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September 22, 2004

Standing By Dan Rather

I mean in the literal sense, as in Dan and I on the Charles Bridge in Prague at midnight. Sounds like a John LeCarre plot twist, but here we are ten years later and no one’s standing by Dan, as he twists in the wind rather than the plot. Be sure what you say is true, Dan. No matter the distortions and outright lies that buzz about our faces on a daily basis like flies in a cow pasture, when you’re the main man and you make that red-light-to-viewer eye contact, it better not be a seventies document written on Microsoft Word.

We’re unforgiving about those things, Dan. We’ll forgive our president a forged document here or there to get us in a war, but he’s just our president. You’re supposed to be made of sterner stuff, Dan and although it’s a heavy load to carry, we hold our network news anchors to a higher standard. The gentlemanly thing would be to resign. Even Nixon knew that. Besides, it’s been a long and successful road and everybody (except Mike Wallace) has to eventually hang up their tack.

The President just this week stood before the United Nations and declared that Iraq was on the road to freedom and democracy, while the evidence on a daily basis is unrelentingly grim. Two Americans knelt this same week, beheaded in Iraq. He is allowed this. No one called out from his audience and declared him a liar. No one will demand that even his speechwriters be held to account for this enormous chasm between fact and fiction. We’re on our way to re-electing Bush and trashing Dan over misrepresentations as disparate as telling a fib and killing your neighbor. And for those of you who feel “killing your neighbor” is too wild and unfair a comparison, I would remind you that, if our president is wrong-headed and if we suffer further attacks spawned by that wrong-headedness, then killing your neighbor will turn out to be far too pale a metaphor.

No one’s going to die for Dan Rather’s wrong-headedness.

Back to the Charles Bridge. It was 1994 and Bill Clinton was in town, Prague was a hot destination anyway and Dan Rather was doing his 6pm New York news live and ‘live’ over here meant six hours later, midnight. The shot was set up to background Rather by a portion of the bridge and the Prague Castle looming behind. The way they accomplished this intrigued me. The centuries-old statues along the bridge had been carefully lighted and the camera and Rather-lighting equipment was sheltered in a tent. Thus, Dan faced this tented equipment and gave his script-perfect report as though he was casually standing alone on this lovely European bridge. After his report, he joshed with technicians as they dismantled the site and then faded into the night. He seemed to be well liked by the worker-bees and I was impressed by that. My “Dan Rather moment” passed without a word between us.

Yet it was play-acting on a lighted set, as is our nightly news on a nightly basis, as are our lives on increasing levels, as are our politicians to an unparalleled degree and one can but wonder where it all ends, if not in chaos. A primary definition of chaos is “a state of things in which chance is supreme.”

You can make a pretty good case that we’re there.


September 12, 2004

Back Again to the Page

I’ve been away from this page for six weeks---it takes that long these days for me to move and Misha and I have moved from the low mountains west of Liberec, in the Czech Republic, to the higher ones to the east. Not that they’re all that high---a little over two thousand feet, which makes them more Adirondack than Rockies. But mountains they are, bordering Poland and Germany in what was once the Sudetenland. They’re beautiful and peaceful. Peace always comes back, sometimes taking its own sweet time but always making the rounds.

Six weeks ago I looked forward to what I supposed would be an energetic and hard-fought runup to the election. There were certainly issues, more than I have seen in six decades of voting for presidents and there appeared to be interest, if the newspaper editorials and street demonstrators in New York are any measure. But the country has gone back to sleep since the conventions and it’s discouraging to find bickering back and forth between Republicans and Democrats over Swift Boats and the President’s thirty year old service record. We’ve come to the point where gossip has replaced any serious discussion of issues.

To say that John Kerry has failed his duty may be unfair, but only just a little. If ever there was an administration that was vulnerable on the facts of their actions against their promises, it is this one. Yet Kerry has allowed himself to be tied down by trivia while the President looks his country directly in the eye and asks their confidence in another four years. And he’s going to get it. America likes to be looked in the eye and somehow Kerry hasn’t been able to do that and stay on message. The message is pretty simple, John---it’s the time that has all but run out.

Tomorrow I’ll stop at our little local post office and mail off my request for an absentee ballot, beginning once again my participation in the miracle that is America.


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