Let’s Talk About Excellence

You don’t really want to read about an old racist running for POTUS, right? 

I mean, it’s tempting. 

We get it Elmo

His idea that you’re either this or that and if you assert the reality that you are both he calls you a liar, or a lunatic or disrespectful to the this or that of yourself you are not asserting at that moment.

For example, in my case there are some rooms where I’m gay (Note: Or, well, REALLY gay) and others where I am THE Jew, or just one Jew among many Jews.

But in truth, I’m always a gay Jew — in any room where I’m present.

You’re welcome

It would be impossible for me not to be.

Still, given that I’m a white dude (Note: For Kamala) no one seems too concerned with what I am in pretty much any room. 

At least out loud.

This is not the case for the bi-racial female Vice President of the United States now that she is the Democratic nominee running for president against the old racist. 

She’s that girl

He seems to want to make it an issue because…..

  1. He’s an old racist who wants to attract those racists still undecided? 
  2. He’s that dumb and lazy that he can’t be bothered to bone up on any real issues where he could best her?
  3. He’s a snowflake so bubble-wrapped, out-of-it that he doesn’t get the actual reality of 21st century America.

I could go on.

please do, Chairy!

But whatever you choose it doesn’t matter.  Kamala Harris can take care of herself.  Especially if we all continue to have her back and vote for her in order to save our democracy against an old racist who aspires to be a very old dictator.

It’s looking better after a few weeks with $300 million raised from mostly small donations and #Kamalanomenon actually becoming a viral thing.

Kamala HQ

Who knew?  We certainly didn’t three weeks ago.

Which is why we need to talk about excellence.

Can you imagine an old racists competition in the 2024 Paris Olympics? 

Yes you could.

Picture it

At the very least there’d be our old racist; that Le Pen woman who recently lost the race she was sure she’d win to be president of France (Note: Yeah, she’s only 55 but that’s not young by French standards); and that Venezuelan dictator out of central casting Maduro guy proclaiming himself winner of an election he actually lost more than a week ago because you can’t teach a 62-year-old racist new tricks.

Unlike the actual competitive athletes now in Paris, you can’t teach anything at all new to those soon to be obsolete, old you-know-whats.  They operate from a tired ancient playbook that goes back for centuries.  Listen to the second season of Rachel Maddow’s excellent podcast Ultra and you’ll see what I mean.  Pretty much everything happening in the U.S. right now was cribbed from the Sen. Joe McCarthy playbook of the 1950s, right down to the Make America Great Again slogan.  And badly.

Laaaaame

As for the 2024 Olympics on view seemingly everywhere, it is the opposite – a testament to training, preparation, excellence AND a diaspora of representation stretched across the planet. 

I’ve never been a sports guy/gay/Jew/whatever but I’ve always found the Olympics highly inspiring. The dedication to get so good at a specialty that you can stand among the best in the world and do your thing alongside them (Note: And actually pat the winner on the back) is something you don’t get in a homogeneous totalitarian state. 

And yes we’re including Celine in this

Ask any of the supremely talented Russian or Belarusian athletes banned from competing in Paris this year, if you could get to them to talk at all – or even get to them.  Especially the gymnasts.  (Note: Who else remembers the great Olga Korbut?) They must be truly and rightly p.o.’d. 

Since it happens only once every four years, Olympics excellence is a different type of mastery.  It shows us what a human being or team can do at one peak moment in time as the best in their country and perhaps the WORLD. 

Superhuman

It takes a lot more work than being an old racist because you have to continually fail, get better, hear the truth and the boos, adjust accordingly, get back in the ring and fail better until you are better – maybe even the best.

  • Super gymnast Simone Biles, 27, earned three gold medals in the 2024 games after bowing out of most of the 2021 Tokyo Olympics due to severe psychological stress. But she concentrated on rebuilding herself psychologically, as well as physically, over the next three years and even proudly acknowledged she had a session with her therapist just before going out and winning one of her Olympic golds this past week.
  • Swimmer Katie Ledecky, 27, and a veteran of FOUR Olympics, returned this year and became the female athlete with the most gold medals in Olympic history, winning three more in Paris for a total of nine, making it 14 medals for her over 12 years.
How do you say GOAT in French?

