Thompson. He shot himself
Sunday night at his home in Woody Creek Colorado. He was 67
years old.
He first became well known during the late
1960s and early 1970s while working for Rolling Stone where
his drug-induced books Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Fear
and Loathing on the Campaign Trail were first serialized.
Thompson once said, "I hate to advocate weird chemicals,
alcohol, violence or insanity to anyone ... but they've always
worked for me."
Thompson identified the death of the
American Dream as his reporter's beat. He called his style of
writing "gonzo" journalism. He said, "Objective journalism is
one of the main reasons that American politics has been
allowed to be so corrupt for so long."
Hunter S.
Thompson was born in Louisville, Kentucky in 1937. He served
two years in the Air Force where he was a newspaper sports
editor. He later wrote unpublished fiction and made his name
after publishing an article in Harper's magazine about the
Hell's Angels who he had rode with for a year.
In 1970,
he ran unsuccessfully for sheriff of Pitkin County, Colorado,
on the "Freak Power" ticket. His platform included changing
the name of Aspen to "Fat City" and decriminalizing drugs.
During his campaign, Thompson shaved his head and denounced
his Republican rival who sported a crew cut as "my long-haired
opponent." He lost by a handful of votes.
He is the
author of a dozen books, his latest was titled "Hey Rube:
Blood Sport, The Bush Doctrine and the Downward Spiral of
Dumbness." He once said "By any accepted standard, I have had
more than nine lives. I counted them up once and there were 13
times I almost and maybe should have died."
Thompson
killed himself this past Sunday. He reportedly stuck a .45
caliber handgun in his mouth and shot himself while his wife
listened on the phone and his son and daughter-in-law were in
another room of his house. His lawyer for the past 15 years
told the Boston Globe that he wanted to be cremated and his
ashes to be blown out of a cannon across his
ranch.
Today, we hear Hunter S Thompson in his own
words talking about President Bush, Iraq and much more. He was
interviewed on community radio station KDNK in the Roaring
Fork Valley in Colorado. Former KDNK station manager, Mary
Suma, began by asking Thompson about him saying that "the idea
of war is not just wrong but borders on insanity." This is
Hunter S. Thompson.
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN:
Today we hear Hunter S. Thompson in his own words talking
about President Bush, Iraq, and much more. He was interviewed
on community radio station KDNK in Roaring Fork Valley in
Colorado in January 2003. Former KDNK Station Manager Mary
Suma began by asking Thompson, saying the idea of war is not
just wrong, but borders on insanity, a comment of Hunter
Thompson's, he responded.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Of couse,
it depends on which vantage point you look at the war from. If
you are the president of a huge oil company, no, it's not
insane at all. The war would be quite justified.
MARY
SUMA: How do you feel -- I've read that you were in the
streets in the Chicago riots back at that convention? Do you
think that we can elicit that sort of passion as it builds? I
mean, it really seems to be building up there, the anti-war
faction.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Yeah, it does. But look at
this. I don't recall, anyway, a massive depression, economic
collapse, at that time, 1968. I was going to say, “Do you?”
but, uh... What we have now is a collapse of the economy and a
totally unjustifiable war, irrational really, except from the
point of view of the oil industry.
MARY SUMA: Did you
watch the State of the Union the other evening?
HUNTER
S. THOMPSON: Oh, boy, I did.
MARY SUMA: What did you
think?
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: I was horrified. It was a
nightmare of a thing to go through. You know, he rattled off
all these “pie in the sky” ideas in the beginning, none of
which are going to either work or be funded. He knows that. As
a matter of fact, the New York Times today said that already
they see that even republicans are admitting that the Medicare
-- he was talking about the Medicare plan, the $400 billion
plan --
MARY SUMA: Right.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Is
impossible. Members of both parties expressed doubts about its
feasibility today, forcing the administration officials to
reconsider important elements of the package. So, none of the
domestic issues he talked about are feasible. I don’t even
think he can get the tax cut through, which is insane. Cut
taxes in a time when the country is going broke. So over the
line, I mean, it's not just the war that's wrong. I can't
imagine any justification for just going over to Iraq and
bombing the place back to the Stone Age like we did
before.
MARY SUMA: Why does it seem a good portion of
the country is buying into this?
