Culture of Life: Bush-Style

Mustang Bobby:

Via Slate comes a nice side-by-side comparison of Bush's stance on the death penalty versus his stance on stem-cell research. Here's the capper:

· "I happen to believe that the death penalty, when properly applied, saves lives of others. And so I'm comfortable with my beliefs that there's no contradiction between the two." - April 14, 2005

· "The use of federal money, taxpayers' money to promote science which destroys life in order to save life is—I'm against that. And therefore, if the bill does that, I will veto it." - May 20, 2005

So, let me see if I have this straight -- Bush says that killing people saves lives, but using a piece of subatomic goo that could lead to cures for diseases like Parkinsons and Alzheimers and save millions of lives is murder.

Okay, I give up.
And that, of course, does not even begin to take into account the contented delirium he experiences each time he has the opportunity to drop bombs on brown people.

On a semi-related warmongering-type note, in case you’ve not heard, one of the revelations associated with the release of the Downing Street Memo is that Tony Blair only agreed to support the Iraq War in exchange for Bush supporting the Afghanistan invasion.

Think about that for a moment.

Bush had to be convinced to go after al-Qaida. Blair agreed to go into Iraq to get us into Afghanistan.

Digby says:
Tony Blair had to make a deal with Bush that he'd support him on Iraq to get him to go after Al-Qaeda. Is there anything more pathetic --- and frightening --- than that?
I’d have to say no.

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Try a Little Common Sense

Today, Harry Reid gave an address at the National Press Club called “The Use of Power: An Agenda for Reform.” Here are some highlights (via Harry Reid’s war room):

Our common sense reform agenda will take our economy from sluggishness to prosperity. A prosperity where a rising tide lifts the boat of every American who is willing to work hard.

When it comes to the economy, the Washington Republicans offer the same old answers and then try to change the subject. But the growing trade deficit and a runaway national debt that puts us into hock to China and Japan show that this Administration and this Congress have lost control over America’s economic destiny.

Democrats stand ready to win back America’s prosperity. We’ll end the tax breaks that encourage companies to take jobs overseas. Restore fiscal responsibility. Spur innovation. Open the doors to college. And make work pay more than welfare.

And if we want our companies to be ready to compete in the world economy, we have to hold down health care costs. Today, Starbucks spends more on health care than on coffee. Today, GM spends more on health care than on steel. Today, we can’t ask our companies to go head to head with foreign competitors with this burden on their backs.

Our families will never get ahead while they are getting battered down by health care costs that total $10,000 a year.

And our country will never be what it should be as long as the color of your skin or the size of your bank account determines whether your children can see a doctor. We can do better for them. And they are expecting nothing less from us.

Many of the jobs of the future will be jobs that come from new energy saving industries. Today, Japan’s and South Korea’s head start on innovation means they are running away with those jobs. We have to get back in that race.

Americans are getting fed-up every time they go for a fill-up. They know that our reliance on Mideast oil is making America less safe. They want us to reduce our dependence on foreign oil and make this nation energy independent. We can get there – but only if we start putting America’s security and prosperity first.

And Democrats will continue to stop George Bush from privatizing Social Security while we say “yes” to shoring up Americans’ pensions and making our retirement system more secure.

This is our agenda – an agenda for reform, an agenda to do the people’s business. And for them we will continue to fight.

[…]

This week’s events mark our chance to forge a common sense center that embraces an American agenda for reform. As Democratic Leader, I will be working aggressively to advance the work the American people sent us to do. And I hope that Republicans of good faith will join with us to get this job done: To strengthen our national security. To make America energy independent. To restore economic prosperity and opportunity. To help our families and business afford their health care. To boost Americans’ retirement security and protect their Social Security.

In the coming weeks and months, I’ll have more to say on all these fronts. But I pledge today, that in everything we do, the lesson of this week – that we can build on the common sense center – will remain front and center.
The common sense center. It’s a nice thought, but as I recall, both people on the Left and the Right were pretty pissed off about the filibuster compromise. And so many of the issues we’re facing aren’t compromisable because the Left has already suggested centrist solutions and the Right continues to reject them. How do you give the LGBT community equal rights in a centrist way? How do you find the center between people who want abortion to be safe and legal and accessible and people who want it criminalized outright? Where is the center between the position that stem cell research should be legal and stem cell research should be illegal? The problem is that people on both sides of an issue have to have common sense.

