Let’s
get this out there: I like graffiti. I like witty, urbane, interesting, cutting graffiti. The type of graffiti you find in bathroom
stalls in graduate school. Clever. Kind of like the anonymous precursor to
facebook, where a discussion may be started by a Marxist, dissing Reagan’s
Capitalism and his trickle down theory of economics as fatally flawed. Once the discussion is started, the
perpetrators always return to the scene of the crime (the same stall) to see
who has commented on their thread. They
like to return well before the call of nature has tooted its clarion horn. ‘Cause they want to see who responded to
their post. Fun stuff.
The first time I had to use the toilet here, I noticed the stern warning taped to the outside of the entrance to the throne, “Warning: This is government property. Graffiti is prohibited. Blah blah blah.” I opened the door to find the walls covered with graffiti. Nasty stuff. Nasty and embarrassing that Americans, native English speakers who wrote that shit are that uneducated. The graffiti is absolutely riddled with spelling and grammatical errors. And then there is some downright racist stuff.
The first time I had to use the toilet here, I noticed the stern warning taped to the outside of the entrance to the throne, “Warning: This is government property. Graffiti is prohibited. Blah blah blah.” I opened the door to find the walls covered with graffiti. Nasty stuff. Nasty and embarrassing that Americans, native English speakers who wrote that shit are that uneducated. The graffiti is absolutely riddled with spelling and grammatical errors. And then there is some downright racist stuff.
The demographics of the workforce amongst contractors in Afghanistan is interesting. On Bagram, you’ll find primarily Americans
from all regions of the U.S., but the Indians can outnumber Americans by a 2:1
ratio. There are also Kosovars, Nepalis
and a smattering of Afghanis. I’m
unfailingly polite to the Afghanis. If
there ever is an incident where the perimeter has been breached and some insugent group is looking for a few good infidels (and my infidel-ness is chart topping, I assure you), I hope they’ll point me out and
say, “Not that one. He’s a good
man. He knows my name and learned a few
words of Pashtu. Spare him.” I’ll give him the big thumbs up and say,
“Allahu akbar to you, my brother! That’s
what I’m talking about!”
But the
international workforce can sometimes lead to misunderstandings and
differences, and can lead to some unpleasant graffiti (factoid: the singular of graffiti is graffito). Most of the stuff is appalling. There is a lot of black/white name calling,
which has nothing to do with the workforce from around the world, which is even more of
a reason for it to be inexcusable. There is the
liberal use of the ‘n’ word. There are proclamations
of the end of the U.S. because Obama was
re-elected. And again, Obama is a Muslim
and was born in Kenya. Like I said, not
the stuff of graduate school. Or high
school. Even Michelle is fair game. Children.
Please. Are Sasha and Malia next? The black population hits back against Mitt
Romney and the white establishment; we’re all racist crackers. Go home if you don’t want to be here, Obama
won the election. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. Clearly, there are some
deep rooted issues at stake. In 1991,
Rodney King asked if we could just all get along. Apparently, even after almost 23 years, the
answer is no. There is one person who
uses a red pen to correct grammar, punctuation and spelling, without entering
the fray. Just things like, ‘Indefinite
article not needed here. No need for a
comma. If there is no pause when
speaking, you don’t use a comma.” My
kind of graffiti. But the rest is just
uneducated, lowest common denominator crap.
The most virulent graffiti is directed
at the Indian workforce. Some of the most interesting, educated, hard working and competent people I have worked with overseas have been Indians, particularly from the State of Kerala, which spends the greatest percentage of their budget on education, and from my perspective, Kerala is getting a bang for their buck. But the graffiti is aimed at toilet habits, which apparently are unknown and foreign to those from the U.S. For those who don’t know, many in the Indian
subcontinent, and throughout Southeast Asia and East Asia use squat
toilets and water to clean themselves.
By the by, there are a number of studies out there that show squatting
while dropping a deuce has health benefits. I won’t bore you with the nitty gritty, but
if you’re interested, go ahead and google it for grins. What really gets the sitters going is the
empty water bottles (brought in to clean the nether regions after squatting)
and what the sitters refer to as ‘ass water.’
The first time I heard that phrase, I couldn’t stop chuckling. Really?
Ass water? I chuckle even as I
write this. For those squatters who are
not careful, when cleaning the nether regions with water, drops may splatter on the toilet seat. When a sitter goes in a stall and sees
droplets of water on the toilet seat, they can rest assured they did not come
from a pure mountain fed fresh spring.
No, those wet spots are…ass water.
Who wants to have to clean that shit up?
The
graffiti is really not fit to print, so anyone who was looking forward to the
gory details of the insults hurled back and forth will be disappointed. And don’t you think ass water is a detail
that is gory enough? We all live on the
base. We work together, we eat
together. The living quarters are
segregated (not sure why that is, perhaps a morbid fear of getting too close to
ass water prompted some planner to have the Indians in separate living quarters
– not sure if the Kosovars are housed separately as well). Living and working together should engender
some sort of camaraderie – and it does, up to a point. And that point, the Mason-Dixon line of
Bagram, and I suspect throughout every FOB in Afghanistan is between those from
whom the ass water comes and those who enter a stall to find the most unwelcome
ass water. The division is between the
sitters and the squatters. And baby, I’ve
seen the graffiti to prove it.
Up next? Bagram, a mature base and an ode to #236.
Up next? Bagram, a mature base and an ode to #236.
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