I have a new cell phone. I entered the T-Mobile store at about 1 p.m., and exited it at about 4:15. All the while, Yash/Josh (a friendly young man from Hyderabad) was transferring data (“Boy, do you have a lot on your phone!”) from my old phone to my new phone. And that means, I spent over three hours in the T-Mobile store without a phone. I sat, I stood, I talked to Yash/Josh, I walked around, I sat, I stood…….
(In the meantime, they counted votes in California.)
I told Yash/Josh that I wanted to stick with an Android phone, and he said, “then stick with Samsung, because you won’t have to learn anything new”. So I did. He also didn’t say “Here are the Samsung phones we have….take your pick”. He said “We have a promotion on this phone, and you will get a new phone and also pay less per month than you have been paying.” I simply said “okay, sounds good”, because…..it did.
Why did I get a new phone? I got a new phone because my old phone told me, every morning when I turned it on, that the storage was full, and I should get rid of some apps. I tried to do that, but the message didn’t change.
I haven’t even checked out the capacity of my new phone, but Yash/Josh told me it was about twice the old phone, and I took him at his word. It has everything on it that my old phone did, and hasn’t told me it is full, so I guess it isn’t.
(By the way, they are still counting votes in California)
The phone seems to work well, it is a little larger than the old one, but, truth be told, it is not yet my friend, and I am not yet its friend. It came loaded with a bevy of game apps, each of which I deleted. I think this hurt its feelings, because I have taken away its fun. But it’s my house and my phone.
You probably don’t remember, but yesterday I ended my post with a quote from Antonio Gramsci. What I don’t think that I told you is that I had never heard of Gramsci. Now, I am telling you.
Gramsci was an Italian scholar/Marxist who was born in 1891 and died in 1937. He became a socialist while at the University of Turin and then became one of the founders of the Italian Communist Party. He was imprisoned for the last dozen or so years of his life, which meant that he never really had much of a life, because he was also sick from birth with a spinal disease (he was a hunchback and under 5 feet in height) and many cardiac and gastrointestinal diseases, and suffered from debilitating headaches. Nevertheless, while in prison, he wrote 30 volumes of prison notebooks. He was very influential in Italian intellectual circles.
Because (just because)……, when I turned on YouTube yesterday to find something to accompany me in the car, the first thing that showed up was an hour and twenty minute class called “Antonio Gramsci: the Imprisoned Philosopher”, taught by a young Pakistani man (age 44), Taimur Rachman, and is a class being given in English at the Lahore University of Management Sciences, where he has taught for many years. I mention this because Rachman is also apparently the general secretary of a Pakistani Communist party, and the lead guitarist of a progressive rock band Laal (I will have to listen to it). A few other things about him. He is a graduate of (no, I am not kidding) Grinnell College in Iowa, and several English universities, his grandfather was Chief Justice of the Pakistani Supreme Court, and his wife is a radio hostess and singer. And, oh yes, he is maybe the most engaging university professor I have ever listened to.
He started his class on Gramsci by asking how many had read the 32 page reading assignment, and how many had started and given up in the middle. His sympathy, he said, was with the latter (he probably didn’t believe the group that told him they read it start to finish), because he said that there were two problems with the assignment. (And no, it wasn’t because it was written in Italian and no one in the class knew Italian.) First, he said, Gramsci refers to other Italian intellectuals and their, sometimes arcane, arguments; it is like, as a reader, you are entering a debate in the middle, and you haven’t heard the other side. Second, he said, because these writings were written while Gramsci was in prison and had to pass through the censor, he disguised what he was really saying by using code words and code phrases; there is no way you know what he was really saying just by reading through the assignment.
Clearly, there was a lesson here.
I should also say that, for the first 30 minutes of the class (that is all I heard yesterday), Rahman is very interesting as he talks about Gramsci’s writings and background. You may want to give the lecture a try.
Or you may not.
And they are still counting votes in California.

















