On marriage equality, the common sense solution is to separate civil marriage and religious ceremonies, requiring everyone to register a civil union and leaving the religious aspects to the church. Will the Right ever capitulate to such a change? On abortion, the common sense solution is to encourage the use of birth control, make sex education (which can include but should not be limited to abstinence as an option) a priority, and make abortions as safe and immediately available as possible, so that they are done as early as possible. Will the Right ever support even one of those steps? On stem cell research, the common sense solution is simply that it should be legalized, because there is no reason it shouldn’t be; the misinformation campaign that invokes inappropriate comparisons to cloning, abortion, etc. should cease immediately. Will the Right agree to approach the topic with the rationality it deserves?

I hope Harry’s on to something; I really do. I just haven’t seen much common sense floating around lately.

As a side note, it’s nice to see he’s been reading my blog:
As of this month, more time has passed since 9-11 than the time between Pearl Harbor and the defeat of Japan. During those three years and eight months – sixty years ago – we invaded North Africa and Normandy. We freed people from the Philippines to France. Hitler lay dead and Tojo was in chains. We had defeated fascism around the world and had begun to build the new United Nations.

But today Osama bin Laden is still on the loose, our homeland is still not secure, we’re still not energy independent, and – in many ways – Americans are less safe than we were before 9-11.
(Just kidding.)

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Crackpots

The Green Knight links to the following report in Editor and Publisher:

The congregation of Davis Memorial Presbyterian Church in Elkins, W.Va., has voted to fire its minister after he wrote a column for the local daily, the Inter-Mountain, supporting gay rights.

"Gay and lesbian Christians are no different than the rest of us," the Rev. Jeff Falter wrote in a Feb. 26 article. "They deserve full equality in the church and in society, for they are my brothers and sisters, people for whom Christ died."
That’s about the most innocuous statement I can imagine a Christian minister making. It is, in fact, simply a recitation of the primary tenet of Christianity.

I am as flabbergasted (and disgusted) by the reaction to Rev. Falter’s statement as I am by the reaction to Nightline’s tribute to fallen soldiers. How anyone can read a political agenda in the recognition of soldiers who have died, simply by reading their names and showing their pictures, is totally beyond me.

The Right is getting increasingly bizarre. They have lost all perspective, including and especially on that which is, ostensibly, solidly within their purview: moral values and supporting the troops. There’s nothing moral about turning people who want to worship away from a church, or firing a minister who claims that Christ died for everyone, and there’s nothing supportive about politicizing the honoring and remembrance of fallen soldiers, or denouncing the reading of their names as anti-war propaganda. They waved bye-bye to the deep end long ago; we’re into certifiably, unrelentingly irrational territory now. Nothing can deter them from reacting with shocking vitriol to anyone who disagrees with them, in spite of their constant assertions that they are the true Christians, the true patriots.

It would be hilarious if ideological hatemongers just like them weren’t running the country.

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Totally Nutzoid

Good jumping Christ! What the fucking fuck is wrong with Phil fucking Spector?! I mean, I know he’s got a shitbucket full of problems, what with being a murderer and all, but, come on, what the fuck?!


(Via Norbizness, who aptly describes this photo as “uncaptionable.”)

And I'm fairly certain that's a wig made out of the cat hair from Mike's place.

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Draft Warren

Okay, after being a bit dubious about a possible run for California governor by Warren Beatty, Ezra’s convinced me. Let’s draft him and get the Gropinator the fuck outta there. Even if he’s terrible, he can’t possibly be as bad as the Austrian Arschloch who’s running the joint now. You know what they say about Desperate Times…

(But I’ll still fight ya on Hillary, Ez.)

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Pictures of the Day

Care of Pam, who notes:

He's not running for office again, but Chimpy can't help himself. He wants BABY.

You just cannot separate that man from bald heads.

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Don't Fuck With His Rep

The Fixer at Alternate Brain responding to Amnesty International’s charges that the prison at Gitmo is the "gulag of our times" and that American leaders may face international prosecution for mistreating prisoners:

I don't know about anybody else, but my reputation means everything to me. As most of you know, besides being a writer, I'm a semi-retired mechanic. Keeping a reputation for ethics and integrity when swimming in a sea of sharks ain't easy, but I (my boss and the guys I work with too) have managed to do it for over 30 years.

