THE COCKROACHES ARE
OUT TO SMEAR BARACK OBAMA. STOP THEM IN THEIR TRACKS!
Stop the SWIFTBOATING COCKROACHES before they get hold of the AMERICAN Psyche...
AGAIN!
Go to
truthfightsback.com
Cockroaches are creepy, no doubt about it. But a cockroach in human form is not
only repulsive, they lack the most basic moral and ethical properties of a
living soul. And that kind of deficiency renders them the lowest of loathsome
and heinous beyond reason. Reading an essay about a book (THE
COCKROACH PAPERS) that recapitulates the characteristics of a
cockroach and nuttin but a cockroach (insect that is) is almost charming,
compared to Corsi's novel of lies! (I can't believe I'm plugging a book about
cockroaches!)
The Cockroach Papers
Another good read on the subject below:
Obama Faces The Smear Machine
thinkingblue

T H E COCKROACH PAPERS
BY RICHARD SCHWEID
FOUR WALLS EIGHT WINDOWS
NONFICTION
By Pete Wells
Jan. 3, 2000 | Before I read "The Cockroach Papers," I had an irrational and
unfounded disgust for roaches. But Richard Schweid's book set me straight.
Knowing what I now know about the digestive, reproductive, circulatory and
neurological systems of these remarkably designed insects, I can say with
certainty that my disgust is as rational and well-founded as it gets.
I used to think that roaches were indiscriminate eaters who would devour
anything in their paths. Now I know the whole story -- which is that although
they prefer cinnamon buns above all other foods, they will make do with paper,
bookbinding glue, wallpaper paste, leather, wool and milk that has dried around
babies' mouths. For this last delicacy they usually wait until the child is
sleeping -- a tactic they also use when they are hungry for human toenails,
fingernails, eyelashes and skin. Of course, a dead person is even easier to
feast on than a sleeping one, which is why the New York City Police Department
employs a full-time entomologist to determine whether wounds seen in autopsies
were caused by violence or by ravenous roaches.
I also had a vague notion that roaches carry disease. I am now quite clear on
that account. Roaches have been found to carry polio, hepatitis, salmonella,
streptococcus, shigella, hookworms, tapeworms, dysentery-causing amoebi, leprosy
and bubonic plague. Even a squeaky-clean cockroach can make you sick (or kill
you) if you happen to be allergic: Roaches are the prime culprits in the
inner-city asthma epidemic that takes the lives of hundreds of children each
year.
As an avatar of urban dread, the only rival to the cockroach is the Norwegian
rat, and polls show that more people fear roaches. I do, too, even though I've
faced both rats and roaches in my kitchen and a rat is by far the more
formidable enemy. But rats generally travel alone. Roaches come in swarms.
Killing the roach you see on the countertop does nothing to the legions of
others who are hiding in the cabinets or streaming in from under the sink or
waiting behind the walls. Rats are brilliant strategists, but roaches are an
invisible army, and what you can't see is always more terrifying that what you
can.
Schweid explores both the reasonable and the unreasonable fears that roaches
inspire. He seems to have met every scientist who studies the order Blattaria,
which takes in the 10,000 or so known species of cockroach. At Vanderbilt
University, he meets a researcher named Terry Page, who is trying to locate the
insect's biological clock, the part of its body that controls circadian rhythms.
Looking at a roach under a microscope, Page remarks, "After you've done this as
many times as I have you realize that each cockroach has its own individual
face. Each one is slightly different."
"So saying," Schweid writes, "he used a single-edge razor blade and tweezers to
make a slice down the middle of the roach's forehead and peel the flaps of skin
back from it," exposing "a pearl-gray blob of brain."
Scientists who make a living doing this sort of thing are invariably filled with
respect for how cleverly cockroaches are engineered. The common domestic roach,
for example, can survive without water for two weeks. It doesn't waste a drop.
"Rectal pads, located almost at the end of the animal's excretory system,
squeeze water from the mass to be excreted just before elimination," Schweid
writes. "This liquid gets recycled to places like the fat body, and the insect's
only excretion will consist of dry solids." Whether you like "The Cockroach
Papers" will depend a great deal on your tolerance for reading about things like
fat bodies and rectal pads. I couldn't put it down myself.
Not that Schweid hasn't made some peculiar choices. He quotes extensively from
works of fiction in which roaches are mentioned but doesn't always get around to
weaving them into his narrative. Even more incongruous are his long first-person
accounts of his travels in the third world. He spends six pages on glue-sniffing
kids who prowl the streets of Managua; there's not a roach in sight until the
last sentence, when the kids' leader confesses that he once accidentally bit
into a roach that had crawled into something he was eating.
I never thought I'd complain that a book contained material that didn't have
anything to do with cockroaches, but Schweid writes about these insects so
respectfully that his digressions are surprisingly unwelcome. Fortunately, there
aren't many of them. Most of the time he gives the cockroach a long cold look
and keeps looking when most of us would turn away, until a subject that seemed
disgusting becomes fascinating. Now I have nothing but admiration for
cockroaches. Which is why I've taken to sleeping in gloves and boots.
salon.com | Jan. 3, 2000
Let's keep our heads, while we continue to watch THE THEATER OF THE ABSURD!!!
YOU CAN BEAM ME UP NOW, SCOTTIE.
Thinkingblue