Thursday, April 9, 2009

A Proud Moment

A few years ago a subordinate of mine got in trouble for using a company computer to look at pictures of naked women on the Internet. His actions necessitated a meeting with my boss in order to formulate the appropriate punishment for the guy. When I was informed of the nature of the transgression he'd committed, I said to my superior, "I have to be honest with you (name deleted because he's an a-hole), I didn't know you could do anything on the internet except look at porn."

It turns out that there is. You can make friends. It is this that I like best about our new Age of Technology. I now have friends I didn't have before. They are people I have never met in person or even spoken with directly. But, I know they are friends. And good friends at that.

A case in point is the great Chicago attorney Dave von Ebers. Dave is one of the most insightful and well-spoken commentator on the tubes and I recommend his blog, "The Journal of the Plague Year" to Everybody. The link is posted on the right side of this page under the Everybody Wants to Read These Blogs" heading.

Dave made me so proud and touched me deeply a couple of days ago by devoting a post to me and MSU Spartan fans everywhere. You can read it HERE.

In his post, Dave cites an article written by Dave (rhymes with "siren") Ziren, one of my favorite sportswriters. If you think that all sports is about is who won and who got traded, etc., you won't like Ziren at all. If you think there is a context and a connection beteween sports and society at large, you need to read Ziren. And you can, right HERE.

I got in a little hot water after the game Monday night when I read a Faceook post about how by hosting the Final Four Detroit and won the PR Battle and about how we should all "stand up and be proud." That last part, the "stand up" part, is the theme of a campaign being aired by a local TV station. We're all supposed to stand up and be proud of Detroit. It drives me nuts. Jingles aren't going to get us here in Detroit out of the mess we are in. The reality is that we are in big trouble here.

I posted a comment to that effect which the original poster, a member of the organization I lead responded to by calling my comments "reprehensible and embarassing" which I didn't mind, but he then de-friended me on Facebook which I thought was really harsh, dude.

My relationship with sports is complicated and I'll write about that sometime. In the instant case (I throw legalese out there from time to time to impress my lawyers friends like Dave and Jay) the poster said it was wrong of me to speak out the way I did since I'm the president of the Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association.

I wasn't knocking the Final Four or the hard work put in by the organizers or the excellent job they did. And I was not speaking in my official capacity. But, whatever, I am the president of the group so I can understand if people think I don't have the right to speak as a private individual. President Obama doesn't get to speak as a private citizen after all.

My point was, and I think it may have been missed, is simply that we have bigger fish to fry in this town.

I was convinced that I said what I needed to say yesterday when I drove all the way across town from the West side to the East for a dental appointment. The squalor I saw on that trip appalling. From the freeway I saw scores of abandoned buildings. Some burned out. Some boarded up. A lot of the scenery looked like the aftermath of war.

It made me think. If we could re-build Germany and Japan after the devastation wrought by World War II, why can't we rebuild Detroit? We are dying here. We need help. We need to do something. Something more than humming jingles about how proud we are. I look at how we make people live around here and pride is not exactly the emotion which it evokes. I'm sorry, but that's just the way I feel.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Richard,

First of all, thanks for the props. I really do appreciate the support. Your comments on the value of the connections you make through the internet reminds me of why I used to teach for a huge, on-line maga-university (which shall remain nameless). The pay was abhorrent and the work load could be crushing – particularly on top of a full-time job – but the ability to connect with people from every corner of the country was amazing. In one class, I had a student who was a middle aged fart like me, who lived in New Jersey and worked in Manhattan. In the same class, I had a woman who lived in rural Idaho and was married to a farrier. Yup, I had to look that up. My spell checker doesn’t even recognize it; but it’s a person who shoes horses. For a living. I think that’s pretty damn cool.

In any event, I totally understand what you’re saying about the need to rebuild cities like Detroit. I think Chicago and Pittsburgh and Philadelphia and probably even New York City were on the same track back in the ’70’s and ’80’s. I don’t really know what the solution is, but it seems to me that some sort of Marshall Plan for both the inner cities and the poor rural south – Appalachia and the like – is in order. I think this is why folks like Paul Krugman say the stimulus package is too small. Maybe the Pres. will through some stimulus money toward Detroit to build “green” industries. Seems appropriate enough.

Meantime, I think its true as a general proposition that if you really care about the city sometimes you have to speak the plain hard truth. For me, Chicago is an intimate part of my life. I could probably live anywhere, but Chicago is in my blood. So I understand what it means to love a place, or a collection of people and buildings and such.

Anyways, thanks, as always, for the kind words.

Dave

Anonymous said...

