The Mental Militia Forums

Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Pages: 1 ... 5 6 [7] 8   Go Down

Author Topic: The Best of George Potter  (Read 152815 times)

George Potter

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #90 on: December 11, 2006, 10:30:27 pm »

I've added your "...polite society" link to the first post in this thread. 

Is it a different version from what was published in your old Lulu.com book?  I have the PDF of that book, and could probably extract the text from it if needed.



Nope, same thing. There never was a part two. :P
Logged

Pagan

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #91 on: December 12, 2006, 12:29:39 am »

Gloryroad:
Quote
I'm gathering and editing into a single document. It will contain: ...etc.

Got it.

Are you planning to add any longer stories? I thought you said you were going to put one in.

And I need the rest of your Blurbs -- from Sunni or whomever. I only have the one from John. Fairly short please, or I (or you) can take excerpts from them.
« Last Edit: December 12, 2006, 12:38:35 am by Pagan »
Logged

George Potter

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #92 on: December 12, 2006, 08:43:49 am »

Gloryroad:
Quote
I'm gathering and editing into a single document. It will contain: ...etc.

Got it.

Are you planning to add any longer stories? I thought you said you were going to put one in.

I'm hoping to include two, actually: The Woman Who Hitchiked With Cats and Trenching. I'll try to get them to you before Xmas.

I should be able to send you the final version of my essay A Map Of Mankind by the end of the week, barring catastrophic events.

Quote
And I need the rest of your Blurbs -- from Sunni or whomever. I only have the one from John. Fairly short please, or I (or you) can take excerpts from them.

I'll do my best...but it's tough to rush favors. :P

Oh, and there will be interior art -- B&W. At least two, possibly more. :)
Logged

Pagan

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #93 on: December 12, 2006, 10:13:16 am »

Quote
I'm hoping to include two, actually: The Woman Who Hitchiked With Cats and Trenching.

Great! I was hoping they would be included.

Quote
I should be able to send you the final version of my essay A Map Of Mankind by the end of the week, barring catastrophic events.

Bring it on... I've been curious about that 'Map'.

Quote
Oh, and there will be interior art -- B&W. At least two, possibly more.

No problem. Just tell me where you want them placed.
This is fun, and should be beautiful. Hope you like it as much as I do; I'm tweaking it daily, as you add and as inspiration hits.
I'm beginning to feel like I'm delivering a baby!

Dare2BFree is currently helping with the copy editing, which I appreciate immensely.  (Maybe she's my midwife... :-) )
Logged

George Potter

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #94 on: December 12, 2006, 10:23:24 am »


Well my thanks to Dare2BFree. :)
Logged

George Potter

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #95 on: December 12, 2006, 12:57:58 pm »

These are the story notes that will go at the books end, thought some here might like to read 'em:

Story Notes



Stray Dog

Everyone places this after Ghost, because of chronology.  But I wrote this one first, and it was my first attempt to write for an audience: a scary thing all by itself. That it concerned extremely personal events that were still raw to me at the time made it even scarier.  Over the course of a few weeks I serialized it on the forum of anti-state.com. I kept waiting for people to laugh, or to lose interest. Neither happened. So I kept going.

Ghost

Of a piece with Stray Dog. Both of these essays were a sort of therapy to me: allowing me to chew up and spit out the anger and self-pity that was keeping me from concentrating on fiction or important -- to be honest -- non fiction.

Odd trivia: created quite a little flame war when a well meaning bridge-builder posted it on the left-anarchist site infoshop.  Based only on a short segment where I praise the market as a civilizing force in even the most hellish of places,  I was called a liar, a fake, a fraud, a poseur, etc. That it was a true, not at all fantastical story of an ordinary guy kidnapped and abused by the state over nothing didn't matter. I was a dirty capitalist and deserved it.

That taught me everything I needed to know about socialism.

micropiece

When I first discovered the world of 'free market anarchism' I nearly exploded. At last someone made sense!
I tackled Ludwig Von Mises' Human Action and discovered something I hadn't experienced in years: a brilliant and difficult text that actually challenged me. That it rewarded me at the same time was the clincher: this guy knew what the hell he was talking about.

I consider this to be my first 'mature' piece of writing. Inspired partly by Leonard Read's I, Pencil this was also my attempt to explain free market dynamics on an emotional, passionate level.   To grab people by the balls rather than the brain, so to speak.  It seems to have worked, because this remains my fastest spreading, most 'viral' piece of work. It popped up all over the place in the months following my posting. I got loads of mail from it.

It's probably the perfect explanation of my philosophy, warts and all. I love it.

