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Hot
Liquid Hope
By Juan Valdez
We’ve
got a war on drugs here in America. We are beefing
up the borders and increasing our police forces to
stop the flow of narcotics into our nation. That’s
a good thing, I suppose. I just hope no one
ever realizes that the entire nation is jacked up
on caffeine.
Coffee,
the product of the coffee bean, wasn’t something
Westerners were getting high on until the mid 1600s. Some
experts say coffee cultivation originated in Arabia
near the Red Sea around 675 AD, and extensive planting
of the coffee tree occurred in Yemen in the 16th
and 17th centuries. The Europeans got a taste
of the black drink brewed from the bean of the coffee
tree and the world has never been the same. Realizing
the power of this drug over the Europeans, The Dutch
soon began to grow it in their colonies. The French
successfully brought a live cutting of a coffee tree
to the island of Martinique in the West Indies. This
single plant was the forerunner and grandfather to
all the great coffee plantations of Latin America.
Do
you remember when your Dad would drink coffee when
you were a kid? Long trips in the station wagon,
Dad with his stainless steel thermos, you asleep
in the back and smelling that wonderful smell. It
smelled like Dad. It reminded you of Dad. And
do you remember weekend mornings around the breakfast
table, Mom and Dad with a cup of coffee? You’d
ask for a taste and they’d let you have a sip,
knowing you would make that face that all kids make
when something tastes like crap. It wasn’t
until high school or college that you started drinking
it, right? Just like beer, just like pot. It
took some getting used to. The taste was bitter. But
it had a great effect. It woke you up. You could
study better. All your friends were doing it.
You found ways to make it taste better. Some
cream, some sugar, milk, whatever. Then before long
you found that you could drink it all kinds of ways
and that it was great after a meal, while reading,
sitting, driving and talking. It was a friend and
the truth was, you needed it. You enjoyed it.
We
stumble to the coffee maker first thing in the morning. Barely
awake, we go to that corner of our kitchen that is
dedicated to the bean of the coffee tree and start
the hot water over the ground and roasted beans to
mix that magic potion that is celebrated from sea
to shining sea. When we get to work, our employers
have placed stations all over the workplace that
are devoted to the magic potion and the employer
gives this potion to us for free. You drank
it all? We’ll make more. We go to
specialty stores that sell the ground and roasted
beans in hundreds of flavors, from exciting and exotic
locations. The local supermarket has an aisle
devoted to it and even a bean grinder. We go to special
bars and coffee houses that make it even better than
we can at home and we’ll pay top dollar for
a few ounces of the juice. We invest money in better
machines that will approximate their concoctions
of the brew and put them in our kitchen coffee shrines. Even
the government is in on the act and will set up free
coffee stations at rest stops on holiday weekends
to keep the drivers on the interstates alert.
This
employer sanctioned, government-funded epidemic has
taken over and we have accepted it. We are a drugged
nation. There is nowhere you can go and not get a
cup of coffee. It makes you wonder what the
war on drugs is all about. Marijuana comes from
the exact same places that coffee comes from. The
process to make drinkable coffee is long and involved. No
one snorts cocaine from the coca plant and no one
drinks coffee from a coffee tree. Regular use
of any of these drugs, coffee, marijuana, or cocaine,
causes strong psychological dependence.
Imagine
coffee being criminalized. You want to see pandemonium
and full-scale revolt? We’d have screaming
and angry drivers in the streets, parents unable
to get their children to school in the morning, Starbuck’s
boarded up, coffee hoarding and lame attempts to
grow coffee in attics and basements all over. You’d
be meeting your coffee dealer in a secret location
and passing brown bags of coffee under tables. Coffee
drinkers aren’t known to be laid-back and passive
and likely wouldn’t lay low and buy and sell
their drug quietly and discreetly, waiting for the
next shipment to arrive, like marijuana users have
learned to do . They’d take up arms and kill
each other to get another fix. Coffee is a drug and
we need it. Some of us can’t live without it.
Imagine
the economic devastation resulting from the government’s
declaring coffee a controlled substance. A narcotic.
Importers, exporters, investors, buyers and dealers.
Retail, wholesale, vending. The financial shockwave
would be hard to overcome, but the money would find
other avenues. Coffee Prohibition wouldn’t
stop the flow of coffee across the borders from Mexico
and the Caribbean. We’d have speakeasies
in secret hideouts. Gangs would war over coffee turf. People
would be getting arrested on routine traffic stops
for transporting truckloads of coffee beans…with
the intent to distribute. Drug addicts are resourceful
and they will get their high, no matter how many
laws we pass or how many police we employ to keep
them from it.
I
love coffee. I am a full-blown coffee-addict
and I’m not ashamed of that. It’s
not illegal and I hope no one at the DEA ever figures
out what a powerful drug it is. Coffee is great and
I will use it in all its forms. I love it from
Arabia, Jamaica, Kenya, Columbia and Hawaii. I love
it fresh perked, automatic dripped, or instant. I
love it in its super-concentrated form of espresso,
a liquid jolt of energy, or in its dessert form of
cappuccino, a tasty treat of get-up-and-go juice. I
like it in the morning, the evening, while driving,
reading, and talking. It starts my day. It’s
my friend. It’s hot liquid hope. I’m
glad I don’t have to make discreet phone calls
in coded words to paranoid dealers just to get a
cup. I’m glad I can drink it in front of my
kids and they haven’t been told at school that
it’s a horrible, addictive substance that makes
people act differently.
Everything
in moderation. There was a time when I could
drink two pots of coffee all by myself before noon. I
could get so jacked up that I would’ve qualified
for a treatment program. My addiction was out of
control. I went through some serious soul-searching
and learned the phrase I started this paragraph with. Everything
in moderation.
We
need some things and we like them. We don’t
want to be without them. Is that addiction? Maybe.
Or maybe it’s just enjoying the things we have.
Coffee is one of the many things we need and enjoy
that alter our mood, change our thinking, or just
help us get going in the morning. Like vitamins or
aspirin or Prozac or Zoloft, or a glass of wine,
a bottle of beer. We are a drugged nation. It’s
a habit, a ritual, a way of life.
And
I know a guy who just got back from Martinique with
some killer French Roast.
Email
Juan Valdez
©2007
Radio Free Babylon™, LLC All Rights Reserved.
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