The reputation of my country means a lot to me too, and this just pisses me off…

25 years ago, I joined the military to protect this nation from the USSR, the people who invented the word 'gulag'. We have become what despise the most.
In the comments thread, his co-blogger Gordon agrees:
It damn sure is turning into something I didn't sign up to defend, either.
We talk a lot about what supporting the troops really means, and the Left and the Right seem to have very different ideas about that. One of the things that I believe we owe to our troops who have already served is retaining the principles for which they were fighting. Asking them to have risked their lives to defend democracy only to destroy it at home and abroad is the worst kind of betrayal. I can’t begin to imagine how it feels to be someone like Fix or Gordon, whose service is mocked by a half-assed Texas guardsman that speaks of ideas like liberty and freedom while he crushes dissent and undermines the democracy he’s sworn to uphold.

Well, mock it all you like, flyboy. It’s people like the men of Alternate Brain who are the real guardians of America, not sniveling bullies who wield its power while destroying its greatness in equal measure, and it’s they who are our heroes.

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We Must Repeat

We just don't fucking learn.

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

This image is from yahoo's news page (tip 'o the energy dome to PusBoy and his commentary). Have we really learned nothing? Don't they realize how dehumanizing and humiliating this is? Dont' they realize how much further this will enrage the Iraquis?

I can't even make a Newsweek joke; this just disgusts me. I'm sure the genius that thought up this procedure was patting himself on the back for not making the prisoners wear a number. After all, that would be too nazi-like, right?

STOP TREATING PRISONERS LIKE ANIMALS.

(Cross-posted while sputtering more obscenities)

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Santorum Shocker!

If you have a weak heart, with this with caution, because it’s a biggie… Turns out that esteemed Senator from Pennsylvania, Rick Santorum, is a hypocrite!

From the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (via DSCC Communications Director Phil Singer):

Question of the Day for Rick Santorum: Can Stem Cell Research Cure Hypocrisy?

[…]

SANTORUM HAS CLEARLY STATED HIS OPPOSITION TO STEM CELL RESEARCH: Following the House of Representatives voting to expand stem cell research, Santorum issued a statement saying he was “disheartened” and that he does not “support taxpayer funding for scientific research that involves the destruction of human embryos or that is based on the prior destruction of human life.” Santorum also said he was “pleased to hear that President Bush has vowed to veto the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2005.” [Press Release, Office of Sen. Santorum, 5/24/05]

SANTORUM EVEN INTRODUCED LEGISLATION TO LIMIT STEM CELL RESEARCH: In January 2003, Santorum co-sponsored legislation that would have imposed severe restrictions on stem cell research. This legislation was applauded by conservatives because it would take more steps in preventing human cloning. Opponents of the bill, including the Christopher Reeve Paralysis foundation, American Diabetes Association and the National Organization for Women believed that the bill goes too far in limiting stem-cell research. [Anchorage Daily News, 5/17/03; S.245, 1/29/03]

YET SANTORUM HAS TAKEN $55,000 IN CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS FROM COMPANIES THAT CARRY OUT STEM CELL RESEARCH: Since 1998, Rick Santorum has accepted a total of $55,500 in campaign contributions from political action committees tied to six separate companies that conduct stem cell research. The six companies are: Becton Dickenson, General Electric, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Novartis, & Pfizer. [www.crp.org; Biotechnology Industry Organization; Wall Street Journal, 4/12/05; Bioworld Today, 10/14/04]
Good lord. Somebody fill a syringe with shame and squirt it into this guy’s mouth immediately.

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Kudos to Kraft

After coming under fire from conservative groups for their sponsorship of the Gay Games, Kraft, unlike some other megacorporations we could mention, hasn’t backed down from their position, instead defending their commitment to support diversity.

Here’s an excerpt from the statement issued by Marc Firestone, Executive Vice President, Corporate Counsel and Corporate Secretary of Kraft Foods, Inc.:

The true test of any commitment is how you respond when challenged. Kraft is experiencing this to a degree right now, as a result of our decision to be one of several contributors to the 2006 Gay Games in Chicago. The games will bring together thousands of athletes in a competition that will take place in our corporate hometown.

[…]

Diversity is more than a word many people like to say. At Kraft we truly respect all kinds of differences. And diversity is not a selective concept. By definition, it's nothing if not inclusive. We respect diversity of ethnicity, gender, experience, background, personal style and yes, sexual orientation and gender identity. Recognizing, respecting and valuing these differences helps us be a more successful business and a workplace where all employees can realize their full potential.

[…]

It can be difficult when we are criticized. It's easy to say you support a concept or a principle when nobody objects. The real test of commitment is how one reacts when there are those who disagree. I hope you share my view that our company has taken the right stand on diversity, including its contribution to the 2006 Gay Games in Chicago.
That’s being a leader. That’s corporate responsibility. That’s the way to tell the conservative barbarians clawing at your gate that the problem is theirs, not yours.

