http://www.zmag.org/wiscalam.htm
To My Baby Girl, On the Day After 
By Tim Wise
 
I was not where I needed to be last night. Not physically, and not
emotionally. My daughter is ten weeks old. And last night, and tonight
as well, only her mother will be able to hold her, and kiss her
goodnight, and hug her, and wipe up her spit. 

I am somewhere else.

Tonight I will call home, and speak to my wife, who gave birth to that
precious baby girl amidst such hope and pain. And in the background, I
will hear that baby's cry: as if she knows something is terribly wrong.
Because babies can feel things that the rest of us have learned to
repress.

And yet when I finally call I find her laughing, consumed with a desire
to do nothing more than reach out, reach out, reach out, and bat at the
soft hanging stars and moons that hang from her mobile.

I sigh a deep sigh of relief. The air escaping my lungs, and signifying
recognition that 10-week-old babies do not, in fact, understand mass
death. They have only begun, indeed, to understand their own life.

It is their parents, it is we, who must impose upon their innocent,
naïve, and far preferable world, with the truth that one day mommy or
daddy may leave for work and not come back.

It is the parents; it is we, who must impose upon their world, altering
forever their smiling, drooling faces that you can only see through the
bitter tears of your own disillusionment.

You cannot protect them. Cannot keep them young forever. Oh what I would
give to be so young and naïve, as to require my mommy or daddy to wipe
my nose and speak to me about anything but mass death.

It is their parents; it is we, who have to tell them of their nation's
talk of massive retaliation, and hunting down those responsible for mass
death. And inflicting upon them some more mass death, to convince still
others--once and for all--that mass death really doesn't pay. And that
our collective national dick is bigger than theirs.

And while I never expected to speak to you of such things at such a
tender age, you might as well know that it is always and forever about
the length and circumference of one's national phallus.

Size, it seems, does matter, whether for missiles, or tall buildings, or
the airplanes that bring them down. Their shapes (and make a note of it
now for future reference), are no coincidence.

So if Osama Bin Laden is the man of the hour, then Al Haig and Hank
Kissinger and their students--who, as it turns out know a little
somethin' 'bout mass death--are apt to make sure he knows how killing is
really done. Because they are hung like horses.

Killers have tutors, see, and the classes are full. How many people can
they kill? Can we kill? (Kill, Kill). "Kill 'em all, let God sort 'em
out." That's what the bumper sticker prophets say. But God has better
things to do, I figure, than to sort through the tangled mess that is
both the New York financial district and also the human condition at
this late date.

I have been in those buildings, have you? I have dropped my quarter in
the silver, shiny viewfinders that you could look through, and get a
close up view of Greenwich Village, or the Empire State Building, or the
Hudson River, or Fort Lee, New Jersey. If for some strange and largely
inexplicable reason you felt the need to see Fort Lee, with the
assistance of a 1000x magnification lens.

I have dropped my quarters in slots my daughter will never see, in
buildings she will never enter, on observation decks that do not exist
any longer, except in my mind. And I have listened as the timer counted
down the time left before the viewfinder would fade to black.

And I can imagine looking thru the viewfinder, and wondering why that
plane looks so damned close.

I can imagine looking uptown as the plane came closer, and closer, and
seeing Harlem, and thinking, damn: I shoulda gone to Sylvia's Soul Food.
'Cause Harlem, far from being the bad part of town, was one of the
safest places in New York yesterday. Even terrorists know which victims
count the most in America.

America, if you want safety, you'd best get your ass to the 'hood. Get
your boogie shoes to 123rd street. Move immediately into the Robert
Taylor Homes, or Cabrini Green, or the lower 9th Ward in New Orleans. Do
not pass go, let alone Wall Street. For there you are like sitting
ducks.

And now what baby girl? Will we shed the blood of innocent babies so
much like you, to demonstrate to the world how precious your life is?
You had best hope not baby girl. Because if so you will never be safe.
Not now, and not when you are old enough to understand, and fear, and
tremble, like I am right now.

We will be signing a death warrant. If not yours, perhaps that of some
other baby girl or boy. Maybe one that was being born at 8:42 this
morning, while others were dying in mass death.

'Cause what goes around, most definitely goes around, and around, and
around, and around.

And all the tough talk and swagger and muscle flexing and chest thumping
and pontifications that the folks who did this are cowards, cannot
conceal the fact that so far there are no brave souls in the mix yet.

There is nothing brave about committing mass murder to be sure. But
neither is there bravery in adding to the body count. Neither is there
bravery in Senator Hatch's testosterone-soaked diatribe about "going
after the bastards," or officials saying no options are being ruled out,
including nuclear weapons.

What a lesson that would teach. Like stealing the stereo of the guy who
took your car to prove how much we respect private property. And then
your VCR is at risk, and his watch, and your jewelry. Jewelry you could
pawn on E-bay on any other day, but not tonight. 'Cause folks are too
busy bidding on chunks of the 39th floor.

So welcome to the world, dear baby girl. And sleep well tonight. And
remain young for as long as you can. For one day, not so far from this
day, everything will change again. As it always has.

And rivers of blood will be added to rivers of blood, all of it red and
flowing downhill as blood tends to do as it seeks its own level. And
mountains of bodies higher than the towers brought down on this day will
be stacked: In the name of God. In the name of money. In the name of
security. In the name of revenge. In the names of people with names like
Osama and George and Ariel or Allah or Jesus.

Or to satisfy our desire for real, real, reality TV. So much so, that
eating rats will seem like a day at Disney.

And your alarm system will not protect you baby girl. 'The Club' will
not protect you. The police cannot protect you. Missile defense sure as
shit can't protect you. Even I can't protect you. And I love you more
than anything or anyone in this world. So my inadequacy is profound
indeed

I wish that love could protect you; not just mine but that of others.
But I'm not sure how much of that is left. It is on markdown; on the
sale rack; on clearance; but no buyers today.

Love is too expensive for some, even when on sale. Too costly in time,
if not in money. 'Cause although money can't buy you love, enough money
can buy lots of cruise missiles, and napalm, and mass death.

It really isn't complicated, baby girl. Most important things aren't.
You'll learn this. Or more to the point, you'll learn it and then forget
it, as age makes you add layers of complication to what once seemed
obvious. And that complexity will be called brilliance by your culture:
nuance, depth. But really it's just mostly vapid bullshit. Sterility
posing as wisdom.

In the end it comes down to just a few simple truths. And while I wish I
had thought of them myself, the simple truth about these simple truths
is that they've been said before, and better than I could, by James
Baldwin, who did not write them for this purpose, though they strangely
seem to fit.

First, that those who treat other people as less than human must not be
surprised when the bread they have cast upon the waters comes floating
back to them, poisoned. 

And secondly, that even in darkness, we must remember that there is a
light somewhere. One discovers the light in darkness. That is what
darkness is for. And what the light illuminates is danger, and what it
demands is faith...I know that sometimes we fail, and that one often
feels that one cannot start over again. And yet we must. The light, the
light...one will perish without the light.

For nothing is fixed, forever and forever, it is not fixed. The earth is
always shifting. The light is always changing. The sea does not cease to
grind down rock. Generations do not cease to be born. And we are
responsible to them, because we are the only witnesses they have. The
sea rises, the light fails. Lovers cling to each other, and children
cling to us. And the moment we break faith with one another, the sea
engulfs us, and the light goes out.

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