A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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graphy , that generation of American kids sealed themselves inside an impenetrab le play world where war was a dreamy reality at best and death was an abstractio n . There was no television to speak of during World War II and the immediate po st-war years . No slaughters in Los Angeles , Bosnia , Haiti , Sudan , Gaza or R wanda that anyone could see , no nightly pictures of rotted , fly-buzzed corpses baking in the sun . No wretched victims dying right there on the screen , nothi ng on a mass scale that could convey to the very young just how gory and grim wa r was . That wouldn't happen until Vietnam . `` Real war is never like paper war , '' Ernest Hemingway wrote , `` nor do accounts of it read much the way it loo ks . '' To many kids of that era , it looked this way : Bang-bang , you 're aliv e . I remember playing lots of baseball with my friends as a kid in Kansas City , Mo. . Just as vivid are my memories of having fun playing guns . For us , only one thing could compare to the crack of a bat hitting a ball , and that was the crack of gunfire , at least as we innocently imagined it . We provided our own sound effects , even our own danger ( dum-de-dum-de-dum-de-dum ) music . There w as something very romantic about the fantasy of both shooting someone and preten ding to get gunned down yourself , grunting and clutching your chest in mock ago ny while keeling over , then getting back up and starting the game again . To us , war was a game , an exercise in heroism minus real casualties . Some things s tay in your head . One afternoon in the winter of 1949 , my neighbor Jody Aldric h and I returned from the Fiesta Theater excited and energized after watching a Saturday matinee of `` Battleground , '' a movie about Americans fighting and dy ing in the Battle of the Bulge . Hearts pounding , we tore into our houses and i n only a few minutes were back outside with our plastic guns ( I think mine was a Thompson 's submachine gun ) , brown infantry helmets and other soldier gear , re-fighting World War II in the snow . Being two years older than I , Jody pull ed rank and , as a result , I got killed probably a dozen times that afternoon , hitting the white ground so often that my clothes took on a glacial rigidity . What fun . It all came back to me while watching `` Turning Point . '' I contras ted my childhood war games with the recollections of Normandy survivors , their voices at times cracking with emotion after all these years . `` I curled up as small as I could . '' `` Twenty or 30 G.I.s who had gotten up ran smack into a s hell . '' `` They were just mowed down . '' `` Men were getting hit , you know , drowning . '' `` His eyeballs .. . were hanging down . '' Reuniting America wit h its dead sons , the 90-minute program ended with an overview of white crosses at Normandy 's military cemetery , where so many soldiers are buried beneath a b it of the ground they fought to free . During `` The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour '' on PBS Tuesday , artist and Normandy survivor Tracy Sugerman asserted that the m emory of what happened there will be `` dusty and meaningless '' to today 's chi ldren and future generations . A disturbing thought . Yet sadly , he 's right , and it 's something that cannot be changed by all the history lessons in the wor ld . Time is too great a barrier to overcome , rendering us all uncaring amnesia cs when it comes to the major crises experienced by our predecessors . Thus , a lot of people are probably tiring of this history lesson that is now preoccupyin g so much television , even though it memorializes a seminal event of a war that changed the 20th century . It must seem as abstract to them as it was to war-pl aying kids in 1949 , especially compared to the contemporary violence that inter sects their lives nightly via their favorite newscast . On CNN Thursday came thi s report from Rwanda : `` We saw nine bodies . When we got closer , we could see five were alive , barely alive . Then we witnessed a government soldier shootin g one . '' In the 1990s , business as usual . Unfortunately , it 's hard for man y to get worked up over Normandy when there 's so much in the present that compe tes for our attention and fear , as television relentlessly reminds us of today 's killing fields both abroad and in the United States , where even children no longer the innocents of yesteryear have access to firearms . And instead of toys , these guns are real . Bang-bang , you 're dead . It was almost a year ago that five male livery cab drivers in suburban New York accused a male police officer of rape , and for most of that year local reporte rs , usually gluttons for sex and sensation , didn't write a word . Now , when t hey do mention the charges , many employ adjectives like `` outlandish '' and `` bizarre , '' as though the very idea of male rape by a law officer is almost be yond belief . So it may come as a surprise that at least one highly regarded ant i-rape organization estimates that the rape of men is as common as the rape of w omen in our society , and that law enforcement officials frequently play at leas t a peripheral role . I 'm referring to male rape in prison , which claims about 290,000 victims a year , according to the group Stop Prisoner Rape . By compari son , the Bureau of Justice Statistics of the U.S. Department of Justice estimat es that 150,000 females are raped annually . True , some independent experts con sider SPR 's 290,000 estimate which does not include consensual sex in prison so mething of an overcount , and some anti-rape activists consider the BJS ' 150,00 0 figure something of an undercount , but that still leaves the figures for male and female rape in roughly the same ballpark . ( For the record , anti-rape act ivists distinguish male rape from homosexual rape : Whether in prison or out , m ale rapists are seldom gay . ) Why , then , do we hear so little about male rape ? For one thing , SPR president Stephen Donaldson says , victims of male rape a re rarely middle-class types with easy access to the media , and even if they we re , the stigma attached to male rape dissuades most victims from complaining . For another , there is a widespread sentiment in this lock-'em-up society that v iolent criminals who get raped are getting just what they deserve . The irony , says Donaldson , is that the victims are generally the least violent inmates . B ut perhaps the most problematic aspect of prisoner rape is the tacit acquiescenc e of many law officers . It 's one thing for some violent male criminals , locke d away for years , to attempt rape as a vehicle for social domination , sexual r elease or both . It 's quite another for law enforcement personnel to wink at th e problem . Or worse , contribute to it . Yet , says Donaldson , prison authorit ies generally deny that rape exists in their institutions , take few steps to pr event it , and sometimes even set it up . Donaldson himself , a Quaker pacifist arrested during an anti-war demonstration in 1973 , says a guard placed him amid violent criminals as punishment . He was raped more than 40 times his first nig ht in the cellblock . As to the rape of prisoners by guards themselves , Donalds on says , `` It is not as common as assaults by prisoners , but more common than most people realize . '' Yet we virtually never hear about it , which is hardly surprising . `` Where it 's a prisoner 's word against a guard 's , nobody 's g oing to take the prisoner seriously . '' His group advises those who have been s exually assaulted by guards to `` band together and show a whole pattern of abus e , on the assumption that a guard who gets away with raping one prisoner is lik ely to be doing it to others . '' That sounds logical . Demonstrating a pattern of rape by a law officer should be more convincing than a single accusation . Bu t it doesn't seem to have convinced law enforcement officials in the Rockaways , where five civilians have charged that that a cop raped them , four others clai m to have witnessed one of the rapes , and yet there is no indictment . I don't know what , if anything , happened in the New York incident , and neither does D onaldson , but he isn't surprised at the reaction to the charges . `` On the con trary , '' he says , `` what I find incredible is the notion that a bunch of wor king-class guys would invent a story in which they would popularly be considered to have lost their manhood . In that sense , it 's far more incredible to think that this didn't happen than to think that it did . '' Provided , of course , o ne acknowledges that male rape happens regularly in our society , and often unde r the watchful eye of the law . Utopian writer Edward Bellamy put it this way : `` If bread is the first necess ity of life , recreation is a close second . '' That was a century ago . Since t hen , through the cycle of the Industrial Revolution with all its gilded promise s of machines to save us time and work , Americans remain uneasy with play . We yearn for it , fret about it and throw our money in quest of it . But we don't r egard it seriously . `` It 's a very contradictory part of America , '' says Joh n R. Kelly , professor of sociology and leisure studies at the University of Ill inois . `` There is increased emphasis in people 's lives on what we call leisur e . Still , in the social ideology is the concept that if something is not produ ctive , it 's not important . '' Now the nation crosses the threshold of a new I nformation and Technology Revolution . And it appears Americans once again are b eguiled by the promise of machines . These new electronic devices will make us s marter , bring to our fingertips the wonders of the world and worlds beyond , en tertain us and delight us . If you follow the breathless promotions closely , yo u might even arrive at a neo-utopian vision wherein technology can erase the dis tinction between work and play , so we willn't have to feel guilty about leisure any more . One machine will do it all we will earn our livelihoods from it , pl ay on it , learn , organize ourselves , establish friendships , let it entertain us , and have the unheard of mobility to do all of this while we roam the count ryside on our own schedules . Finally , we will be in charge of our lives . Not buying this promise are some of those who study leisure as a necessary component to human balance and satisfaction . These thinkers offer at least two contrasti ng expressions of skepticism about tomorrow 's technology . Kelly subscribes to the `` big mirage theory . '' That is , technology is evolutionary and not revol utionary ; it may alter how we do things , but not what we do . `` Vastly overbl own , '' Kelly says about foretold changes in American life . The huge costs of technology , its inherent complexity and longstanding patterns of cultural behav ior will naturally , and significantly , modulate the process of social transfor mation . `` Technology doesn't change things very much in the small worlds in wh ich people live . Most people still live in families , they eat dinner , go on v acation . Change will have to fit in with that , '' he says . So , a 12-year-old obsessively playing with dolls or toy soldiers in 1950 is not so much different from today 's youngsters fixated on their beeping Game Boys . A more disturbing view comes from other scholars . As they see it , technology is rapidly separat ing us from the natural world , blurring the distinctions between what is real a nd what is not , substituting vicarious stimulation for actual experience , and giving us no leisure relief from the relentless acceleration of time . The bally hooed coming of virtual reality is particularly unsettling to these experts . As envisioned , these machines will simulate places and experiences without requir ing physical effort or skill , for instance deep sea diving without getting wet . `` Our definition of mental illness and sanity is the ability to distinguish b etween what is real and what is not , '' says Geoffrey Godby , professor of leis ure studies at Penn State . `` People already are yearning for what is real . Wh y else would a highly sugared nut beverage be marketed as ` the real thing ? ' . . . Leisure is giving oneself to an act , not taking something from it . And tec hnology is no friend of that . '' ( Optional add end ) At California State Unive rsity , Northridge , Al Wright , professor of leisure studies , says he is stagg ered , overwhelmed and depressed at how little students know of the real world a round them . For example , urban youth have seen so many images of rivers that r eal rivers hold no mystery . `` Then I take them out to a river , and they say , ` Oh my gosh , I didn't know this is what a river sounds like. ' ' ' Wright fea rs that Americans will accept simulated experience and never know what they are missing . `` And it willn't result in the same benefit , '' he adds . Virtually all experts in the field say Americans undervalue leisure even in the face of ov erwhelming data that show that well-rounded individuals live longer and happier . Rather than trying to intermingle work and play , these scholars say Americans need more thoughtful emphasis on leisure apart from toil . How important is it ? `` I 'll answer that with a question , '' says Brett Wright , a professor of r ecreation at George Mason University . `` How important is it to sleep ? To eat ? To breath ? We can't continue to rob ourselves of it . We can't sustain our li ves without it . Psychologically , we 're beginning to reach that point . '' Per haps the most important ingredient of leisure is the release from the pressure o f time . And in this regard , even the most enthusiastic futurists offer little consolation . Rather than measure time by the seasons as their ancestors did , A mericans now rush to upgrade their IBM 286 computers for the marginally faster 4 86 , compressing time into ever quickening bursts . This , despite their lament , expressed in poll after poll , that society is too fast-paced already . Says G odby : `` Efficiency is the most important value in American life . We are becom ing ever more efficient , at the resultant death of tranquillity . Whatever happ ened to tranquillity anyway ? '' It would probably be overstating things to suggest that revenge was the main th ing John Lydon had in mind when he wrote his memoir of the Sex Pistols but not b y much . After all , the Sex Pistols ' saga has been hashed over from every imag inable angle . There have been music histories , such as Jon Savage 's award-win ning `` England 's Dreaming , '' cultural analyses along the lines of Greil Marc us ' wide-ranging and impenetrable `` Lipstick Traces , '' even a few films , li ke Alex Cox 's `` Sid & Nancy . '' But none of them , in Lydon 's view , came cl ose to getting the story straight . `` It 's terrible that my own life has been taken away from me in that respect , and re-written for me , without me supposed to have a word to say about it , '' he says , over the phone from Los Angeles . So Lydon ( or Johnny Rotten ) decided to do something about it , and wrote his own book : `` Rotten : No Irish , No Blacks , No Dogs , '' a 329-page memoir tha t traces his path from the slums of London to the height of pop culture infamy . It 's a fascinating book , and not just because it tells about the original Sid Vicious ( a `` soppy white hamster that used to live in a cage on the corner ta ble in my parents ' living room '' ) or what Lydon 's audition with the Sex Pist ols was like ( `` No , I will not mime to ` Maggie May ''' ) . What Lydon offers is a warts-and-all view of what was then the world 's most-feared rock band , o ne that balances his own recollections with sometimes contradictory comments fro m others who were part of that scene . It 's not the most flattering way to asse mble an autobiography , but then , Lydon wasn't interested in feeding the Sex Pi stols myth . `` People seem to thrive on fantasy , '' he complains . `` It 's a shame , because I think the truth is far more interesting and certainly more use ful . Reality at least you can learn something from . '' That 's not to say Lydo n 's memories aren't occasionally shaded to his own benefit . Just ask Pretender s frontwoman Chrissie Hynde , who knew Lydon even before the Sex Pistols started to pop . Hynde is apparently miffed about an interview Lydon did with the Engli sh music magazine Q , in which he dismisses the story that