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Joe Dees
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virus: Andrew Sullivan's retrospective on 2002
« on: 2003-01-01 17:07:14 »
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Re: virus: Andrew Sullivan's retrospective on 2002
« Reply #1 on: 2003-01-01 17:56:20 »
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Thanks for this Joe. Please can you also post the link or source?

Regards

Jonathan

----- Original Message -----
From: <joedees@bellsouth.net>
To: <virus@lucifer.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 01, 2003 10:07 PM
Subject: virus: Andrew Sullivan's retrospective on 2002


> Waiting for 2003
>
> J.R.R. Tolkien was adamant that his fantasy novels not be
> misconstrued as political parables. But there was something
> uncanny about sitting down this Christmas in Manhattan for the
> second installment of the "Lord of the Rings" movie trilogy.
> Second parts of trilogies are often difficult, of course. The
> audience is left hanging at the beginning and at the end. Suspense
> is built and released but then has to be built again. Like real wars,
> Tolkien's epic struggle of good against evil therefore has its lulls,
> its protagonists beset by self-doubt or fear or exhaustion. There is
> a modest relief at having survived much; but there is also
> deepening fear of what may still lie ahead.
>
> In America, the last year felt like just such a bridge. The war in
> Afghanistan ended over a year ago; the preparation for the war
> against Saddam has filled the entire interlude since. Only once did
> real terror strike again at the heart of the country: as a radical
> Muslim convert murdered one innocent citizen after another in the
> region around Washington, D.C. But the blast in Bali was also felt
> nearer home, a timely reminder of the depravity of the enemy, and
> its long memory and reach. The rest of the time, anticipation was
> the rule. From George W. Bush's "Axis of Evil" speech last
> January to his September speech to the U.N., he spent a year
> attempting to make the case for a real war against the terror
> masters and their state allies. Some are still unpersuaded. But if
> 2002 was a test for the president in his stewardship of the war -
> bringing the American public, the allies, the U.N. and the
> Congress toward endorsing the next step - then even his harshest
> critics would be hard put to argue he failed. His unprecedented
> election victory in November was the clincher. Now, of course, he
> has to fight the war. But sometimes in divided, democratic
> politics, making a necessary war possible is as hard as waging it
> itself.
>
> Domestically, two deep shifts occurred. The first was the visible
> implosion of the American Catholic Church. It's hard to over-
> estimate the damage that has been done to what is the largest
> single denomination in the wealthiest and most powerful religious
> country on the planet. Last January, the Bsoton Globe began
> aggressively reporting on the Boston Archdiocese's record in
> tolerating the sexual abuse of children. Within a year, the most
> powerful and respected cardinal in America, Bernard Law of
> Boston, had resigned. But in those twelve months, the rotten core
> of the American Catholic hierarchy had been exposed as never
> before. Cardinals, we discovered, routinely put the reputation of
> the Church above the protection of children from statutory rape.
> Faced with scandal, the hierarchy behaved less like servants of
> Christ than peculiarly hapless politicians, unable to understand
> what the fuss was about and alternately sickened to their stomach
> by what they knew was true. By the time the Catholic bishops got
> around to opposing war against Iraq, they had about as much
> moral authority with the general public as Ozzie Osbourne.
>
> The painful reality that the Church had done so much to obscure
> was now implanted in every American's head: that vocations to
> the priesthood had collapsed; that the Church's negligence was
> leading to financial crisis; that up to a third of Catholic priests
> were gay; that a few were so sexually conflicted and immature
> that they found sexual expression satisfying only with children;
> that knowledge of this went right to the top, to the Vatican itself;
> and that there was no sign that Rome would begin to address even
> the minimal steps to repair the harm done: allowing married
> clergy, talking about the possibility of women priests, or initiating
> a dialogue on the role of homosexuals in the Church. The Church
> will endure, of course. But it is hard to see how the American
> Church can reform itself, maintain the commitment of its own
> laity and remain loyal to Rome. A year ago, hitting that trifecta
> would have seemed unlikely. Now it seems all but impossible.
>
> And then there was a subtle but profound cultural shift on the
> matter of race. Some of this doubtless has something to do with
> September 11 - as the threat from outside the borders helped erase
> racial animosity within. But something else was also happening. A
> new generation of Americans, those who do not think in the
> black-and-white paradigm of their baby boomer parents and pre-
> civil rights grandparents, began to make their presence felt. The
> biggest entertainment success of the year was one Marshall
> Mathers, aka Eminem. His extraordinary movie, "8 Mile," will
> one day be seen as a cultural watershed. It was in one way a
> classic, almost conservative, American morality tale: poor boy
> struggles to get out of the ghetto both of class and of race. He
> faces down black hostility to a young white rapper, and he also
> leaves his welfare-dependent single mother to advance up the
> social ladder. But it was also a brilliant exposition of how race is
> now far more complicated a factor in America's social and
> political landscape than it once was. As Eminem yells on his latest
> album, "White America, I could be one of your kids!" And, yes, he
> is one of their kids. But is he really white or really black? Some
> deride him as yet another Elvis rip-off, another American white-
> boy purloining a black cultural form. But they forget that Mathers
> really is a part of black hip-hop culture. In his generation, class
> trumped race, as it does increasingly at the very bottom and the
> very top of American society. He is to his circle what Condi Rice
> is to hers.
>
> You only have to think about this for a minute to realize why
> Trent Lott had to resign as Senate Majority Leader just before
> Christmas. Lott had made a jovial, off-hand remark at Senator
> Strom Thurmond's 100th birthday party. The remark was to the
> effect that he wished that Thurmond had won the presidential
> election of 1948, when Thurmond had run on an explicitly
> segregationist platform. That kind of sentiment is not only
> repulsive; it's almost culturally absurd to those who grew up after
> the Civil Rights era. Once the story got real play in the media, the
> country gave what might be called a nervous, collective gasp, and
> it became clear that no-one who could have made such a joke
> could actually govern in contemporary America. Like Cardinal
> Law, Lott lived posthumously for a while, but eventually
> succumbed to reality. Both men had been left behind by history.
> Law had grown up at a time when no-one ever criticized the
> Catholic Church and got away with it, while Lott had grown up in
> a South where segregation was not the slightest bit controversial
> among most whites. But by 2002, the culture's tectonic plates had
> shifted, and suddenly two of the most powerful men in the country
> fell, humiliated, into a quake.
>
> No doubt next year will be as cruel to some others as 2002 was to
> these old men. But these shifts at home struck me as mere cultural
> and social adjustments, compared to the terrorist trauma of the
> year before. And we obsessed over them not simply because they
> were riveting and revealing, but because they also helped us
> ignore the gathering storm beyond the borders. Just as we were at
> the beginning of this year, we are still waiting in this bridge to the
> twenty-first century, glancing nervously at the sky. But the next
> phase cannot be forestalled for much longer. And in this brief
> holiday respite, most Americans sense it.
> ---
> To unsubscribe from the Virus list go to
<http://www.lucifer.com/cgi-bin/virus-l>

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Joe Dees
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Re: virus: Andrew Sullivan's retrospective on 2002
« Reply #2 on: 2003-01-01 18:13:16 »
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