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I first read this (now somewhat dated) novel in 1980. I found it interesting due to the unusual (for a late 20th century novel) amount of philosophizing by some of the characters, and because it was about people of places that, for one reason or another, touch me directly (Japan, Russia, France, the USA, Great Britain, Spain, and Euzkadi, the Basque country).
In one passage, a terminally ill instructor in a Japanese board game gives a final lecture to the main protagonist (age 20 at this point) as Japan is about to be defeated in World War II. I reread that passage this morning, and thought of Obama and his teabagging opponents. Frankly, my first reaction was, "someone should read this to Obama." My second reaction was, "no, maybe not, so as not to give him the idea that he should consider himself so very distanced from the very people he was elected to govern."
The novel is called "Shibumi," and was a bestseller when it came out. It received a lot of critical acclaim, but was also criticized as elitist and "taking the ethnic slur to a high art."
This is from the dying 60 year old Japanese Gō master to his 20 year old Western student:
"No, it is not your lack of experience that is your greatest flaw. It is your disdain. Your defeats will not come from those more brilliant than you. They will come from the patient, the plodding, the mediocre."
"Your scorn for mediocrity blinds you to its vast power. You stand in the glare of your own brilliance, unable to see into the dim corners of the room, to dilate your eyes and see the potential dangers of the mass, the wad of humanity. Even as I tell you this, dear student, you cannot quite believe that lesser men, in whatever numbers, can really defeat you. But we are in the age of the mediocre man. He is dull, colorless, boring--but inevitably victorious. The amoeba outlives the tiger because it divides and continues in its immortal monotony."
When reading that, I thought of the contrast between Obama and Senators like Mitch McConnell and Ben Nelson, dull, plodding, and tossing obstacles in Obama's path every step of the way, derailing what should have been a Shinkansen of progress now in its thirteenth month.
Should Obama (and his inner circle, hopefully soon Rahm-less) take more heed of the dangers presented by the McConnells of the world? On one hand, it would be demeaning and time-consuming to descend to their level. On the other hand, ignoring them will not make them or their obstruction go away.
Just some musings on my first Sunday morning off from work in many moons...........
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