He turned from preaching to the choir
to walking among the pews —-
coffee with two acquaintances
at the sidewalk café on a gorgeous,
late summer’s afternoon between
three, old, white guys — clever, sarcastic,
repartee, tete-a-tete about nothing much
at all that matters other than and perhaps
including yesterday’s sail on the thirty-six
footer that the owners only use as a day-
sailor anymore. Then, economic theories
and ideological javelins were hoisted, lines
drawn in the middle of the table, tempers
rising, two right-wing, free-market dudes,
one “What are you anyway?” “Socialistic
capitalist.” “What’s that?” “Responsible
economics with regulations to keep
good old-fashioned greed in check.”
They stared blankly. One reference to
Bloomfield Hills touched a nerve and
torched the rhetoric: “Don’t make this
personal!” Hmmm. “Not personal, just
demographic, brother, and a reference to
your contemporary, the Republican candidate.
Wasn’t he from there? So you pulled
yourselves up by your bootstraps, boys?
I thought those were Docksiders, prefer-
ably worn sockless now showing the
spider veins around your ankles. Perhaps
you boys pulled yourselves up by your own
Ralph Lauren soft cotton crews.”
They hoisted spoon javelins waving
Them in the pleasant breeze, because they
were not hoisted up on the shoulders
of those who went before. They did it
alone. They stood their ground over
coffee as they do now as old, shriveled,
white guys standing against the inevitable
coming of the rainbow coalition — blacks,
browns, yellows, reds — the people of
color who make the white guys blanch.
“Sixty-four million sidlin’ up to the
public trough, dead-beats, not lookin’
for work. Tell ‘em to get a job. Nobody
made them take those pay-day loans. No-
body held a gun to their heads to take
those home loans. When are they going
to learn to take personal responsibility
like we have? We’ve earned what we have.”
He walked up the aisle, turned to the
choir and started singing, “Jesus loves
the little children, all the children of the
world. Red and Yellow, Black and White,
they are precious in his sight. Jesus
loves the little children of the world.”
He felt a tap on his shoulder. Turning
he heard Jesus say, “You forgot Brown.”
The old, shriveled, white preacher said,
“Sorry. I’m trying.”
Bob, this is one of the best yet … painful to read … how blind are the blind.