>You might care to give a little time to rethinking your paradigm.
>
>One does not have to be a "left winger" to despise those who either
>ignorantly or wantonly wreak as much havoc as has done Junior.
>
>Just ask a random sampling of 100 Republicans the next time you walk down
>the street.
>
>Todd Swearingen

... http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=16930

The Quality of Mercy

By William Greider, AlterNet
October 9, 2003

When Rush Limbaugh's drug problem first surfaced in various Web site 
chatter, I was intrigued. When it made the evening news, I admit I 
felt a moment of joy. Limbaugh is the icon of brutish, cheap-shot 
conservatism and his entertaining style has spawned a vast legion of 
broadcast talkers even nastier than he. How could one not find some 
pleasure in his fall from grace? As we learned from the unmasking of 
other righteously destructive rightwingers, hypocrisy is their middle 
name.

My feeling passed and the story disappeared from the news (at least 
for now). But I was led to reconsider my reactions to Limbaugh's 
troubles by a surprisingly compassionate editorial in the Wall Street 
Journal. The WSJ is a leading purveyor of brittle condescension and 
scorn, the first apostle of hard-ass conservatism. But the Journal 
asked its readers to feel human sympathy.

What an odd suggestion from that source. American culture has been 
severely coarsened during the last generation, not so much by the 
rightwing talkers, but by the brutish practices of modern capitalism 
and by institutions like the Journal who lead cheers for the ideology 
of take no prisoners, throw the losers over the side. Winners and 
losers are the natural order in life, winners should merely push them 
aside and get on with it.

The anger and shame that now permeate this society were planted in 
large part by the callousness of Wall Street finance and major 
corporations. They routinely pursue self-interest by trampling others 
and call it "efficiency." The victims are often their own employees 
or shareholders (not to mention welfare mothers and people too weak 
and poor even to afford shelter). The right embraces this new 
definition of manliness (even the so-called Christian right). 
Liberals who hold back are ridiculed as bleeding-heart sissies.

Business is business. The dominant culture tells young people their 
only choice in life is between hard or soft. Despite what they are 
taught, a lot of young people reject that choice, but many also 
succumb. Who wants to be a loser?

Repairing our damaged culture is a difficult and longterm task, but 
maybe social change can start in odd places like the Wall Street 
Journal's editorial page. Their Limbaugh editorial cited the New 
Testament parable of the adulterous woman - he who is without sin may 
cast the first stone - "to remind us that we are all human, failed 
creatures." President Bush, it added, responded compassionately to 
Rush's troubles, perhaps because he himself fought a drinking problem 
not too long ago. Yes, indeed, we are all human, failed creatures.

We are not all compassionate beings, however. The Wall Street Journal 
and right-wingers in general are very selective in where they choose 
to bestow human sympathy. Usually, it is reserved for other 
rightwingers or for business guys who find themselves in trouble with 
the law. When the WSJ recently reviewed my new book, it peppered it 
and me with the usual disparaging wisecracks. That's expected. I 
don't go to their church and, indeed, I regularly attack their 
religion.

But what really angered me were the scornful wisecracks the review 
directed at the organization called Solidarity described in my book. 
It is a temp agency in Baltimore owned and run by the temp workers 
themselves in cooperative fashion. They earn a dollar or two more per 
hour than other temp workers, they have health-care coverage, they 
share the profits. And nearly all of them are recovering narcotics 
addicts and/or former prison inmates. I explained how their mutual 
struggles with addiction give them a shared sense of self-discipline 
(no one can con a fellow member of Narcotics Anonymous who's been 
through the same fire). The reviewer quipped: "Apparently, being 
stoned together breeds camarderie." Yuk, yuk.

The Solidarity workers are of course black. The WSJ would not make 
drug jokes about white guys in suits - corporate executives 
struggling to overcome alcoholism or the bond traders afflicted by 
cocaine habits (indeed, it seldom writes about these addicts). The 
Journal needs to work on its own human sympathy. "The quality of 
mercy is not strain'd," Shakespeare taught us. "It droppeth as the 
gentle rain from heaven..."

