|
![]() |
|
|
The other day, I came face to face with true partisan extremism and it was comforting. That is, if this is what it means to be partisan, why, I'm an evenhanded lamb!
I was reading about Mitt Romney and his sons, and their rescue of some distressed boaters in New Hampshire. The Massachusetts governor (a Republican) was at his vacation home there. After news of this action was reported, a Democratic state senator in Massachusetts (Jay Kaufman) said, "There are lots of people drowning in the Commonwealth right now who would certainly welcome rescue." Ah. A spokeswoman for the state's Democratic party Jane Lane (how poetic) said, "Mitt Romney only chooses to run for office from Massachusetts he doesn't vacation here." I mean, jeez. For the sake of (non-partisan) sanity, another Democratic legislator, Eric Turkington, said, "When somebody's drowning, we're not Democrats or Republicans. I'm impressed that we have a governor who can do that kind of thing." And I'm impressed that there's a Democrat in existence who could state such a thing.
But this does not mean that Lieberman stops being a Democrat or a man of the Left. Lieberman, this good, religious, values-totin' moderate, a man of the Left? Yes. Consider: When Ward Connerly announced that he would invite Michigan voters to renounce racial preferences, Lieberman said, "This is a divisive and destructive act, and people of all political persuasions should condemn it as such." This, of course, stands truth on its head: It's the racial discrimination "reverse" or not that is dividing and destroying. What Connerly stands for is the good old liberalism, whereby you judge people by the content of their character, not by the color of their skin, and you uphold equality of opportunity and equality under the law the Civil Rights Act and all that square stuff. Haven't we learned, at this point, that judging and hiring and admitting and promoting on the basis of skin color is, in fact, divisive and destructive? (And un-American?) Lieberman also said, "Mr. Connerly and his allies want to put a stop sign on the path of progress. This ballot initiative is a step backward, not a step toward racial equality." And that language is practically to use an overworked word Orwellian. I'm not sure I've ever heard Lieberman more demagogic even when he was denouncing the GOP's plans for the Arctic reserve as an assault on "one of God's most awesome creations." Actually, my little item here could work in Lieberman's favor: "See, Democratic primary voters, the right wing thinks of me as stupidly leftist! Vote for me without fear!"
More from that column: "[Jeremy] Mayer, a political science professor at Georgetown University, says Bush won't reach black voters merely through his travels. 'The idea that African-Americans are strongly connected to Africa and its politics is simply wrong. . . .'" If that's the case, might we not want to reconsider this newish, troublesome designation "African-American"? Don't we have enough hyphens in this country already?
The Times article also states, "Sweden, which has vigorously pursued women's rights, is following Norway's example." It's a shame that that term "women's rights" has to be used when it comes to such things as quotas on corporate boards, instead of, say, voting. For that matter, it's a shame that "civil rights" has to mean legislation that has nothing whatever to do with real civil rights. Thus do golden terms turn ambiguous, and then like tin.
So, a letter sent out by Jianli's wife, Christina Fu, came as a relief. It read, "Dear friends: I have a great news to tell you. On July 8, our lawyer, Mo Shaoping, and his assistant met Jianli in the Beijing State Security Detention Center. I'm thrilled and much relieved that Jianli is alive and in good health. (According to our lawyer, 'Jianli looks fine.' He wore the clothes that were left at the center by his brother earlier this year.) . . . "Mo told Jianli about H. Res. 199, S. Res. 184, the U.N. decision, and many, many efforts around the world to free him. Jianli looked confident and hopeful. "All I can say now is that it is your deep care and tireless work over the past fourteen months that have saved Jianli's life. I'm very, very grateful to you all. "Now it's critical and urgent to build support in the Senate. Again, I respectfully ask you, please write your senators if they have not signed on to S. Res.184, and please also send a thank-you note to those who are already a co-sponsor. "I depend on your continuing efforts to bring Jianli home in the near future." Again, the site dedicated to freedom for this extraordinary man is www.SupportJianli.org.
