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What I remember
My father was a southerner of the same generation as Ms. Deen. He did not speak directly to the question of the “n” word and his culture. As a child I knew these stories:
His father owned a hardware store. He was taught to call people “sir” and “ma’am” and so he did so until his father told him these terms did not apply to the African American customers who came to the store.
Why? My father wondered. He never, as long as I knew him, treated anyone with partiality. He was not convinced by prejudice and racism. Always fair at all things except cards–in which case the man played to win.
Or the stories of the black women who raised him. They loved him, put up with him, nurtured him, and gave him his taste for butter on rice and pinto beans. A taste that is sewn into who we are and what we call home.
And then there was Tav–Octavia, the subject of the most explosive argument I remember between my father and his parents.
They objected to loans she got from the government to renovate her shack. She was their employee. If they had paid her a living wage then she could have afforded her own linoleum and shingles.
Hardly luxuries.
But this last story is mine: I was 4 or 5 at most and a relative repeated a familiar rhyme that often has the word “tiger” in it. Only she used the n word. I did not know at first what it meant.
My parents (Paula Deen’s age and no angels) explained that it was a derogatory term we did not use.
If you can teach a 5 year old that some words are painfully off-limits, well…you can teach just about anyone.
Trick is to get’em to understand God sees us all the same–His beautiful children.
And love follows…
He was (judging from his parents’ devotion and the genes he has bequeathed to his grandchildren) a lovable child. His dog thought so. He followed my father everywhere–so much so that he had to be tied to a stake when dad went to dog unfriendly places.
Church for instance: old-style pre-air conditioned southern baptist. It was warm and the windows and doors were open to let in the breeze.
But they let in more than that–that old dog broke his chains and bounded across town to find his boy in the pews…day dreaming, I imagine. Until the commotion started.
My father (or maybe it was my grandfather–the real story teller) said the hound came running down the aisles, jumping over pews to get to his boy.
Psalm 23 says,
Surely goodness and mercy will follow me…
Like my father’s dog. Like God’s unending love.
Simple Maxim
It is easy to speak
Of overcoming
Fear
Until someone
You love
Falls.
The Kenneth Bae Predicament
Have you heard of Kenneth Bae?
Probably not. Justin Bieber takes up more oxygen in the news world than Mr. Bae. From what I can gather, Bae was a tourist in the hermit kingdom until he was arrested and accused of crimes against the state. His guilt is not in question because torture is the go-to investigative tool of N. Korea and because just setting foot there is cause for the death penalty.
That is right–in North Korea breathing is a capital offense. Everyone is guilty.
I am praying for Kenneth Bae and I am deeply concerned about him. I am afraid no celebrity endorsement from Rodman or Clinton will save him.
But there is something else as well. I am willing to push the metaphysical idea of hell when such a ready example rises to the surface.
Life in North Korea is hell. How can we turn away?
The elision of ordinary evil
Years ago a friend described his parent’s divorce–“it was like a bomb going off in the livingroom.”
His description was vivid and devastating and it came back to rest on my shoulder when my adopted children wreaked violence on my family.
The dust, the debris, the shrapnel of crime and violence rocked my own family.
I think about the steroid-bloated image of Uncle Sam, I think of the empty rhetoric and cries for both caution and justice. To me so few of the words are useful. They will not restore.
They will not restore limbs to the wounded.
They will not restore peace to the shattered.
They will not replace trust or safety like vases fallen and broken after a blast.
Do you want to help the victims?
Then shut up and listen.
Listen very carefully and stop congratulating people for being heroes.
We are none of us heroes.
We are fragile, easily broken and we take great care to heal.
And if we want any kind of justice or restoration we must first mourn our dead and then we must think, really think, in silence and humility–
if I had lost my safety, my loved ones, my dignity, my limbs, how would I want people to respond–to my pain and grief and loss?
Think hard.
Then do something.
Frog Boils
For years now I have refrained from using the creepy and depressing frog in a pot of water analogy because I had been told it was not true.
Turns out it may be true. It could be true in the following ways:
1. The frog has been mentally or physically disabled. A brained frog or a frog with broken limbs will or can’t jump. Hardly proves anything beyond extreme cruelty.
2. The water is heated extremely slowly.
The “successful” experiments for this story were conducted by “scientists” in the 1800s. The quotation marks indicate my personal distaste for this kind of experiment. What normal person boils frogs in the name of science?!
The unfortunate truth: amphibians now have more advocates than babies. Imagine what PETA would do if NIH started boiling frogs.
But the children born as the result of incompetent abortionists (here I resist the quotes but must ask you to dwell on exactly what a successful abortionist does) are targets for medical murder.
Not only have abortion clinics been quietly snuffing out human life for years, now Planned Parenthood (recipient of tax funds) is openly advocating extending abortion to live human babies.
Who needs frogs when you can experiment on humans instead? Are you feeling cozy and warm in that pot? Check your limbs, check your cerebral cortex, and then find a way to jump. ‘Cause things are getting hotter here. One degree at a time.
The $100 Question
What would you do with $100?
What would you do with $10?
You get a gift, win a contest, you come into some legit but unexpected cash.
What do you do with it?
Answers can be posted here or on my Facebook link to this post.
Thanks.
Art history


