We reported previously our cautious belief that Elvis
Presley is still alive. Here we wish to examine a few of the implications of
that staggering conclusion.
On the one hand, Elvis pulled off one of the greatest hoaxes
in history, although he is by no means the first to do so. We believe the
evidence purporting that legendary murderer Jesse James faked his death in 1882
is equally persuasive as Presley’s.
Although Elvis’ disappearance wasn’t original, it was far more
spectacular.
After all, Presley lived his life in a fish bowl made of
magnifying glass where few people have endured closer scrutiny and adulation
than he. Thus accomplishment of this feat in plain sight speaks volumes for Presley
and his co-conspirators. It also raises the question of who was involved in
orchestrating the faux death. Did CIA and other intelligence forces materially contribute
or assist in this virtuoso act, or was this legerdemain largely a Pressley
virtuoso act? If the deception were all Presley’s, I certify him to be a near
genius.
The other important implication of the faked death is the
exposure of the limitations of our senses. Presley was worshipped as a demi-god
whom people felt they knew because they experienced him through the mediation
of the entertainment, publicity, and news institutions which played on people’s
desires to associate with the fame, power, and success belonging to the
incomparable Presley.
Because he touched them as they had never been touched
before, his fans felt they knew him, and consequently could know whether he was
alive or not. But these very media which made Elvis translucent were the very
media which provided enough opacity to allow him to escape before our very
eyes.
Since people felt that they knew him, and it was through
their minds acquiescing to the aforementioned media, they accepted that the
event they witnessed was a genuine depiction of a fallen hero’s last moments
above ground.
But if the DNA findings are reliable, it is impossible – reminiscent
of Grouch Marx’s famous line about who was buried in Grant’s tomb – that the
coffin in Presley’s grave contains the remains of the King of Rock and Roll. As
such, people were fooled by the same media they trusted implicitly.
Of course one can allow a certain lenience toward those
believing a lie due to a deliberate deception, but nonetheless believing that
Elvis is dead is a colossal error of perception and possibly judgment. And I,
like most of the world, believed that he died on August 16, 1977.
The other matter so disturbing about Elvis’ disappearance is
that he felt compelled to disappear. What price fame? His fans were into themselves
that they could not give their idol peace of mind. It is also likely that
Presley’s famous hard living took its toll on his psyche and physiology – again
assuming that the tales of his wild life are indeed true. Of course endogenous
factors unrelated to his fame could have precipitated the need to get out of
Dodge.
But it wasn’t just his fans who threatened him. Dr Hinton
tells of other threats to Presley which I assume were derivative of his fame.
Could Elvis come back to the world
today – assuming that he is still alive after July 2008? Sadly, I don’t think
he could. Many of his fans would be outraged that he deprived them of so much
joy by disappearing so abruptly while others would be ecstatic that he is back.
His non-fans would probably be furious that he duped them, perhaps endangering his life for sure.
But did he really dupe them or did
the media and the people dupe themselves? And so we get to the matter of
blaming the victim. But in a caveat emptor world, I find it difficult to be too
hard on Elvis given the many mitigating circumstances surrounding his need to
disappear.
I don’t think that we have
excavated all of the implications of Elvis’ non-death, but I wish him peace in
the valley of his solace.
1 comment:
But if the DNA findings are reliable, it is impossible – reminiscent of Grouch Marx’s famous line about who was buried in Grant’s tomb – that the coffin in Presley’s grave contains the remains of the King of Rock and Roll. As such, people were fooled by the same media they trusted implicitly.
Interesting that you would bring up Groucho - Groucho Marx in fact died the very same day as The King, and as a result, practically nobody even heard about it, despite the ongoing social prominence of the Marx Brother clan in Hollywood circles.
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