And though a certain other kind of bigot might see them merely as unhappy childless cat ladies, both have not ruled out competing at the Summer 2028 games in Los Angeles.

On the men’s side, there were numerous medal winners but none the zeitgeist loved more than Stephen Nedoroscik, 25, adorkable Pommel Horse specialist.  He helped lead the U.S. men’s gymnastics team to a bronze medal (Note: Its first medal of any kind in 16 years) and became the only male gymnast this year to win a second medal in the individual competitions. An electrical engineer, Rubik’s cube master and self-described nerd with severe vision problems, Nedoroscik (Note: Okay, he’s a personal favorite of mine) has been dubbed the Clark Kent of the competition for the seriously corrective glasses he wears at all times except when he competes.  In those moments they come off and he literally has to feel his way around the apparatus as he executes his routine.

How could you not love him?

I have no idea the political affiliations of the above three athletes (Note: Though Ms. Biles did shade the old racist when she tweeted she “loves her black job,” alongside a picture of herself and her medal).  But it is interesting to note that one is a person of color, another has a physical handicap and the third is a 6 foot tall unmarried woman almost in her thirties without any kids.

More than anyone or anything else, this is and has been America for quite a while. 

Old racists be damned.

Charlie xcx – “360”

The Others

There is a 305 feet tall monument in New York Harbor that was built as a symbol to welcome all immigrants into the United States.

It is called the Statue of Liberty and was a gift from France to the U.S. in the late 1800s to honor American values and the end of slavery (Note: Ahem) after the Civil War.  

Hey gurl

The idea for this gift came from a conversation between Edouard Laboulaye, a politician, law professor and president of the French Anti-Slavery Society, and the sculptor Frederic Bartholdi. 

I’ve thought a lot about the Statue in recent weeks as the United States continues to have a centuries old debate about immigration. 

Among the questions raised in this debate are statements like:

How many do we have to take?

– What about US, or the U.S.?

– We feel bad for “those people” but right now we don’t have enough American jobs for real Americans.

And my favorite: 

Why must we dilute American culture, religion and skin color with THEM, to the point where our very own AMERICAN culture, religion and skin color, gets watered down and rendered unrecognizable?

Seriously?

There is no point getting into the details of any one of those questions, and many more, over immigration to a country whose very existence was built on a nation full of immigrants from an oppressive society traveling to a new country where everyone from anywhere would theoretically be free to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

That the U.S. has not always lived up to its mission statement is not in debate.  But that this was always a fact of its intention is undeniable if you subscribe to historical facts, or any facts at all.

This week I watched the superb three-part PBS documentary The U.S. and The Holocaust by filmmakers Ken Burns, Lynn Novick and Sarah Botstein.

A must see

It’s a riveting six hours of overtly watchable, if maddening, history that sadly feels all too contemporary.

This is not only because it gives us a painstaking account of the rise and, not necessarily guaranteed at the time, fall of the Nazi Party.

Rather it is due to the fact that with the myriad of interviews with people who were there, combined with historical footage, governmental documents, and accounts from some of those serving the White House during those years, it explains the reluctance of the U.S. to open its doors fully to Jews desperate to escape (nee migrate) here, at the time. 

Too few

As the film puts it, this was principally due to:

a. A repressively strict immigration quota system and, more importantly,

b. A nationwide resistance to allowing our country to become overrun with others who would threaten the religious, economic and social balance in the U.S.

In simpler terms, this means Jews who would be needy, Jews who would take American jobs and, mostly, Jews that were branded as inferior and responsible for the economic troubles real Germans, nee Europeans, were forced to endure during the 1930s.

It wasn’t until several decades later when America had already won the war; six million Jews, not to mention many millions of others, had been killed; and the country had fully recovered from the Depression it was still reeling from in the 1930s, that US immigration quotas were lifted.