I’m gonna go buy me some Cheese & Macaroni!

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Sith Review

Okay, since we have a lot of Star Wars fans loitering about, I have to share with you the most hilarious review (containing no spoilers) of Sith from someone who does not like Star Wars. Never has, never will, which I must say provides for quite an amusing rant. This review comes courtesy of Mr. Shakes' best mate, MWS (with his permission), who regular Shakers will remember recently made a guest appearance as our resident hero.

(And by the way, a "jobbie" is a turd.)

----------------------------

There are insufficient words in the English language to describe just how appallingly bad that film was. In fact, I doubt whether the lexicon of a lost tribe who had survived millions of years in a slurry pool beneath the mouth of a sewage outlet would be extensive enough to relate the true vomit-encrusted jobbie that was the Revenge of the Sith.

Was that really better than the Phantom Menace? Or have I just forgotten how terrible the Phantom Menace was for that to have been considered an improvement? I have considered the matter overnight and searched for one aspect of the film that could be deemed a success but have been unable to come up with a single thing. Now, I know people will rave about the special effects (which can never replace the need for a storyline and/or decent acting in my opinion) but they were just boring. It appears that he spent the whole budget creating these huge space cities replete with millions of insignificant little characters in the background doing insignificant things to lend more realism to the film. So, what? It's just boring. I could have created a more exciting film at a fraction of the cost by simply video taping the effects of throwing a box of fireworks on to a bonfire. When people want special effects, they want massive explosions, buildings coming apart at the seams, actors being flung across a room following the impact of a high velocity weapon. Not boring background garbage. So, while I can appreciate the skill, labour and money that must have gone into the creation of some of these mega-cities, I can't help thinking, 'what was the point'? The fight scenes were pathetic. The reliance on computer animation just showed up the terrible human acting and directing. On several occasions during fights, the camera would slowly pan across the seven or so real human actors in the scene and, each would carry out some action at the moment the camera centered on them before continuing on to the next one! Before it was their turn, they looked as though they were just scratching their baws.

Then there was the storyline and script. Has George Lucas now regressed so deeply into his childhood fantasies that he thinks and writes like a five year old? Was the original script written in crayon with none of the letters joined up? Is the story board a collection of pictures of one dimensional stickmen with three fingers? Seriously, when I was in primary school I was better able to hold a plot together than Lucas. The final turd on the dung-heap was that clumsy effort in the last five minutes to stitch the film together with the original Star Wars! I mean, when he was actually writing the script did he not think about these loose ends until he was 90% finished? Then the acting. Oh my god! Ewan McGregor should be dragged naked behind a horse and then strung up from the battlements for his shocking parody of Sir Alec Guiness. What the hell was that crummy accent all about, or the way he managed to murder just about any one-liner he was made to deliver. Then the bird and Anakin managed to set new minimum standards with badly hammed up performances that would have seen them dismissed from a school production of the nativity play. The only character in the whole film with any depth or consistency was Yoda! I would rather be force fed faeces from the bowels of the local rugby team after a night of beer and curry than ever watch anything associated with George Lucas and Star Wars again.

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A Note to the Guys

If you’ve been considering the best way to get semen from your penis into a woman’s mouth (and I know you have been!), I’ve got some important information for you.

Don’t even think about engaging in consensual oral sex, especially if you might have reason to lie about it later. They impeached a president for that—I can only imagine what they’d do to you.

Instead, try filling a syringe with your jizz, then injecting it into women’s mouths. Even if you get caught and lie about it, you’ll only get probation.

In testimony before the board, [former dentist John Hall] denied the allegations.

"I have never injected semen in any patient's mouth," he said. "I never would. I've got a 10-year-old daughter. That whole concept is so beyond me."

Police searched Hall's office and confiscated syringes after several employees said they were suspicious of the dentist's behavior. DNA tests on the syringes later showed they contained Hall's semen.

[…]

[Superior Court Judge Robert Ervin] placed Hall, 44, on probation for five years, telling the alleged victims he chose that over a maximum 120-day prison sentence in the hope that Hall's activities would be monitored and similar acts prevented.
So, like I said…syringes are definitely the way to go. Just looking out for ya, guys.