Damn ... sorry for the typos in that last comment!

gmanitou said...

Mr. K.,

My relationship to being a sport's fan is complicated too. I am a Habs fan. Funny you took me to my first hockey game (Leafs/Blues)and I have to thank you for that.

While I love hockey and while it appears to have become my oldest son's reason for being I understand that it is a game, a diversion, not the thing that is life itself. Games should be what we get to play or watch or talk about or enjoy in whatever manner when we are living lives that don't suck.

It was great that the Final Four was in Detroit, but as has been used by others to much effect the phrase it was a diamond studded necklace on the neck of a dowager dying from cancer seems appropriate.

We need to face up to the fact that we have to work to save our way of life. By we I mean each and every m*ther f*cking member of our population that is scientient and ambulatory has to fight to save our jobs, our values and our way of life. Our leaders and we ourselves have let us as a nation wander where we should not have gone.

The unions gave us the middle class, but their leadership got fat and greedy and the members were willing to be lead as if they were sheep. The CEOs, their bankers and their bought and sold politicians lost sight of the common good and let greed blind them to the need rational behavior. We the general citizenry have become apathetic. If all of us don't change and begin to act responsibly and rationally Detroit and the ideal of America we pledged allegiance to as kids will wither and die.

The people who post to your blog and von Ebers aren't apathetic, but they are a small, small minority. Hey you need to speak the truth, it is an antidote to apathy. You know that speaking the truth has a cost. The people we value, the people whose words give us our vision of participatory democracy and of a nation built on concepts of justice and democracy often died before the vision was accomplished. I laud you for speaking your vision of the truth but there is a cost to such integrity. Keep talking dude.

I leave you with the lyrics to a song more relevant today than it was when it was released. It is the last part of Monster by Steppenwolf

****


The spirit was freedom and justice
And it's keepers seem generous and kind
It's leaders were supposed to serve the country
But now they won't pay it no mind
'Cause the people grew fat and got lazy
And now their vote is a meaningless joke
They babble about law and order
But it's all just an echo of what they've been told
Yeah, there's a monster on the loose
It's got our heads into a noose
And it just sits there watchin'

Our cities have turned into jungles
And corruption is stranglin' the land
The police force is watching the people
And the people just can't understand
We don't know how to mind our own business
'Cause the whole worlds got to be just like us
Now we are fighting a war over there
No matter who's the winner
We can't pay the cost
'Cause there's a monster on the loose
It's got our heads into a noose
And it just sits there watching

(America)
America where are you now?
Don't you care about your sons and daughters?
Don't you know we need you now
We can't fight alone against the monster


Words and music by John Kay, Jerry Edmonton, Nick St. Nicholas and Larry Byrom
© Copyright MCA Music (BMI)
All rights for the USA controlled and administered by
MCA Corporation of America, INC

democommie said...

Richard:

You and the Dixie Chicks, dude! Your "ex" friend is an ass.

Everything that Dave von Ebers and GManitou said.

The following lyrics are from "Become America" by the band, The Call.

Chorus
When will America, become America
When will America, become America
When will the home we love
Mean freedom for everyone
When will America, become America

When will the killing stop
When the last child has dropped
How long must mothers’ tears
Rain down on streets of fear
When will the home we love
Mean justice for everyone
When will America become America

(Chorus)

When will the struggling poor
Walk with their heads held high once more
Children playing on haunted streets
Politicians weave their spell
Promise spoken from the mouth of hell
When will America become America

(Chorus)

With their very lives they gave
Soldiers, the young and brave
Shame for the world to see
A mystery to you and me
Angels will keep their watch
Heaven will count the cost
When will America become America

(Chorus)

Anonymous said...

Demo, love the Call but I’m not familiar with that song. Gotta see if I can find a YouTube of it.

By the way, I knew you had a little ’80’s in you.

Oh, and thanks a lot. Now I’m going to have “Let the Day Begin” going through my head all day.

gmanitou said...

And Dave let us never forget that immortal Call lyric "I looked at her with my one good eye..." That CD was just awesome and I had forgotten about it. Now I will have Let the Day Begin in my mind for a couple of hours.

gmanitou said...

And Mr. K. I apologize for going off topic.

Richard said...

Geez, boys, I'm inspired by your comments. Not gonna do anything about it, but still...

So I thank you.

Sad news came last night. The very first big-time radio morning man I worked with when I had my very first major-market on-air job here in Detroit, Deano Day, has died. He was a good guy and funny as hell. He ruled country radio in Detroit for a decade.

Have a good Easter, Passover, None of the Above: Whomever you conceive your God to be, Harry Thunderer or Cosmic Muffin.