The sad truth

Yet all the while most of the top decision makers in the U.S. government knew of the grave danger and mass murders the Jews in Europe were enduring all through the 1930s. 

Also, as the filmmakers inform us, public sentiment AGAINST welcoming any more European Jewish immigrants was well over 70% during most of that time.

This included a large and very rabid Nativist, Anti-Semitic movement dominating a significant section of public and private institutions in the U.S. being spearheaded by people like much adored, wholly American aviation hero Charles Lindbergh.

Dr. Seuss on Nativism, 1941

Well, what do you do when so many in a country don’t want to open its doors for outsiders from another country and culture to come inside?

How about when those citizens, already hurting from their own economic woes, claim there is no room for THEM? 

These questions plague us to this day.  To wit:

What can you say when people whose lives are in danger, people who have no physical resemblance to the majority of US,  literally arrive here (Note: We are more connected these days and have better transportation) by the tens of thousands?

Do you tighten the borders, raise the quotas and build a theoretical and/or literal wall to keep them out?  (Note: Also known as buying them bus or plane tickets to simply get them out of your sight and away from your town).

It isn’t a game

Or do you take history into account, visit New York Harbor (note: physically or virtually) and consider who you are as a nation and how you can learn from your past mistakes?

Here is some information about our very own Lady Liberty that might shed some light on things, as she is wont to do anyway.

Mr. Laboulaye, who as mentioned had the idea for Her in the first place, was a staunch abolitionist and supporter of the Union Army during the Civil War.  In other words, he was rabidly against slavery, especially the kind that helped build the United States.

Hey Eddie!

So when that particular form of servitude was officially outlawed here  (Note: Ahem, again) he decided it could be significant to have a proper symbol of freedom greeting all newcomers on their arrival to these shores of freedom.

It would be the first visual they saw upon arrival, an encouraging beacon lighting the road to a new life in the offing.

That sculpture, Lady Liberty, actually depicts the Roman Liberty goddess, Libertas.  She holds a torch high above her head in her right hand and in her left is a tablet on which the Roman numerals for American Independence Day, July 4, 1776, is inscribed.

Fundraising efforts included visiting the torch for 50 cents as the platform was being built (1876, Philadelphia)

But the pedestal on which she stands, which would become part of the statue we know, took more than a decade plus to finance and build in the U.S. separately through donations spearheaded by a member of the media, a newspaper publisher (Note: Imagine that!) named Joseph Pulitzer. 

It accounts for half the height of what is now one of the most iconic monuments in the world and bears a plaque of the poem The New Colossus, written by 19th century poet Emma Lazarus.

Not coincidentally, Ms. Lazarus was a Sephardic Jew from an immigrant family of Portuguese descent, as well as an activist on behalf of Jewish immigrants. (Note: Imagine that, again!).

Both icons

And though her poem was not written specifically for the Statue her words have, over the years, become synonymous with its intent.

Among the most famous is this section:

Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!

This is not to say that it takes someone Jewish inside the U.S. or a foreigner from outside the country (Note: In France, no less!) to show and tell us what democracy and American values are all about.

However, it has always been of interest to me that it took Czech born film director Milos Forman to make so many great films chronicling America, including the quintessential American counterculture musical, Hair; the fictional story of E.L. Doctorow’s America in Ragtime; an unlikely depiction and ultimate condemnation of American censorship in The People vs. Larry Flynt; and a celebration of oddball American creativity in the Andy Kaufman biopic, Man in the Moon.

Amen to that

It has also not escaped me that the very, very New York Jewish immigrant, Irving Berlin, wrote one of most popular anthems the U.S. conservative movement has ever wrapped its arms around, God Bless America.

All this is to say that every once in a while, and perhaps more often than that, it’s nice to be reminded who we really are, or strive to be, by some of the OTHERS who, rightly or wrongly, admired US.

And to welcome them into the fold and learn from them the lessons we were all supposed to have known in the first place.

Aretha Franklin – “God Bless America”