
New Map of the Americas #501
The presidents of Argentina and Chile signed an accord Wednesday settling the final border dispute between the two South American countries. The agreement draws the border through a glacial area known as the Southern Glaciers Field along the Andes mountains that divide the two countries… Long suspicious of one another, Chile and Argentina nearly went to war in 1978 over a couple of islands in the Beagle Channel at Tierra del Fuego, the southernmost tip of the continent… In December 1978, the Argentine military junta sent coffins to the Chilean border in preparation for a war over three small islands in the Beagle Channel… It divides 100 miles of territory in the far southern region of Patagonia known as Hielos Continentales [Continental Ices] in Argentina and Campo de Hielo Sur [Camp of Frozen Ice] in Chile.
Los Angeles Times. December 17, 1998.
IMAGINED THEATRE #308: Block of Ice
Agent #1110 shows me a video on his cell phone of a coyote running down my street
The camera follows a coyote who attacks a dog that used to belong to my neighbor
The coyote attacks a squirrel, a cat, and a yard full of illegal chickens
Agent #1110 then shows me a video of fourteen coyotes running together in a pack
Birds, cats, and rodents hang from their mouths
This is on my street, in front of the house they dragged me out of after they spent four months listening to my phone calls
Agent #1110 says: here in the city nature has finally caught up to us
I say nothing and he starts filming me
I look away from the camera and he screams at me
It’s okay, you can cry, you can relax, he yells, as he points his cell phone camera at my forehead
It’s okay now if you want to rest or whimper or laugh
But I do not rest or whimper or laugh
And this annoys him
So he asks me again what I want
And I say: I don’t know what I want
And he screams: who are you in relation to yourself?
And I tell him I don’t know who I am in relation to myself
And he screams: who are you in relation to the state?
And I say: I don’t know who I am in relation to the state
He drags me to the edge of the fenced-in yard and asks me to look hard at the end of the state
There are barbed wire fences around the end of the state
Just as there are barbed wire fences around the beginning of the state
From where I stand I can see that on the side of the wall where the state begins there are refugees who have lost their homes and their families and their cities
And on the side of the wall where the state ends there are refugees who have lost their homes and their families and their cities
And when the refugees try to enter the beginning of the state, they see a giant billboard that reads:
THE BLOCK OF ICE IS OURS
On one side of the wall the billboard is blue with red letters
And on the other side of the wall the billboard is green with white letters
Where I stand with Agent #1110 in the fenced-in yard at the beginning of the state, I can see the billboards on both sides
THE BLOCK OF ICE IS OURS
Agent #1110 explains that there is a block of ice that straddles both sides of the border
But there are no photographs of the block of ice
And no one has actually seen the block of ice
Nevertheless, on both sides of the border there are signs that say
THE BLOCK OF ICE IS OURS
Our state, says Agent #1110, insists that we own the block of ice, and our neighboring state insists that they own the block of ice, and the people of each state are convinced that the block of ice needs to be defended because if the block of ice is not defended then the people of our state will feel threatened by the people from their state
And even though there is no difference between the people of our state and the people of our neighboring state, says Agent #1110, each night the people of our state gather on one side of the border and each night the people of their state gather on their side of the border to sing songs about the block of ice
They recite poems about the block of ice
They carry signs about the block of ice
They wear hats with slogans about the block of ice
The people of my state and the people of their state feel equally connected to the block of ice even though no one has ever seen it or touched it or smelled it
Agent #1110 shows me a news clip where a journalist interviews civilians on both sides of the border
I see a father standing with his kids, each of them wearing hats and t-shirts and holding signs that say
THE BLOCK OF ICE IS OURS

New Map of the Americas #502
The journalist asks: what would you do if they invade the block of ice
The father, two kids at his side, looks into the camera
Speaking slowly and carefully, he says: 250,000 of them could not defeat us
If they touch our block of ice we will slaughter them
If they so much as lay a toe on our block of ice, we will torture them, beat them, it will be a total fucking massacre
We love the block of ice, says the man, as if it is one of our children
We protect the block of ice, he says, as if it is one of our parents
We defend the block of ice, he says, because this is who we are

New Map of the Americas #503