he was once to have m arried Hynde so she could have stayed in England . `` He says , ` Oh , I wouldn' t have married Chrissie Hynde , that would have been a lifelong commitment , '' ' she huffs . `` Which was the last thing any of us was thinking about at the ti me . `` He never mentions in his book that he got married to a woman who was a m ulti-millionaire , and who was just about to inherit a great deal of money . He doesn't really talk about a lot of the stuff that I could have talked about ! Bu t he turns around and trashes me the minute the book comes out . `` I still love him , '' she adds . `` I mean , we all know he 's a back-stabber . Everyone kno ws that . '' He 's also more than happy to own up to contradictions like that on e . `` Rotten , '' to its credit , does include a lengthy interview segment in w hich Hynde gives her side of the muddled matrimony story as well as similar bits drawing upon the memories of scenesters like Billy Idol , Julien Temple and Mac ro Pirroni , plus fellow Pistols Paul Cook and Steve Jones . Why the interviews ? `` As the book slowly but surely started to come together , I wanted to introd uce other voices , '' Lydon explains . `` And have you ever tried interviewing y our own father ? Well , it doesn't work . So I got Keith and Kent ( Zimmerman ) in to help me on things like that . Because it became impossible for me to do it any more on my own . '' Lydon insists that , by writing `` Rotten , '' he can f inally put the whole Sex Pistols era behind him . On the one hand , it 's easy t o believe him when he says there will never be a Sex Pistols reunion ( he 's too happy with his own music , particularly the solo album he 's working on ) ; on the other hand , it 's hard to imagine him passing up the opportunity to wax sar castic on his old band 's legacy . Take , for example , the Sex Pistols ' impact on today 's bands : `` I 'm sure there are some who genuinely do appreciate us for what we were , '' he says . `` But I 'm mystified as to what element they ge t from it . They can imitate the music , but that 's where they stop . They don' t seem to be dealing with serious problems . They shy away from them , in fact . I find that rather sad . '' Six days before he was shot while delivering a speech at the University of Cali fornia , Riverside , Khallid Muhammad , the former national spokesman for the Na tion of Islam , appeared in a pre-taped session of the `` Donahue '' show . Anyo ne who saw the show May 23 would not have been surprised by the events of May 29 . During the show Muhammad expressed love for Colin Ferguson , the man accused of killing whites and Asians on a commuter train in New York . In an analogy dra wn by those who hover perilously close to the lunatic fringe , he confided that he loved Colin Ferguson just as white America loved its killers Generals Schwarz kopf , Westmoreland , Patton , MacArthur and Eisenhower . So suspect No. 1 in th e shooting might have been some neo-Nazi or skinhead type who took Muhammad at h is word that white America and black America are in a shooting war in which sold iers from each side are expected to go out and gun down unarmed civilians . It w ould be unlike Muhammad to go an entire hour without hurling some bit of invecti ve against Jews . And so he did . Phil Donahue played a segment of a Muhammad sp eech in which he referred to the `` hook-nosed , bagel-eatin ' , lox-eatin ' , i mposter-perpetrating-a-fraud , johnny-come-lately , just-crawled-out-of-the-cave s-and-hills-of-Europe wanna-be Jew ... '' Since Muhammad repeated the phrase at Cal-Riverside in his Sunday speech , we can only assume it must be one of his fa vorites . So suspect No. 2 might have been some member of the Jewish Defense Lea gue whipped into a state of high dudgeon after hearing the insult one too many t imes . Folks on the lunatic fringe , you see , often have a fatal attraction for one another . Thus it came as no surprise that the suspect in the Muhammad shoo ting turned out to be a former Nation of Islam minister one James Edward Best . Violence in the Nation of Islam is nothing new . When I mentioned that obvious a nd well-documented fact in an opinion piece a while back , some folks in the Nat ion of Islam pretended not to know what I was talking about . One wrote to me fr om Dayton , Ohio . Dr. Waheed S. Al- ' Araby took issue with my assertion that a hit squad from the Newark , N.J. , mosque of the Nation of Islam assassinated M alcolm X in Harlem 's Audubon Ballroom Feb. 21 , 1965 . `` I challenge Kane to p roduce any evidence to support this one more deranged innuendo , '' Dr. Al- ' Ar aby sneered . I don't need any evidence . I 've got something even better a conf ession from the only man arrested at the scene of the crime and convicted for it . Talmadge Hayer 's confession has been on record for some time now . I urge me mbers of the Nation of Islam to give it a careful reading . But the Malcolm X as sassination is only the most famous example of factional violence spawned by dis putes within the Nation of Islam . Others are : The beating of Aubrey Barnette , the secretary of the Boston mosque in 1964 . Barnette left the Nation of Islam at about the same time as Malcolm X . ( Louis Farrakhan then Louis X of the Bost on mosque called Barnette a `` bourgeois Negro '' for asserting his independence . ) Barnette wrote an expose for the Saturday Evening Post that same year descr Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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