_________________________________
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/01/opinion/01brooks.html?oref=login&n=Top%2fOpinion%2fEditorials%20and%20Op%2dEd%2fOp%2dEd%2fColumnistsA Time to MournBy DAVID BROOKS
Published: January 1, 2005
<
cut to the end> Nature doesn't seem much like a nurse or friend this week, and when Thoreau goes on to celebrate the savage wildness of nature, he sounds, this week, like a boy who has seen a war movie and thinks he has experienced the glory of combat.
In short, this week images of something dark and unmerciful were thrust onto a culture that is by temperament upbeat and romantic.
In the newspaper essays and television commentaries reflecting upon it all, there would often be some awkward passage as the author tried to conclude with some easy uplift - a little bromide about how wonderfully we all rallied together, and how we are all connected by our common humanity in times of crisis.
The world's generosity has indeed been amazing, but sometimes we use our compassion as a self-enveloping fog to obscure our view of the abyss. Somehow it's wrong to turn this event into a good-news story so we can all feel warm this holiday season. It's wrong to turn it into a story about us, who gave, rather than about them, whose lives were ruined. It's certainly wrong to turn this into yet another petty political spat, as many tried, disgustingly, to do.
This is a moment to feel deeply bad, for the dead and for those of us who have no explanation.
_________________________________
To the NYT:
David Brooks insinuates that it is out of bounds to criticize the President during this time of mourning. Just the opposite is true. When the President is loathe to interrupt his vacation to offer sympathy and support to the victims, when he does not appear in public for three days following the disaster, when his spokesperson informs the press, two days after the disaster, that the president is biking, relaxing, strolling, and clearing brush on his ranch - the only message sent is one of callous indifference to human suffering. And that message deserves the harshest and most immediate criticism.
Stephanie
_________________________________