A reader wrote, "It took me a while, but I finally found a searchable database of Israeli victims of terror. The site is found at www.gal-ed.co.il/leumi/search.asp. "The site is all in Hebrew, however, so not only will you need to have some rudimentary Hebrew skills, but your browser will, too. (Another site, www.TerrorVictims.com, is in English, but it goes back only to 1994.) "Here's a list of the victims from the bombing on July 4, 1975, when Jubarah detonated a refrigerator left at the curbside near a busy Jerusalem square: Ariv Abu-Hadiga, age 25; Yoseph 'JoJo' Amer, age 40; Micha-el BenYitzchak, age 40; Rivka BenYitzchak, age 35; Yoram Zizuvi, age 41; Nezihah Hamad, age 26; Fatimah Hamad, age 53; Daoud Khouri, age 60; Shabtai Shevi Tschikoshvilly, age 10; David Cohen, age 43; Ahava Zracha 'Ahavalah' Zimmerman, age 10; Meir Zimmerman, age 34; Rosita 'Raizel' Zimmerman Yoffa, age 30. "According to news reports, two of Jabarah's victims were Americans. The list of people he murdered includes two children, plus four women. He killed Jews and Arabs. He murdered two married couples. Two of his victims were a middle-aged Arab man and his yet unmarried young adult daughter. Three others were a husband, wife, and their ten-year-old child." Good to know, somehow important to know.
So there!
It's a greasy spoon, an eatery, a dive however you want to describe it. I doubt I've ever had a better milkshake (and this is one area in which I am a world-class authority you can forget all the rest). The onion rings are pretty memorable, too. The waitresses may look about 14, and chances are they smoke, vigorously. For many years at least since I started going there there has been a photo of Dan Quayle on the wall. He's making a campaign stop, probably in '88. Not sure whether he had a shake (the former veep doesn't look like the type, frankly). My friends and I will do almost anything for a Ronnie's shake. I've been known to have more than . . . well, never mind. Even a web column can be too intimate. I'm just tipping my hat here, to a special, cherished site in the Southland, in these United States, which grow more interesting the more you discover them.
"Aloha, Jay: I read the letter that ended your Impromptus today [about having to declare race on a marriage license], and just had to relate my story. "Upon the birth of our daughter last year, the State of Hawaii sent the requisite forms to acquire her legal birth certificate. The predictable, odious racial-category box appeared on the form, and I treated it in my usual manner I checked the box that said Other and wrote in "human." (I've been doing this for years, even on census forms, though threatened by my own government with a $500 fine.) "A week later, a very serious-looking letter arrived, informing me that 'human' was not a race recognized by the State of Hawaii. I was warned that, unless the form were completed properly, my daughter's birth certificate would list the father's race as 'unknown.' So it reads, forever more. I am pleased with my little act of civil disobedience, and look forward to explaining it to my daughter when she is old enough to ask. (My wife, however, is not so pleased with the implication . . .)"
"P.S. On a side note, I hate it when people say, 'If you aren't a liberal at 18, you have no heart; if you're not a conservative by 30, you have no head.' I am 18 years old and proud to have enough sense to be a conservative although it seems to me that the title 'conservative' is a little anachronistic. Let me say I am proud to be a supporter of the USA." Say it, sister!
"However, the country being what it is, we cannot fully escape the administrative need for racial classification, even in my daughters' school. Every year, we must fill out an application for the following school year; and every year, the application asks me my daughters' 'race.' "My wife and I do not make a big deal of our ethnic backgrounds in our daily lives; my wife is very proud of her American citizenship and her adopted country. It seems so strange to answer this question. How should we respond? Neither white nor Korean is a complete answer. Korean-American or Asian-American appears to leave no room for my side of the family. Eurasian sounds so exotic; besides, other than some distant cousins, my ties to Europe are nonexistent. "In the end, I answer the question of race in the way I want my daughters to think of themselves, the way that seems most right: 'American.' Thankfully, the school has let this answer stand and has not called in the power of the state to correct our thinking." God bless that school.
"If there has to be a bias, I want it in my favor."
"From now on, I'm checking Other, and in the line that asks me to specify, I'm putting 'American.' And I couldn't be prouder of my new 'race,' and all we've accomplished in our history." Congratulations on your new race, sir!
"Just last night, I had a chance to skew a survey and took it. I received a phone call for a radio survey. The last question was race. Being of European descent, I answered black." See you later, my rebel friends! |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||