Wake

I'll be blunt: I dig big chicks. Plain and simple. I wonder, all the time, if the stressed out - need pills - need therapy paradigm of the 'modern woman' is the direct result of so many women wandering around permanently hungry because they are attempting to force their bodies to be something they'll never be. Have you ever met a content hungry person? I haven't. Hilariously, I struck a nerve amongst the starve-myself-skinny crowd. One lady called me a 'monster' and said I was encouraging teenaged girls to have heart attacks. Umm. OK. Have a cheeseburger and chill, hon.


The Liberators

I received more flack from (L)ibertarians for this story than I did from conservatives. Liberals seemed to love it (for all the wrong reasons, of course: one person actually thought it was a freakin' pro-gun control parable! *shudder*), the conservatives mainly accepted it as food for thought, but interventionist (L)ibertarians took it for the slap in the face that it was meant to be. I know why -- I was using their own first principles against them to show why they were wrong. It flat out pissed them off. Good.

Years ago I saw this little snippet of video on the news. A young Iraqi girl, dancing with great joy on a Baghdad street while her grandfather played the accordian. I looked at that baby girl and could see no difference between her and my baby girl.

When the war cranked up she stayed close to my thoughts. A lady I spoke to often on the phone (met and started flirting on the 'net) was pro-war. I asked her, as a mother, how she could condone an invasion where the youngest of the population took the brunt of the horror. She told me her children were different from 'raghead' children. I slammed the phone down in disgust and never spoke to her again. I started writing the story that day. It was hard: I got so pissed off that I had to take breaks. Eventually took me a year to finish.

The only one of my stories extensively edited. She knows who she his, and has more thanks.

Lullaby

My most personal story. Utterly self explanatory. If you don't get it, I apologize. I can't explain it any better than it explains itself.

Roberta

Probably my best story on a technical level, and probably my favorite. All this despite the fact that only a specialized audience will get the fundamental gag (not to mention all the in-jokes!). That's why it's my best -- and my favorite. once I thought of the concept, I couldn't not write it.

I gotta thank my bro Carl Rose for it. One night we were goofing off in IM talking about the 'perfect libertarian story'.

'Gotta have Rand. And probably Heinlein.' I said.

'And Zeppelins.' Carl reminded me.

"Hells yeah." But the voice took notice, and wheels started turning.

Oddly enough I think this just might be the perfect libertarian story in a sense. While serializing it I averaged about about 30-75 emails per DAY, demanding more. "Dear god," I said. "I've invented libertarian crack."

On a more serious note, this takes micropiece and screams off into speculation with it.

I hope to god this is where we're going. Call my hopes pinned. Watch 'em dangle.


Round Eyes

My most metaphysical piece, and a sort of attack on one of the silliest habits we humans have: living in the past, obsessing over the future, and ignoring the only thing that matters: now.

This was also a structural experiment -- I wanted to see if I could pull the tricky structure off without diluting the sheer emotion of the narrative.

I don't believe in destiny or fate, not really. But if it existed, I think it would be a little something like this.

Xangurl

Lots of people disliked this story, were offended and disturbed by it. Maybe that's why I wrote it. I know the gal I based this on, and consider her a friend. After she got it through her head that 1) she couldn't seduce me and 2) I didn't judge her, she was a pretty damn good friend right back.

This is one of the rare stories I sat down and wrote in one go. Lullaby is the only other.  The reason I wrote it is because the damn thing wouldn't leave me alone.

But the reason I posted it is a different animal. I readily admit that I write for a ghetto. I don't mean that as an insult. Hell, I love my ghetto. I write for libertarians and anarchists, and I do it for two reasons: The first is simply so that I don't have to explain why liberty and freedom are good things in and of themselves. The second is that it's hard for folks like us to find fiction that isn't insidiously statist in some way.

But that doesn't mean I can't challenge my audience to a certain degree. Not everything about liberty and freedom is sweetness and light.

Think what you want about my little Xangurl, but never deny that she lives life on her own terms and by her own rules. This little adventure in the skin trade and the party scene is a paean to freedom: the kind of freedom you might not like thinking about.

Of course, if she could just walk to the store and buy her drug of choice, maybe...

*Edited to fix bizarre word processor cut/paste/insert mistake by most likely stoned writer*
« Last Edit: December 12, 2006, 07:23:49 pm by Gloryroad »
Logged

Dare2BFree

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 1061
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #96 on: December 12, 2006, 01:38:20 pm »

Quote
Dare2BFree is currently helping with the copy editing, which I appreciate immensely.  (Maybe she's my midwife... :-) )


Well my thanks to Dare2BFree. :)

My pleasure  :)  I'm having to read very carefully.... I enjoy the stories so much, I get lost in them and forget what I'm supposed to be doing!
Logged
If I had known that these days would have changed my life - I would have dressed better.   ~ me

No man's life, liberty or property are safe while the legislature is in session.  ~ Judge Gideon J. Tucker

Pagan

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #97 on: March 11, 2007, 01:47:52 am »

Hey George,

Is there anything more to come for Symbols Flow? PLEEEZE!
Logged

coloradohermit

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 1472
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #98 on: March 11, 2007, 06:50:32 am »

How is this project coming? Any ETA on when we can hope to see it available?
Logged
Never try to teach a pig to sing. It wastes your time and annoys the pig.

