By Larry Thornberry on 6.1.07 @ 12:07AM
Folks who call George W. Bush and Republicans "cowboys" are dumb enough to think that's an insult.
Articles and retrospective TV specials surrounding the
centennial of John Wayne's birth last week reminded me of those
folks who call George W. Bush and Republicans "cowboys," and are
dumb enough to think that's an insult.
The cowboy, according to the side-saddle-riding elites, was a
violent, sadistic, racist, environment-stabbing, Indian-hating,
tobacco-chewing, beer-swilling, mouth-breathing, low-forehead lout.
But the joke is on the latte-breath idlers who misjudge the
cowpuncher (a few of whom, defense stipulates, may have deserved
one or two items from the above list). There could not be a worse
misreading of the cowboy myth, and by eyewitness accounts, a good
deal of the reality.
The people who use "cowboy" as an insult, many of them elected
officials, don't seem to be aware that far more Americans like
cowboys than like politicians. The country would probably be better
off if W and other elected officials were more like the guys who
flocked from all over the US of A, Europe, and other parts to take
the low-paying, brutally hard job of punching doggies in the
American West from about 1870 almost to the 20th century (yes, a
short period in history for all that myth, but there it is).
They were a various lot, these cowboys, but most who observed
them during that period reported that they tended toward reserved,
courteous, quiet, uncomplaining, hospitable, trustworthy,
forthright, fearless, tough, hearty, and loyal. They were smart and
resourceful or they didn't survive the pre-safety net West. They
were able and willing to bear hardships and to work long hours
under Spartan conditions (no time and a half for more than eight
hours in a day -- no mental health days). They expressed themselves
economically, and often with a dry, earthy, and cynical humor.
Cowboys on the frontiers couldn't hide behind convenient ideals
and didn't have much time for abstractions. They had to deal with
what popped up. Evil -- in the form of rustlers, rattle snakes,
flash floods -- had to be dealt with. It couldn't be appeased. You
couldn't hold a seminar, a conference, a debate, or a sit-in. Often
the dealing with required physical courage and violence. You can't
deconstruct a cattle stampede or a prairie blizzard.
Nuances were rare on the range. And the boys didn't spend much
time worrying about them when they popped up. To the extent that
they dwelled on the generality of things at all they tended to the
tragic view of life rather than to the current therapeutic. No one
was getting in touch with his inner child. Whiners weren't popular,
nor were shirkers. These guys weren't French.
The cowboy wouldn't know risotto from creosote, and he often got
a little wide and noisy when the cattle drive was over and he and
his mates hit town again for the first time in weeks. Drinking too
much was not unknown, and no one ordered lite beer. Not the sort of
guy to liven up a meeting of Skull and Bones (though Lord knows
they probably need livening up). And if The West Wing had
been around back then, I don't believe our lot would have watched
it.
Probably none of these sturdy Americans could pass the Foreign
Service exam. But taken all around, I wouldn't trade one of them
for the combined 2007 classes of the Ivy League, or for all the
idlers you could round up from all the Starbucks in Cambridge and
Berkeley.
If only W and the Republicans would earn their spurs.
topics:
Trade, Environment