Now, as for us girls, it seems pretty crappy that having a dude squirt his manjuice into our mouths against our will is considered a misdemeanor, especially considering that the junk can carry disease, not to mention the psychological trauma of such an event, and it seems even crappier that the best they can do to punish someone charged with seven counts of “misdemeanor assault on a female” is 120 days of jail or a 5-year probation. But, you know, that’s what the law says, and who are we to question the wisdom of the judiciary, right? The only solution I can think of is to stop going to the dentist. Maybe if our teeth spoil and rot and fall out of our heads, then there won’t be anyone wanting to squirt semen in our mouths uninvited.

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“Unintentional but worrisome”

The tone of this article from the AP would be laughable if it weren’t so sad:

A voters' rights group said Wednesday its audit of November's presidential election ballots in Miami-Dade County showed counting problems - and an unintentional but worrisome instance of a number of votes being counted three times.

A report released by the Miami-Dade Election Reform Coalition said during the elections there were "serious problems with policies and procedures that are supposed to protect the integrity of the ballot."

In many precincts, the number of people who signed in to cast votes was not tracked carefully, or in some cases was not compared with the actual number of ballots cast at those precincts.

The group also said there was a touchscreen machine malfunction; when votes were tallied the results from one machine had been counted three times, creating a discrepancy of 171 votes that became part of the certified canvass, the group said.

"It slid right through and nobody caught it," said Martha Mahoney, a professor at University of Miami and a group member.

Fifteen of Florida's 67 counties used touchscreen machines, including most of the heavily populated ones.

Election officials welcomed the criticism and said the machine that gave a 3-for-1 tally has been sent for testing.

"We generally think that the more voices that you have the better off you are," said Seth Kaplan, spokesman for the elections office.
Kind of fucking alarming, I’d say. That the only quotes included in the article are as dispassionate and generic as a tin of mushroom soup is pathetic. We should be outraged at this situation. We should be up in arms that we are being placated with a solution like sending the machine “for testing.” We should be crying foul from every corner of the country, asking what has happened to our democracy. We should be demanding to know whether there is any relationship between this revelation and the claims made by Clint Curtis. And we should certainly not let the lackluster reporting of such irregularities dictate our reaction.

As an aside, I haven’t seen any comment from Mr. Kerry.

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Unbelievable

Go visit Pam to get the story on the cross-burnings that happened in her neck of the woods.

What fucking century is this? Sick motherfucking fucks.

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Well, At Least He’s Honest…

…for a change (though probably unintentionally, for which he can thank his limited vocabulary and his coke-fried brain that precludes quick thinkin'). In a comment reminiscent of musings where he waxed dreamy about being dictator, Bush admitted yesterday that he spreads propaganda:

See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda.
Read: As your de facto dictator, I rely heavily on the repetition of talking points to brainwash you and push my agenda into the media.

Yeesh.

Crooks and Liars has the audio here.

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Open Thread: Revenge of the Sith

Okay, I finally saw it last night. This the open thread for all manner of discussion. Spoilers are allowed, so if you don't want to know, don't read it!

What did ya think?

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More Bloch Head

John Aravosis has more on Bloch here, here, and here.

(My earlier post is here, if you need to catch up.)

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Shaken, Not Stirred…and Very Dry

A lovely little bit of dry snark from Shaker John Lombard, who also authors the generously named blog Trust Me, You Have No Idea How Much I Hate Bush -- And Dick Isn't That Great, Either:

Bill O'Reilly is upset with Michael Kinsley. Michael Kinsley thinks that one way to restore America's -- sorry, what is it? -- oh, right, prestige in the world is to give the prisoners at Guantanamo legal representation. Bill cried appeasement! He thought Kinsley meant that giving Guantanamo prisoners lawyers would restore America's standing among mujahedeen.

Some on the right seems to think that America's prestige is only down with tyrannies. Rush Limbaugh said just that on his program. Unfortunately, America's stock is down in the free world. When Democrats talk about loss of prestige they mean among the free countries of the world, not among dictatorships. So, they could just be a misunderstanding. Because Republicans are stupid.

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More on Jim West

JJ continues his coverage at Big Brass Blog of the increasingly bizarre and disturbing scandal surrounding the disgraced mayor of Spokane, Jim West. Some snippets:

All I have to say is DUUUHHH, lets put it into perspective… A 54 year old CEO of a company hires a cute 23 year old blond to a key position knowing that the blonds claim to fame and only experience is making balloon animals.

