By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 2.21.02 @ 12:02AM
It is not just that after years of run-ins with the law -- usually involving the abuse of women -- Mike Tyson remains in the public eye, free to erupt at any time. It is that there are at least three other famous men in the same very public situation.
Washington -- The very day that I heard Mike Tyson is about to
be licensed to fight in our nation's capital I read the following
on the front page of the esteemed "Wall Street Journal": "Tyson
will stop using the antibiotic Baytril, which the FDA wants banned,
on chickens meant for human consumption."
Alas, thought I, no sooner does luck shine on Iron Mike than the
ex-heavyweight champion is in trouble again. Fight fan that I am, I
thought: "What the hell is Tyson using Baytril for?" Could it be
that the medication works like Prozac, and that the ill-starred
fighter is trying to render himself equable in polite company or at
least at stoplights? All of us fight fans remember the mayhem that
ensued when Tyson was last treated discourteously at a
stoplight.
Then those words "chicken…consumption" caught my eye. Mike
only eats red meat, usually raw. Oh, how foolish of me. The
"Journal" was not reporting on Tyson the fighter but on Tyson the
chicken plucker. To be sure the chicken-plucking Tysons of
Springdale, Arkansas, have as many run-ins with the law as Iron
Mike, but the two families are unrelated.
So far Mike Tyson is as clean as a hound's tooth regarding
Baytril use, and if he stays clean he may soon be given a chance to
regain the heavyweight championship in the very shadow of the
Washington monument. The three-member District of Columbia Boxing
and Wrestling Commission unanimously agreed to a procedure that
will allow Tyson to fight here despite his spotty
résumé and recent displays of cannibalism. Surely you
remember the time he was suspended from boxing for gnawing on
Evander Holyfield's ear during a heavyweight competition. And just
a few weeks back he lost his chance for a Nevada boxing license
when, during a press conference, he erupted in fisticuffs and again
attempted to sink his teeth into the flesh of a potential opponent,
reigning heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis -- and for no earthly
reason. There was a very fine chophouse nearby. Lewis had not even
been cooked.
Now, of course, all Washington is convulsed in debate over
whether Tyson should be allowed to perform in this famous city. The
infallible "Washington Times" reports that a fight between Tyson
and the delicious Lewis could bring the city $150 million in
revenue and a much-needed bounce to the tourist business that has
fallen off dreadfully since 9/11. Tyson is possibly the most
controversial of all heavyweight champions, having spent three
years in the calaboose for sexual assault and yet another year for
road-rage assault. He is under investigation even now for two more
alleged rapes. Feminists call him a "sexual predator" and want him
banned from the fight game. Yet fight fans want to see him in the
ring. They claim, notwithstanding his manifest weaknesses, he is a
swell fighter.
Well he may be a fine fighter, but there is something eerie
about him. It is not just that after years of run-ins with the law
-- usually involving the abuse of women -- he remains in the public
eye, free to erupt at any time. It is that there are at least three
other famous men in the same very public situation, each with his
own claim to talent and his own alibis and complaints to being
victimized. The first that comes to mind is O. J. Simpson. He
remains at large after beating one particularly grisly rap and
after several other serious displays of violence.
The other two public men who travel the country with lurid
charges filed against them are a former President and an embattled
United States Congressman. In the case of the former President the
charges of abuse of women (one is a rape charge) have not been
wholly substantiated. He was, however, found guilty of contempt of
court; and he was impeached for perjury and obstruction of justice.
Few would argue with the claims that he is a repeated perjurer and
obstructer of justice. Some just say the claims do not matter. The
most lurid charge against the Congressman remains unsubstantiated;
though at this writing it appears he will be defeated because of
the charge, which is in fact very serious.
The former President is an amusing fellow, and it is said that
he has not done the country much harm. He has, however, served as a
role model for some very unsavory figures; for instance the
Congressman, who has torn a page from the ex-President's game book
and now claims that one of the best reasons for re-electing him is
that it will help criminal investigators maintain public interest
in the whereabouts of Chandra Levy's body. I am not kidding.
Congressman Gary Condit said that to a "New York Times"
reporter.
As I say, the continued presence of these men in public life
strikes me as eerie. Tyson may be champion of the world again.
Simpson is starring in a documentary of his life. Clinton is a
celebrity -- admired here, booed there -- all await his next
scandal. And Condit is, well he is a politician who now uses
Clinton's tactics to remain in Congress. Once out perhaps those
tactics will help him remain a celebrity. I find all that
eerie.
topics:
Business, Law