects to all of those who keep raising awareness of Kent State and all who continue to fight the good fight.