[…]

I did some checking into Ryan Oelrich’s Quest youth group and discovered that the primary donors to Quest are older men who were solicited by Ryan to contribute to the group. According to a member of Quest, who wishes to remain anonymous, the group only allows white straight acting gays as its members.
And from a new article that alleges West groped and pulled down boys’ pants at a Boy Scout camp:
West did not return telephone calls seeking comment about allegations that he pulled down the swimming trunks and pants of boys, some of them as young as 8, at a Scout camp on Diamond Lake. Those allegations have come from family members and friends of some of the alleged victims.
Also, Pam has more about another allegation that West made an “inappropriate” comment to a state senator about her son:
''West told me, 'I want to do to your son what no mother would want to know,''' Roach said the former senator told her. Roach said she told fellow Republican Sen. Ann Anderson about the encounter at the time, but Anderson, a friend of West, told the newspaper she recalled that West told Roach: ''Pam, you have a nice-looking young son.''
This guy is seriously gross. Imagine saying that to anyone about their kid?! Eugh! I’ve seriously just about had it with these closeted Republican freakazoids and their unsuccessful attempts at repressing their mutated sexualities. If any more of these nutjobs get exposed (no pun intended), I think we’ll be pretty safe in making a case for automatically arresting any elected Republican who strenuously objects to gay rights and/or reproductive rights. At the very least, we should be able to secure a search warrant on those grounds. A brief exploration of any of their computers would likely produce enough distressing pornography to make Caligula blush. Weirdos.

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The Contender

(Even though it seems like this post is about boxing, it really isn’t, I promise, although it’s not really about politics, either.)

So, last night, my favorite Contender won the $1 million at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas after seven rounds of some serious boxing action.


Sergio “The Latin Snake” Mora

I honestly couldn’t believe the guy I supported right from the start actually won the whole thing, especially because I picked him as my favorite even before I saw him box; I knew nothing about the technical aspects of boxing, really, on which to base my opinions of the contenders, so I didn’t expect to support anyone in particular. But then, all of a sudden here was this tall, wiry guy, sitting on his bed and talking about his love of books, of language, of art. The Oscar Wilde novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, which contains a single line that was the impetus behind Mr. Shakes and my meeting, was his favorite book, and the entirety of his living space was cluttered with books and notebooks, filled with his own notes, highlighted passages, drawings and doodles.
I was always fascinated by learning more, and school was something I actually enjoyed. After graduating high school, I began taking college courses. I really enjoyed reading, writing and drawing so much I didn’t consider them classes, but hobbies. Hobbies I still enjoy doing until this day. (Link.)
I was, of course, hooked. And more than that, I could relate to him in the intimate way that lovers of books can. Readers, I’ve found—the real voracious, book-devouring, insatiable kind of readers—nearly always have an instant affinity for one another, and a shared approach to the world. Sergio saw and loved the art and strategy of boxing more than the brawn of it (he has, in fact, no discernible weakness aside from the lack of a reliable knock-out punch), and, because he was a reader, a man who loves language, he could eloquently describe the intellectual components of boxing I never understood (or tried to) before Mr. Shakes cajoled me into watching the show with him. And so it was that week after week, a middle class suburban white girl, the daughter of two teachers, tuned in to watch the poor Latin boxer from East LA, the son of a single mother who works in a factory; I cheered him on and in return he gave me an appreciation for a sport I had not had before.
"We love fighting because we see beauty in the art of the science of fighting. We don't see the brutality about it. This is what we love to do.”

“Boxing was a commitment I endured because I loved the beauty of the sport. The essence of fighting, not only with ones fists, but the actual battle of attrition is what addicted me to the ‘sweet science.’ It truly is a beautiful sport and it's what I love to do...”
The truth is, I really, really liked most of the guys on the show. I adored Alfonso, who was fighting his way out of poverty, much like Sergio, and had picked up boxing as a defense against bullying. I wanted to have a beer and a laugh with Jesse, who loved to fight just to knock people out. I felt for Peter, who fought for his father’s love and his family’s honor. But I best understood Sergio—he had the same look in his eyes that I know is in my own, and that I see in the eyes of other readers, who have tumbling piles of books on their nightstands and wonder how life can be so short when there’s so much to be learned.

I don’t know that I’ve been turned into a boxing fan for life, so I can’t say with certainty that I’ll keep tabs on the Latin Snake as his star inevitably rises. Regardless, at a time when I often bemoan the willful ignorance that plagues so much of America, it was nice to find a reminder that the readers, the pursuers of knowledge and truth, are out there, everywhere, in expected places and not. It was nice to find another Wilde fan. It always is.

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