HUNTER S. THOMPSON:
That is a really – that’s a disturbing aspect of
it.
MARY SUMA: Can we believe the polls? I mean,
certainly the applause the other evening, they always say that
you can sort of gauge the popularity of a president by the
applause at the State of the Union. I don't know if that's
true or not. But it seems like we're living in two separate
countries.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Well, remember, that
Bush's popularity and the popularity – or the support for the
war and two months ago when it was much higher. But these are
just daily. These are things that change every day. But I
remember writing in – I don’t know, it might have been at
least five years ago – it was a, I think, ABC, some serious
poll, several of them came up with the findings that the
American people, overall, favor giving up some of their
freedoms in exchange for more security.
MARY SUMA:
Mm-hmm.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: They would rather be secure
than free, in other words.
MARY SUMA:
Right.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: That really is
shocking.
MARY SUMA: It is shocking, and more so today,
maybe.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: That's the answer, I think,
for your question is why is the public buying into it. Another
reason is that the fear which I -- that's why I tried to
address or at least rave about in the book. Fear is an
unhealthy condition, living in fear. And as we clearly have
been for two years now, it makes the population more obedient,
particularly if they're willing to give up their freedom for
security. More obedient, more easier to control, and it's,
well, it is very much like Nazi Germany.
MARY SUMA:
Mm-hmm.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Remember the old good
German syndrome.
MARY SUMA: Mm-hmm.
HUNTER S.
THOMPSON: We used to ridicule it, the good Germans who just
went along with it because that's what the Fuehrer
wanted.
MARY SUMA: You’ve said the president has
destroyed the country, the economy and our relationship with
the rest of the world.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Well, I
believe that's true and even the countries that allegedly go
along or support us, our allies going into this war, popular
opinion in most of those countries, I can't say this for sure,
but in England, certainly, the English people, as a whole, are
strongly opposed to the war and to going along with whatever
George Bush says. Democracy is on its last legs in this
country, and freedom, you know, the Free World?
MARY
SUMA: Mm-hmm.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: We’re defending
freedom? We'll fight to the death for freedom? That's absurd.
This country is no more a capital or bastion of freedom now
than Nazi Germany was in the 1940s. This country is a rogue
nation in a way, but worse than a rogue nation. We're a
war-crazy, war-dependent, really, nation and that leads right
to the oil industry. It is ridiculous. And particularly in the
media; with the media I noticed. To not discuss the connection
between oil and bombs in Iraq is disgraceful. Winston
Churchill said, “In times of war, the first casualty is always
the truth.” Truth is the first casualty of any
war.
MARY SUMA: In lieu of fear.
HUNTER S.
THOMPSON: You see, I’m a little bit cranked up and fanatical
about it.
MARY SUMA: That's the age group, isn't it,
Hunter, that we want to really --
HUNTER S. THOMPSON:
Yeah. This is – I mean, if you want to live in a Nazi nation,
I wouldn't want to be 20 years old now.
MARY SUMA: I
wouldn't either.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: I fear for what's
coming and for the welcoming committee of kids that's going to
meet it, saying come on in. No, it’s just ignorance, and well,
the media, we're being deprived of the real news. I'm not
going to try to say I have the real news, but just what you
said. That's exactly right.
MARY SUMA: Again, you're
going to be at Pepkey Park on Saturday afternoon. Do you know
what your topic is yet? We know the topic, but do you know
what -- can you give us any preview of what’s going to be
said, or do you just stand up there and let it
--
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Yeah. I usually just take a --
just wing it, freefall, just like I did today. I had no idea
what I was going to say today. This is really a disgraceful
moment in history and just thinking about the war, or
attending the peace rallies, going out in the street, voting
with your feet, as they say.
AMY GOODMAN: Hunter S.
Thompson speaking with KDNK's Mary Suma in January of 2003.
She then asked him about his book Kingdom of Fear: Loathesome
Secrets of a Star-Crossed Child in the Final Days of the
American Century.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: It started off –
it’s supposed to be a memoir; I think it started off as
memoirs. You know, it just sort of -- a very quick and active
story about how I got to be what I am today, you know,
different key adventures in my life. Mainly it is fun. Yeah, I
could use a little bit more editing, but everything could.