What luck for rulers that men do not think. - Adolf Hitler

Lead, follow or get out of the way.

Pagan

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #99 on: March 11, 2007, 07:15:52 am »

I was under the impression that George was going to add to it with a novella and possibly another short work or two, so have been waiting for him. In the meantime we were doing the cookbook (which was promised first)  and working on some ideas for Outlaw Trail.

But George has said very little lately except to give us some works of other authors. I don't know where we stand with Symbols Flow. 
Logged

Tahn L.

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 2020
  • Neither Predator Nor Prey
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #100 on: March 11, 2007, 11:21:09 am »

After reading just a story or two, I would certainly be honored (if allowed) to purchase an autographed copy at extra cost!  Just tell me where & when. Thanks George!
Logged
All human beings have two dogs within them. A good dog and an evil dog. The evil dog is always attacking and fighting the good dog. Which one wins?
The one you feed!
  Native American Story

Government is a meme, woven within a supporting memeplex.

Who ever frames the argument, kicks ass.

From MamaLiberty; "The Price of Liberty (is) self ownership, self control, integrity and non-aggression."

"The lust to control the lives and property of others is the root of all evil". MamaLiberty

Bill St. Clair

  • Techie
  • Sr. Member
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 6852
    • End the War on Freedom
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #101 on: August 06, 2007, 08:16:11 am »

George has posted a new one, the first of seven parts on his blog, Market Theocracy.

http://markettheocracy.blogsome.com/2007/08/05/a-map-of-mankind-part-1/

Quote
Because society as defined by the collectivists and powermongers and control freaks is an outright lie. Amusingly (if the bleakest of black humor amuses you), it’s not even a well told lie. It is a ridiculous, inept, un-clever, clumsy lie. Loki himself would speak truth before he used such pathetic trickery. Satan would bow before heaven rather than resort to such childish fibbing.

Society, as posited, praised and worshipped by the beehivers and leash-holders, simply does not exist.

Society as it is, however, does exist. It is as real as math and music and logic and language. Far from devaluing individuals, it glorifies them. Rather than being ‘more important’ than our flickering firefly selves, it is our servent and greatest tool. Instead of beating us down, it raises us up to great heights and allows wondrous achievement.

I mirrored it at http://billstclair.com/blog/gloryroad/map.html , which I'll update as the other parts come out, goddess willing.
Logged
"The state can only survive as long as a majority is programmed to believe that theft isn't wrong if it's called taxation or asset forfeiture or eminent domain, that assault and kidnapping isn't wrong if it's called arrest, that mass murder isn't wrong if it's called war." -- Bill St. Clair

"Separation of Earth and state!" -- Bill St. Clair

carpediem

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #102 on: May 14, 2008, 10:59:05 am »

After reading just a story or two, I would certainly be honored (if allowed) to purchase an autographed copy at extra cost!  Just tell me where & when. Thanks George!

I would too...am a member of another board that I met George at almost 5 yrs ago?
Frankenfood is my handle there...
Hi George!!
Logged

Claire

  • Plain Folks
  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 6577
    • Living Freedom
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #103 on: August 22, 2009, 08:55:54 am »

I know this thread is stickied, so it's already very visible to anybody who enters the Writers Block forums. But for newbs and others who might not be familiar with the world-class writings of TMM's resident genius George Potter, I thought I'd give it a bump.

Check out the links Plinker-MS posted at the start of this thread.
« Last Edit: August 22, 2009, 08:57:38 am by Claire »
Logged
Just as the flattery of friends often leads us astray, so the insults of enemies often do us good. -- St. Augustine, Confessions, Book IX, Chapter 8


When faith ceases to be a challenge to the standards of polite society, it is no longer, or has not yet become, faith. -- Donald Spoto, Reluctant Saint:  The Life of Francis of Assisi


My life is my message. -- Gandhi

Undefined

  • Guest
Re: The Best of George Potter
« Reply #104 on: August 26, 2009, 03:03:06 am »


Since the removal of 'George's Place', it seems a few of the links in the first post are dead. Starting tomorrow, I'll post the missing pieces on my blog and send Plinker a list so that he can re-link when he gets a chance.
Logged
Pages: 1 ... 5 6 [7] 8   Go Up