Yesterday morning, I was waiting for my
wife to get ready so she could drop me off at the newspaper office,
one town over. Tuesday is Truck Day. That means I drive the company
panel truck to Sterling, where they're printed, load most of the
bundles in the box and deliver them to the post offices and news
stands. It's not a bad gig 80% of the time. One day a week, I get $10
an hour to drive around and haul newspapers. And for some reason, as
annoying as being up early is, one of the moments I enjoy in the day
is walking into the warehouse and getting that first whiff of
newsprint.
I have no idea why.
But while I was waiting, I decided to
turn on the TV. Most of the time, I watch ESPN. Just because. A lot
of times I regret having cable... mostly when the bill comes due …
but I do like ESPN. There's something about it that just makes me
feel … I don't know... connected to the universe in some ball
scratching, Al Bundy sort of way. This particular morning, though,
they were talking about the World Series, and I could seriously give
a shit less since I wasn't invested in either team. I'm against Texas
on principle, but I have no geographic love or hate for St. Louis,
though I do vaguely remember their bus station. (Please see The
Greyhound Quarto for further
explanation.) Flipping around trying to find something else, I ran
across MSNBC and Morning Joe with Joe Scarborough.
Keep
in mind that not only do I not watch Morning Joe, I tend not to watch
or listen to news first thing in the morning. And no, it's not
because I don't care about what goes on in the world – I do. I find
my news from a variety of sources and a variety of perspectives. But
I have learned – maybe because I'm in the news business – that
watching, listening, or reading news first thing in the morning does
nothing but sour my day and my mood. Early morning news is a
combination of current event memes for the memory impaired that is
often mistaken for hard news (Kim Kardashian's divorce, for
example... not only is it fluff, but it shouldn't count as news.
After all, does Good Morning America report every time the sun
rises?) When I tuned in, though, I found former NBC Nightly News
Anchor Tom Brokaw on talking about his new book, and spouting, as
Brokaw often does, his thoughts on how things are going in America.
One of
the things I like about Brokaw is that he's one of the few left from
his business who understands the importance of context. For some
reason, the American people have gotten in their heads that the news
ought to be objective, without context. And naturally, which ever
news outlet most reflects their views (this is true all philosophical
and ideological bents) is the one given the prestigious label of
“objective.” One of the things about Brokaw is that he spent so
much time in the corporate media machine that the context for all of
his criticism is a Post World War II 20th
Century America. Rather than looking at the whole, trying to wrap his
brain around history as more than Manifest Destiny, he ignores the
fact that most of what we're dealing with in the Post American
Century is the bullshit byproduct that's been left behind to fester
since the original 13 signed off on the U.S. Constitution.
The gist of the conversation as I tuned
in – as described by the caption at the bottom of the screen –
was that Americans need to “re-enlist as citizens.” He went on to
explain that real leaders – the people he writes about in his new
tome, I guess – are people who led through action, who came up from
among the people. He bemoaned the absence of “larger than life”
leaders who could capture the minds and imaginations of his fellow
Americans.
And I had a few thoughts, which I'll
list here:
- “Re-enlist”... a militaristic term. Maybe we ought to consider the possibility that being in some army or another is the problem.
- People DO need to be directly engaged in and with their community and their country... as individuals coming together for the common good. (This, kids, is the root of all civilization.)
- Brokaw's critique regarding the absence or need of “larger than life” leaders is incorrect. The issue is that corporate media empires like NBC and MSNBC (wholly owned subsidiaries of General Electric) ignore them in favor of spouting non-controversial public relations reports they claim are true news reports.
- Underlying every argument Brokaw has made since he wrote about World War II is “These kids today... what pussies!” Maybe if he were talking to them instead of a table of talking bobble heads, he might get more of the reaction he's looking for. Or if he was paying any attention at all to current events.
That was before the coffee kicked in...
which it did somewhere on Benson Road between Lanark and IL-40 headed
towards Milledgeville.