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	<title>Significant Objects &#187; William Gibson</title>
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	<description>...and how they got that way</description>
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		<title>&#8220;Hawk&#8221; Ashtray</title>
		<link>http://significantobjects.com/2009/10/02/hawk-ashtray/</link>
		<comments>http://significantobjects.com/2009/10/02/hawk-ashtray/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Oct 2009 17:02:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>William Gibson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[FOSSILS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ashtray]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exposition - Classification]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[First-Person Narrator]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[history (invented)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tobaccania]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[v1]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[workplace]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://significantobjects.com/?p=1650</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[[The auction for this Significant Object, with story by William Gibson, has ended. Original price: $2.99. Final price: $101.00] In 1969 my friend’s dad was a Pentagon technocrat. My friend said that when his dad came home with a new &#8230; <a href="http://significantobjects.com/2009/10/02/hawk-ashtray/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_1651" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 505px"><a href="http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&amp;item=250507743345#ht_500wt_1103"><img class="size-full wp-image-1651 " title="hawk-ashtray-550" src="http://significantobjects.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/hawk-ashtray-550.jpg" alt="hawk-ashtray-550" width="495" height="371" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Object No. 72 of 100</p></div>
<p style="text-align: center;">[<em>The auction for this Significant Object, with story by William Gibson, has ended. Original price: $2.99. Final price: $101.00</em>]</p>
<p>In 1969 my friend’s dad was a Pentagon technocrat. My friend said that when his dad came home with a new tie-tack, it meant there was a new weapon in the works. Not that there would <em>be</em> a new weapon, but that there was now a coterie of guys in the building who thought the idea was cool enough that they’d wear the tie-tack. It started with the tie-tack. If you couldn’t get the über-geeks to wear your tie-tack, your project wasn’t going to get off the ground. You had to demonstrate that your weapon had <em>fans</em>, and these guys didn’t wear t-shirts. My friend said that Soviet spies should hang out at malls and supermarkets in McLean and take micro-telephoto pictures of tie-tacks. Because it was all there, <em>revealed</em>, this utterly top-secret quadruple-classified shit, on a background of plaid madras. And you could be sure that the weapon of mass destruction depicted there was really the very latest thing, because, he said, it was uncool to wear them once they became a done deal, just as it was uncool to wear them if they definitely weren’t going to happen. What you wanted to demonstrate was that your tie-tack depicted something that was <em>liminal</em>, something still in the Dreamtime.</p>
<p>I imagined that David, my friend’s dad, had one of those ’50s dad boxes on his dresser. Where he kept his doohickeys. Cufflinks. Whatnot. And in David’s box was a fistful of tie-tacks, their little anchor-chains hopelessly tangled, a secret history of Pentagon blue-sky imagination. <span id="more-1650"></span></p>
<p>He was a good guy, David. In 1969 he told me that what was going to happen with the Soviet Union was that it was going to go bankrupt. He said they were cooking the books, fooling themselves that their economy worked, that their system made sense. He wasn’t talking politics. He was an engineer. He was absolutely right, though I confess I didn’t buy it. I couldn’t imagine a world without the Soviet Union. He called it. The only thing he got wrong was the food riots. In the end, they weren’t necessary. In the meantime, he said, we just had to hold them at bay. With tie-tacks.</p>
<p>This ashtray, I imagine, came from somewhere further along the Hawk missile system’s developmental span. Ashtrays aren’t liminal. When you’re passing out ashtrays, you’ve actually got a product. When they passed a little spring-topped jewelry box, closed, to one of the über-geeks, that confidential “check this shit out” moment, it wasn’t a product, it was a glyph, something there but not there, half-juggled from the Dreamtime.</p>
<p>A fossil from a future that you knew might not even happen. Dashing, enigmatic, unworn. Not yet tangled in the darkness of history’s dad box, with the dead boys and the lost stupid war they died in.</p>
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