Eilon, November 25, 2004
Hello friends
I thought that this was one of Tom Friedman's more powerful tracts.
-Barry
OP-ED COLUMNIST
In My Next Life
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
In my next life, I want to be Tom DeLay, the House majority leader.
Yes, I want to get almost the entire Republican side of the House of
Representatives to bend its ethics rules just for me. I want to be able
to twist the arms of House Republicans to repeal a rule that
automatically requires party leaders to step down if they are indicted
on a felony charge - something a Texas prosecutor is considering doing
to DeLay because of corruption allegations.
But most of all, I want to have the gall to sully American democracy at
a time when young American soldiers are fighting in Iraq so we can
enjoy a law-based society here and, maybe, extend it to others. Yes, I
want to be Tom DeLay. I want to wear a little American flag on my lapel
in solidarity with the troops, while I besmirch every value they are
dying for.
If I can't be Tom DeLay, then I want to be one of the gutless
Republican House members who voted to twist the rules for DeLay out of
fear that "the Hammer," as they call him, might retaliate by taking
away a coveted committee position or maybe a parking place.
Yes, I want to be a Republican House member. At a time when 180 of the
211 members of the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit in Iraq who have been
wounded in combat have insisted on returning to duty, I want to look my
constituents and my kids in the eye and tell them that I voted to empty
the House ethics rules because I was afraid of Tom DeLay.
If I can't be a Republican House member, I want to be Latrell Sprewell,
the guard for the Minnesota Timberwolves. I want to say with a straight
face that if my owner will only give me a three-year contract extension
for a meager $21 million, then he's not worth working for, because "I've got
my family to feed."
Yes, I want to be Latrell Sprewell. At a time when N.B.A. games are
priced beyond the reach of most American families, when half the
country can't afford health care, when some reservists in Iraq are
separated from their families for a year, including this Thanksgiving,
I want to be like Latrell. I want to make sure everyone knows that I'm
looking out for my family - and no one else's.
If I can't be Latrell Sprewell, I want to be any American college or
professional athlete. For a mere dunk of the basketball or first-down
run, I want to be able to dance a jig, as if I'd just broken every
record by Michael Jordan or Johnny Unitas. For the smallest, most
routine bit of success in my sport, I want to be able to get in your
face - I want to know who's your daddy, I want to be able to high-five,
low-five, thump my chest and dance on your grave. You talkin' to me?
I want to be able to fight on the court, off the court, in the stands
and on the sidelines. I want to respect no boundaries and no norms. And
when I make your kids cry, I want to be able to tell you to just "chill" - that my coach says "stuff happens" and
that my union rep is appealing my punishment in the name of the Bill of Rights
and the Magna Carta. Yes, in my next life, I want to be The Man.
If I can't be The Man, then I at least want to be the owner of a Hummer
- with American flag decals all over the back bumper, because Hummer
owners are, on average, a little more patriotic than you and me.
Yes, I want to drive the mother of all gas-guzzlers that gets so little
mileage you have to drive from gas station to gas station. Yes, I want
to drive my Hummer and never have to think that by consuming so much
oil, I am making transfer payments to the worst Arab regimes that
transfer money to Islamic charities that transfer money to madrassas
that teach children intolerance, antipluralism and how to hate the
infidels.
And when one day one of those madrassa graduates goes off and joins the
jihad in Falluja and kills my neighbor's son, who is in the U.S. Army
Rangers, I want to drive to his funeral in my Hummer. Yes, I want to
curse his killers in front of his mother and wail aloud, "If there was
only something I could do ..." And then I want to drive home in my
Hummer, stopping at two gas stations along the way.
If I can't be any of these, then I want to be just a simple blue-state
red-state American. I want to take time on this Thanksgiving to thank
God I live in a country where, despite so much rampant selfishness, the
public schools still manage to produce young men and women ready to
voluntarily risk their lives in places like Iraq and Afghanistan to
spread the opportunity of freedom and to protect my own. And I want to
thank them for doing this, even though on so many days in so many ways
we really don't deserve them.
Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company
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