People are strange, but days are often stranger
By Paul O’Sullivan
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 14, 2008, 00:12
These are
strange days we live in; seemingly no money in the world and clowns getting the
sack on either side of the pond. The days of cocktails and early Friday
knocking-offs have turned dusky and it’s all getting a little uncertain.
Dr. Hunter
S. Thompson said that when the going gets weird the weird turn pro. 2009 is
shaping up to be a year for the weird. Or maybe not weird, perhaps all that is
happening is change. But after so much time under the cosh, so to speak, change
does feel a little weird.
For eight
long years we, the television watching/media spoon-fed populace, have been
subject to images of desert-fatigue clothed men scurrying across sands or
through darkened dry stone buildings, the groundbreaking methods of reporting
from where the action is actually happening, and a small guy with all his hair
talking to the world on his terms and his terms only.
Eight years
as torturous as some isolated Guantanamo
interrogation room where nobody but nobody can hear you scream, as they pull
out the pliers or crank up the amplifier so you can hear the drip-dripping a
whole lot clearer.
Remember,
forlorn promises from the likes of Ari Fleischer and Donald Rumsfeld in the
seemingly entirely blue White House pressroom as choking black smoke columns
grew in number.
Or the
President of the United States sticking out his tongue and giving a V-sign
(maybe he was trying to copy Winston Churchill but got confused) to the world
before delivering a grave message about the state of the world and everybody’s
need to protect themselves from the ubiquitous threat.
Well if you
don’t, I do. Slouched down on a couch in some college front room pit-hole watching
Sky News reporters running around with blue microphones, telling us what it was
like to really be there and everybody
telling each other how cool it was to see somebody who was really there.
Afternoon
after afternoon, evening after evening, watching as the world was being torn
apart while jerks in suits assured us it was for our own good, not for the
reasons we all knew without even really knowing -- the real reasons. ‘Real’ -- now there’s a word that might regain some
of its meaning in 2009.
Now, now
that votes are counted and an entire phase of rhetoric and political
correctness is useless we can finally say it; say it loud and proud oh
brothers, America’s first black president is here.
Today, the
year of our Lord 2008, a crack of hope in the monolith of white-rule has
appeared and with it light shines on all continents of the world. Not only is
he black, he has as much experience as a community organizer as he has in the
hopelessly disconnected world of high-powered politics.
An
undisguised blessing or perhaps only a lesser of two evils, who knows. What I
would like to know is what Dr. Thompson would have thought.
Paul O’ Sullivan,
journalist and writer, resides in Ireland.
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