I confess that I’m at a bit of a loss for Gratitude Monday today.
The world spent the weekend watching American cities roil with rage against
systemic racism, seeing cops arresting and shooting (rubber bullets) at credentialed
journalists and firing tear grenades at peaceful protesters, witnessing white right-wing extremist agents provocateurs breaking commercial windows and urging protesters to loot,
and listening to Cadet Bonespurs bluster at NASA about what he will or will not
tolerate.
More than Motor City’s burning, folks; shit’s real for sure.
It’s like I’m reliving 1968, only via the internet instead of
B&W TV. We’re 52 years on from Martin and Bobby, and 28 from Rodney King
and we haven’t moved discernibly forward. We've got police riots all over the country.
Well, there was a moment, in Minneapolis, where Mennonites showed
up in solidarity with the protestors, and I was reminded of the Catholic
priests at the forefront of civil rights marches, and of the Quakers who held
silent vigil outside the main Post Office in Pasadena every Wednesday for years
to protest the Vietnam War.
I was also reminded of a quote by the late-Nineteenth Century
Irish professor G.F. Fitzgerald—it was about Britain’s Irish “problem”, but swap
out White America for England, and Black America for the Irish, and it seems
pretty damned appropriate for these days.
“England, as we all know, never understands Ireland; the English
are a dull people compared to the Irish, and require a tremendous row before
than can be moved to do anything. Then, after we have blown up Clerkenwell
Prison, or something of that sort, England rubs her hands and says, ‘the Irish
want something,’ and flings us a new pair of shoes. The shoes, as a rule, don’t
happen to fit us, and when we still grumble she gets angry and sais, ‘They are
a good pair of shoes, and it is your own fault if they don’t fit; you are a
most ungrateful, provoking creature, never satisfied,’ and turns back to her
own business till we make another row.”
Well, chew on that, if you like. Today I’m grateful for the
Mennonites showing up in peace and support. We need tens off thousands more of White America to show up and march with our brothers and sisters of color, or this is never going to change.
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