Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/02/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Walter S Delesandri wrote: > standard of living, we Americans (yes, USA) have been sitting > on our asses letting our individual freedoms and lack of governmental > intrusion be taken away by zealous political/legislative activity. For those of you outside the United States, I will venture to translate,as Walt has requested. Many Americans of Walt's generation have lived to see a transition in the behavior of the United States government towards its citizens. In Walt's boyhood, members of all manner of suspect groups and races were routinely stomped on by the government, the press, and the private sector. Americans of Japanese ancestry were put into concentration camps, union organizers were beaten until they hemorrhaged, homosexuals were called 'fairies' or 'perverts', nonwhites and women enjoyed limited-to-nonexistent economic opportunities, and the FBI and other government organizations harassed and intimidated American citizens, keeping files on people considered subversives---Sandy Koufax, for example---and trying to blackmail Martin Luther King into committing suicide. Meanwhile, Walt and other members of his generation and background worked hard, many of them rising from having little material wealth to a standard of living their parents never could have imagined. The continually-expanding U.S. economy provided opportunities for a segment of the American population to better themselves, and many look back quite proudly on their productive lives, and rightly so. Some members of this generation made great sacrifices at places like Omaha Beach, Okinawa, or Korea that younger Americans like myself should be damn grateful we never had to make: every U.S. citizen under 35 should be forced to watch the first 30 minutes of 'Saving Private Ryan'. Meanwhile, for many Americans, not necessarily the same race or subculture that Walt might consider 'red-blooded', didn't enjoy the same opportunities, and for some reason many in Walt's generation didn't notice this. Perhaps because they were raised in an era when it was more acceptable to see other races as inferior, or pehaps because of a sense that anyone the government was harassing must deserve it---after all, they weren't harassing red-blooded Americans---Walt and Jim are able to see the U.S. of 1955 as a paradise built by cheerful non-Union labor, where everyone had lots of opportunity. It is this that makes Richard Jewell so scary to Jim: Richard Jewell is about as nondescript and nonthreatening a typical white American as you can find, and for a change someone that Jim could imagine to be himself. It is not the acts perpetrated in the case of Richard Jewell that are anything new, it is the object. Jim and Walt think things have been getting worse because they are ignorant of the treatment the establishment has dished out for generations. Things might indeed be getting worse, but it seems that their perception of this is colored by the the government (or the wealthy, or whoever you hate) now screwing U.S. citizens more democratically without regard to race, creed, or color. I have learned much from Jim's posts to this group newsgroup, and I read every one of Walt's posts, often laughing out loud at his witty, biting sarcasm that is so intelligent. These are intelligent men whose experience and observations we would be foolish to ignore. It is well worth our forbearance in tolerating their disgusting and perverted behaviour at the polling place. Just remember that when they say 'we', they are not always referring to all U.S. citizens. - -Al