Molly Ivins -- 'a truth-seeking missile'
Columnist Molly Ivins was a feisty truth-teller unafraid to battle
those who prevented a better world.

By Kinky Friedman, KINKY FRIEDMAN is an author, musician and former
candidate for governor of Texas.

February 4, 2007 / LA Times

Atrue maverick died in Texas last week, and they don't make 'em extra.

There'll always be plenty of George Bushes and John Kerrys to go
around; the Crips and the Bloods will trot them out every four years
whether we like it or not. But a voice in the wilderness, like the
still, small voice within, is a song to be savored while we have it,
whether we're listening or not, and when we have lost it, we should
mourn for ourselves. Such a voice was that of Molly Ivins.

I met her on the gangplank of Noah's ark. I did not agree with her on
a lot of things. Like Sinatra, I've gotten more conservative as I've
gotten older. But not Molly. With the awkward grace of a child of our
times, she clung to her ideals and notions and hopes, riding against
the wind in a state as red as the blood of a dying cowboy. The word
I'm looking for is "righteous." Righteous without being
self-righteous.

Molly was a truth-seeking missile. She was a devil and an angel and a
spiritual chop-buster who went after anybody who got in the way of a
better world. Quite often she towered above the people she wrote
about. They, as likely as not, were merely the slick, lubricated heads
of well-oiled political machines; she was a dreamer, a little girl
lost at the county fair, who somehow grew up to be a brave and bawdy
and brilliant ball-buster in a state where men have always been men
and emus have always been nervous.

In an age in which the five major religions are Bank of America,
Wal-Mart, McDonald's, Kentucky Fried Chicken and Starbucks, Molly
Ivins was an atheist. The New York Times, which got Herman Melville's
name wrong in his obituary, called Molly a "liberal newspaper
columnist." The Los Angeles Times said she was a "political humorist
and best-selling author." They were right, of course, but those are
the words we use when we don't know what to say.

In her dark, American heart, Molly was mostly a troublemaker in the
feisty spirit of Jesus Christ, John Brown, Joe Hill and, not to be a
male chauvinist or needlessly alliterative, Joan of Arc and Josephine
Baker. Two, and possibly three, among this esteemed and reviled
assemblage spent time in France. Molly studied in Paris. I do not like
France. I do not know what Molly thought of that country. I know she
loved this one.

It is, however, the sacred duty of the troublemaker to stir the putrid
pot of humanity every now and again, to make people see that there is
something more important than political correctness and that is moral
correctness, and to challenge the prayers and the promises of the
heartbroken land she loved. And she did it mostly with wit and humor,
the kind of humor that sailed dangerously close to the truth without
sinking the ship. There are two kinds of sailors, they say: the sailor
who fights the sea and the sailor who loves the sea. Molly loved the
sea.

I loved Molly because she would say things nobody else had the cojones
to say, always in a funny and charming Texas way, of course. Imagine a
big, brazen cowgirl walking up and saying, "That boy's jeans are on so
tight, if he farted he'd blow his boots off."

My dad, Tom, was a World War II hero, and Molly had long been one of
his heroes, though he had never met her. After he had a heart attack,
Molly showed up on our doorstep one afternoon just to visit with him.
Molly lifted his spirits and her gesture touched him deeply, as it did
his son.

Finally, Molly gave me the greatest slogan I had in my recent campaign
for governor of Texas. The slogan was, "Why the hell not?" Why the
hell not, indeed. In this homogenized, trivialized, sanitized world,
she stands as a lighthouse not just to the left but to us all. Peace
be with you, Molly.


--
Jim Devine / "The truth is more important than the facts." -- Frank Lloyd Wright

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