Maybe, when the full story becomes known, Rush Limbaugh will find the 
courage to express a more encompassing sympathy for other human 
beings. No one should expect Rush to change his politics or eschew 
cheap-shot jokes (he would be boring without them). But, the next 
time someone has stumbled and fallen, either wrestling with personal 
demons or crushed by error and ill fortune, the first question 
Limbaugh (and the rest of us) might ask is: Doesn't anybody feel 
sorry for the poor bastard?

William Greider is the author of "The Soul of Capitalism."

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,98871,00.html
Limbaugh Faces Drug Allegations
Friday, October 03, 2003

>----- Original Message -----
>From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: <biofuel@yahoogroups.com>
>Sent: Friday, October 10, 2003 11:23 PM
>Subject: Re: [biofuel] A good use for dino-fuels!
>
>
> > > Sorry, but that's a very miserable way to go. Wouldn't wish that type of
> > > demise on my worst enemy.
> > >
> > > However, shackling him to an old moldy dungeon wall and giving him
> > > nothing but a bread and water ration until he repented and promised to
> > > cloister himself in a Alpine monastery for the rest of his days would
> > > suit me fine.
> > >
> > > Todd Swearingen
> > >
> > > ----- Original Message -----
> > > From: "Ware, John" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > > To: "Biofuel (E-mail)" <biofuel@yahoogroups.com>
> > > Sent: Friday, October 10, 2003 2:26 PM
> > > Subject: FW: [biofuel] A good use for dino-fuels!
> > >
> > >
> > >> I've got 10 gallons I'd be glad to send.
> > >> john ware
> > >>I thought you left wingers were supposed to be the compassionate,
> > tolerant ones.  I wouldn't ahve said such a thing about the previous
> > occupant of the White House, despite my emphatic disagreement with him
> > on the issues.  Thankfully our leaders don't come and go taht way, what
> > I wish on my political enemies is ouster from their miserable offices.
> > J.D.
> > >> -----Original Message-----
> > >> From: Frederick E. Finch [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >> Sent: Friday, October 10, 2003 12:11 PM
> > >> To: biofuel@yahoogroups.com
> > >> Subject: [biofuel] A good use for dino-fuels!
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> SIPHON ANYONE?
> > >>
> > >> A lobbyist, on his way home from work in Washington, D.C., comes to a
> > >> dead halt in traffic and thinks to himself, "Wow, this seems worse
> > >> than usual." He notices a police officer walking between the lines of
> > >> stopped cars, so he rolls down his window and asks, "Officer, what's
> > >> the hold-up?"
> > >>
> > >> The officer replies, "The President is depressed, so he stopped his
> > >> motorcade and is threatening to douse himself in gasoline and set
> > >> himself on fire. He says no one believes his stories about why we went
> > >> to war in Iraq, or the connection between Saddam and al-Qa'ida, or
> > >> that his tax cuts will help anyone except his wealthy friends; the
> > >> press called him on the lie about Iraq trying to buy uranium from
> > >> Niger, and now Campbell Brown is threatening to sue him for a sexual
> > >> innuendo he made at a recent press conference. So we're taking up a
> > >> collection for him."
> > >>
> > >> The lobbyist asks, "How much have you got so far?"
> > >>
> > >> The officer replies, "About 14 gallons, but a lot of folks are still
> > >> siphoning."
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> ============================================================
> > >> Frederick E. Finch                Delivery System Manager
> > >> MINITEX Delivery Services           [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >> [EMAIL PROTECTED]      (612) 624-3374   Direct
> > >> 15 Andersen Library        (612) 624-4002   Office
> > >> 222 21st Avenue South             (800) 462-5348   WATS
> > >> Minneapolis   MN   55455            (612) 624-4508   FAX


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