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Saturday, April 14, 2007
Crash
I borrow liberally:
New Jersey Governor John Corzine has 12 broken ribs a cracked vertebrae and won't walk for 6 months. He was driving to attend a meeting between Don Imus and the Rutgers women's basketball team. Pressure from Al Sharpton applied to CBS and NBC raised the profile of the story to the point where the Governor of NJ felt obligated to attend.
Sharpton tried to change things and things happened.
In the privacy of your home, in the company of friends, in the republic of a public sporting event anything is fair game and nothing is the end of the world. The young girl working events and promotions who doesn't fire a t-shirt out of an air cannon in your general direction is a slut, or if you are in high spirits, a sloot.
Jose Reyes is the best player, your favorite player, on your favorite team, and you still mimic his ESL speech deficiencies during post-game interviews in for your friends.
At the stadium or in your living room, with or without alcohol. You make fun of Asian drivers with your Asian friend in the passenger seat. You tell your Indian co-workers that the street food outside their flat is more likely to kill all of us than the motorcycle we just rode on, weaving through traffic, to the office.
They laugh and love it.
It is personal, in the best of ways.
Time discusses my paragraph of writing in this week's cover story about Imus and race and media. It goes in circles and does not touch on the conversations that take place in the living room.
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I remember an incident from prison. In that other world-within-a-world, back then, I moved into a new prison cell and discovered a tiny mouse there. The creature entered through a cracked air vent, and crept into the cell every night. Patience and obsessional focus are the gems we mine in the tunnels of prison solitude. Using them, and tiny morsels of food, I bribed the little mouse over several weeks and eventually trained it to eat from the edge of my hand. When the prison guards moved me from the cell in a routine rotation, I told the new tenant - a prisoner I thought I knew well - about the trained mouse. On the morning after the move, he invited me to see the mouse. He'd captured the trusting creature, and crucified it, face down, on a cross made from a broken ruler. He laughed as he told me how the mouse had struggled when he'd tied it by its neck to the cross with common thread.. He marveled at how long it had taken to drive the thumbtacks into its wriggling paws.
Are we ever justified in what we do? The question ruined my sleep for a long time after I saw the tortured mouse. When we act, even with the best of intentions, when we interfere with the world, we always risk a new disaster that mightn't be of our making, but that wouldn't occur without our action. Some of the worst wrongs were caused by people who tried to change things.
New Jersey Governor John Corzine has 12 broken ribs a cracked vertebrae and won't walk for 6 months. He was driving to attend a meeting between Don Imus and the Rutgers women's basketball team. Pressure from Al Sharpton applied to CBS and NBC raised the profile of the story to the point where the Governor of NJ felt obligated to attend.
Sharpton tried to change things and things happened.
In the privacy of your home, in the company of friends, in the republic of a public sporting event anything is fair game and nothing is the end of the world. The young girl working events and promotions who doesn't fire a t-shirt out of an air cannon in your general direction is a slut, or if you are in high spirits, a sloot.
Jose Reyes is the best player, your favorite player, on your favorite team, and you still mimic his ESL speech deficiencies during post-game interviews in for your friends.
At the stadium or in your living room, with or without alcohol. You make fun of Asian drivers with your Asian friend in the passenger seat. You tell your Indian co-workers that the street food outside their flat is more likely to kill all of us than the motorcycle we just rode on, weaving through traffic, to the office.
They laugh and love it.
It is personal, in the best of ways.
Time discusses my paragraph of writing in this week's cover story about Imus and race and media. It goes in circles and does not touch on the conversations that take place in the living room.