12.13.02 @ 5:04PM
Apologies all around, except from Jimminy Carter.
Another day, another apology. The one thing Trenty Lott has
going for him is that he's hardly the only sorry act out there.
There are, for instance, the many liberals and Democrats who can't
decide whether they want to hang him from a tall oak tree or to let
him stay on as Senate leader on the condition he appear at official
functions dressed only in white sheets.
But it took an esteemed product of white liberal privilege, Bob
Herbert, to really capture what's at stake. As he put it in his
New York Times column, "Mr. Lott is not the only culprit
here. The Republican Party has become a haven for white racist
attitudes and anti-black policies." Herbert is one of those who
wants Lott to "stay" as "the Senate Republican leader." As he
explained for the ages: "Keep him in plain sight. His presence is
instructive. As long as we keep in mind that it isn't only him." In
his next offering Herbert will name David Duke to chair the
Republican National Committee.
The tragedy is that Lott's deviant utterings have turned
attention from the campaign to feminize Augusta National. For
naught, it would seem, did Treasury secretary designate John Snow
resign from the exclusive golf club in order to improve his
confirmation chances. There was suspicion that faced with the
prospect of earning a government salary Mr. Snow would no longer be
able to afford August's steep green fees. But now it appears there
was more to this profile in cowardice than first suspected. Mr.
Snow is guilty of activity even more reprehensible than sex
discrimination -- age discrimination. In abandoning his Augusta
colleagues, he was traducing on the reputation of a membership most
of which is in its seventies, eighties and nineties. One would
think Strom Thurmond would feel right at home here if asked to
join, but think again. Who'd be there for him to squeeze? As one of
his lackeys might say, if Augusta had accepted women, it wouldn't
be in the mess it's in today.
Another big event was obscured by the Lott lather, at least in
the U.S. In Venezuela, fortunately, an engaged citizenry did its
part to show solidarity with James Earl Carter on the day he
grabbed the 2002 Nobel peace prize. In Caracas, as we observed via
satellite, long gas lines formed outside the few filling stations
still selling petrol to local drivers. The essential Carter remains
an inspiration and a disgrace. Although old enough at 78 to join
Augusta National in his home state, he refuses to become one of the
boys. Unlike the religious right in his region, he knows what's
what in the world. In Oslo, he spelled it out, decrying "Israel's
inability to live in peace with its neighbors." Now imagine if
Trent Lott had said that. Just imagine. Let's put in
understandable terms. Israel is small country of a few million
surrounded by neighbors who not only refuse to accept its existence
but outnumber it by something like ten-to-one hundred or more to
one and make it a point of cultural pride to promise themselves
that sooner or later they'll suceed in erasing the "Zionist entity"
from the face of the earth. And Carter is blaming Israel for trying
to get itself lynched?
Still, one can understand why the U.N. remains so close to
Carter's admittedly impure heart. Controversy continued to rage
whether it was relevant for the Washington Post to have
reported that one of Hans Blix's crack inspection team is a leading
light of the "sadomasochism/leather/fetish community," and
particularly adept with knives and ropes. The Post's
ombudsman slapped the paper around for "yield[ing] to the
titillation factor" in whipping the story out.
Now that we have Hollywood's attention, we can express
admiration for that community's significant contribution to
bureaucratic theory. It used to that there was only a small and
efficient Hollywood 10. But because the U.S. government and F.B.I.
failed to dismantle this bureau, it continued its work and
naturally expanded in size. Now one hundred of its artists have
signed a treasonous missive intended to sabotage the hard foreign
policy work of the United States President. A sure sign of its
permanence and growing strength is that this time around young reds
like Ethan Hawke, Matt Damon and Uma Thurman joined with graybeards
Martin Sheen, Jessica Lange and Mike Farrell as signatories. The
miracle is that their activity isn't government funded -- or at
least U.S. government funded.
By the way, just to reassure Times columnist Bob
Herbert that his work is not in vain, that he is a man of vision,
that we didn't take anything he wrote personally, we're happy to
buck him up with this week's EOW prize. Now let's all rush to our
TV sets. Word is, Trent Lott is about to speak. And when he speaks,
strange things happen. And not only to him.
topics:
Hollywood, Israel, NATO