It's a fun read. It's a very – pretty savage one. And it's
clearly, not anti-Bush, but anti-war. See, I don't hate Bush
personally. I used to know him. I used to do some drugs here
and there.
MARY SUMA: Is that true, Hunter? What about,
I didn't know that you were an unofficial adviser to Jimmy
Carter.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Yeah. Weird things happen
here and there. I got to know him early, two years before he
ran, and he just looked like a pretty good bet to me, because
I was a gambler, and I wanted to win. It was important to win
at that time.
ANITA THOMPSON: Evan Dobelle, who was,
among other things, Carter's Secretary of Protocol, he held a
dinner in Hawaii about two months ago and Hunter was a guest
of honor and he stood up to say and thank Hunter because Jimmy
Carter would not be president if it wasn't for Hunter
Thompson.
MARY SUMA: Really?
ANITA THOMPSON:
Yeah. Isn't that cool?
AMY GOODMAN: Anita and Hunter
Thompson. Anita, Hunter Thompson's wife, again, speaking with
Mary Suma of KDNK in January of 2003. Finally, Mary Suma asked
Hunter Thompson about his upcoming trip to New
York.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: What I'm going to New York to
do is stir up trouble. I'm not going to change hats, yeah,
Saturday in the park, Sunday in New York City, Monday night,
Conan O’Brian, or something like that. I just believe in this.
I'm offended and insulted by the slope of the American people,
and that means us. That means these bastards who just sit
around –
ANITA THOMPSON: We’re getting
there.
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Let's keep hitting on this
because I doubt that George Bush is going to go away before
the next two years anyway. He should be run out of office. He
should resign right now, in my opinion. I did call for his
resignation, but I don't think we would have a groundswell
immediately for that. There will be a lot of people who agree
with me.
MARY SUMA: Down the road?
HUNTER S.
THOMPSON: Well, no, in a year. I mean, the --
MARY
SUMA: Will we be at war in a year, Hunter?
HUNTER S.
THOMPSON: I think so, without a doubt. Like I said, we've been
at war for 13 years. We've been bombing that country that long
and we've cut off everything, all their food, books, you know,
close -- cut off all imports of books over there.
MARY
SUMA: Have you ever been there?
HUNTER S. THOMPSON:
Excuse me?
MARY SUMA: Have you ever been over
there?
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: I don't think so. Not in any
way that I was impressed by. I probably have gone through it
or stopped there. I don't really know Iraq. I made a point of
getting to know it a lot better. It was a very advanced,
progressive country, had, what, 90% literacy, health care for
the whole entire population. They were doing well, prosperous,
high literacy. Many more book stores per capita in Iraq than
there are in this country. Many. No more. We bombed their
children. We killed their husbands and wives and we bombed
them, and we saw her, and we're going to do it again. Just
random killing like that, mass killing to force a population
to get rid of Saddam so we can move in and take over and
control the oil, God damn it, if that's not evil, I don't know
what would be. You know, Bush, he’s really the evil one in
here. Well, more than just him. We're the Nazis in this game,
and I don't like it. I'm embarrassed and I'm pissed off. Yeah.
I mean to say something and I think a lot of people in this
country agree with me. A lot more never say anything. We'll
see what happens to me if I get my head cut off in the next
week by -- it's always unknown Bush [inaudible] strangers who
commit suicide right afterward. No witnesses. They have a new
kind of crime.
MARY SUMA: Is that the CIA kind of
crime?
HUNTER S. THOMPSON: Oh, absolutely. Anyone who’s
a successful criminal has got a crime. Absolutely no
witnesses, no records. We can go on and on. I have to be
restrained on the subject.
AMY GOODMAN: The late Hunter
S. Thompson, speaking two years ago in an interview on
community radio station KDNK in the Roaring Fork Valley in
Colorado, speaking with then-Station Manager Mary Suma. Hunter
S. Thompson died of an apparent suicide this weekend; shot
himself Sunday night at his home in Woody Creek, Colorado. His
latest book, a collection of his essays called Hey Rube:
Bloodsport, the Bush Doctrine, and the Downward Spiral of
Dumbness.
ORIGINALLY
PUBLISHED
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/02/23/164218