Southampton, NY: Conservatives Using SHS (shriveled heart syndrome) to Counter
Occupy Movement.
It’s not just for southerners, the shriveled heart syndrome, any more. David
Brooks and other northerners are also susceptible to SHS: it appears to be
contagious. Canadian born conservative Brooks considers all US citizens
southerners and he’s a Jew who used to be liberal.
During Reconstruction, doctors first described shriveled heart syndrome. It’s
becoming a powerful weapon for the 1% rich due to its history and its
devastating affect on the body politic. Mostly liberal or progressive doctors
coming down with nurses to bind the wounds of our civil war, these physicians
began listing human symptoms of SHS, heretofore mostly confined to dogs. In
dogs it is called heartworms.
Southerners often discount the existence of SHS due to its evolutionary
origin. SHS can best be understood as a social disease evolved over several
centuries with roots in the early years of our nation’s history.
David Books, accused of spreading the disease when he pooh poos empathy as a
useful aspect of society, is an educated historian from the University of
Chicago, a well-known hot bed of empathy. He should know better.
Empathy, Brooks certainly knows, was the key human emotion our founding fathers
and mothers had to destroy when they needed to simplify slavery by making it
hereditary only for black folks. This original sin, clearly recognized as a
moral compromise, cleared up the question of who were slaves and who were
servants. It also defined white and black, an improvement over the former
confusion. People became “white” who had never considered themselves white.
Class, heretofore the prime divider of people, suddenly discovered a twin named
Race.
Shriveled Heart Syndrome then went viral sweeping the body of America with
speed rivaled only by HIV. It stands to reason that Americans, especially
southerners, where slavery persisted, were hit hardest. They cultivated harden
hearts while unlearning empathy. Farm boys and girls, already accustomed to
withholding sympathy and empathy from farm animals as they were exploited and
slaughtered, took the short step to withholding love and sympathy from certain
humans. You can’t stand on your brother’s throat, confiscating the fruit of his
loins, his woman, his labor, his soul without becoming an awfully mean person.
Slavery, defined as an act of war, could be maintained only by a garrison state
augmented by vigilantly terror in the form of the poor white (trash) “paddy
rollers.” This lasted from the early 1600s to the civil war, two full
centuries.
Following Reconstruction, a cruel joke on the freedwomen and men, federal
protection left the south. Former slaves, told to return to the tender mercies
of their former owners were informed, “You are not going to get the tools,
seeds and land we promised you as small reparations for years of free labor –
forget forty acres and a mule! Get over it! Go back with hat in hand to Massa
and work for whatever he is willing to pay. “
More hardening of the arteries shrunk southern hearts as new forms of slavery
were built - sharecropping and Jim Crow, then prison labor, where bodies were
bought and sold as of old. As late as 1922 Claude McKay, offering a poetic
lesson in how Shriveled Heart Syndrome is passed down through generations and
from mother to son, wrote:
“The ghastly body swaying in the sun
The women thronged to look, but never a one
Showed sorrow in her eyes of steely blue;
And little lads, lynchers that were to be,
Danced round the dreadful thing in fiendish glee.”
He focuses on unrepentant members of the mob ensuring a continuing lineage of
white fiends.
Unfree labor persisted in the south through the New Deal, even to the present.
This year, for instance, the largest prison strike in our history opposing
slave labor, occurred throughout the state of Ga., home of vaunted CNN world
news.
Not a peep of it in the news. A small article in David Brook’s New York Times,
soon squelched by the Obama administration, reveled the prison uprising to be
nonviolent and well organized, bringing together skin heads, Latino
gangbangers, Muslims, Christians, black folk, white folk - everybody. Had the
prison revolt been violent, the roads around every private and public prison in
Georgia would have been covered with trucks sporting satellite dishes, dishing
out the thrill for the entire world to see. But no, this was well organized
and nonviolent. So get over it, no news here. Our country can’t allow this to
spread – it’ll kill the cash cow cradle to prison pipeline.
The scariest thing to Wall Street about the Occupy Movement is that young
people are getting their own word out. Social media along, with old methods
like putting out their own News Letter, allows circumvention of David Brooks
and the Times. They’d like you to believe nothing will be done if you lost
your home and your job – just suck it up!
Dean Baker in his column, BEAT THE PRESS, asks why nothing will be done to help
the 26 million unemployed, underemployed or those giving up looking. “The
reason,” Dean says, “is that people like David Brooks and rest of the 1 Percent
don't give a damn about you."
This is the shriveled heart syndrome in spades.
BOB ZELLNER
October 21, 2011
Monday, October 24, 2011
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
MLK Monument Dedication
Oct. 15-16, Washington, DC
Report from the front:
Yesterday I spoke briefly to First Lady, Michelle and President Barack Obama. This is a report from the front, the front of the Civil Rights/Political establishment. I celebrated the entire morning with a small knot of Americans including, in addition to the President and First Lady, and their two children (the dog was missing), John Lewis, Nancy Pelosi, Steny Hoyer, Joe Biden, Attorney General Holder, General Powell, Tim Geithner, Ken Salazar, on down to Madame Aretha Franklin, James Taylor, Stevie Wonder, Sheryl Crow, Ledisi, Tommy Hilfinger, Rev. Sharpton, Nikki Giovanni, Cicely Tyson, Diahann Carroll, Mary Mary (both of them) and others too numerous to drop. I saved two seats up front for Eric Falkenstein and Senator Wofford, but was asked to give up mine for Dan Rather. Since he is older than me, I agreed.
Yesterday I spoke briefly to First Lady, Michelle and President Barack Obama. This is a report from the front, the front of the Civil Rights/Political establishment. I celebrated the entire morning with a small knot of Americans including, in addition to the President and First Lady, and their two children (the dog was missing), John Lewis, Nancy Pelosi, Steny Hoyer, Joe Biden, Attorney General Holder, General Powell, Tim Geithner, Ken Salazar, on down to Madame Aretha Franklin, James Taylor, Stevie Wonder, Sheryl Crow, Ledisi, Tommy Hilfinger, Rev. Sharpton, Nikki Giovanni, Cicely Tyson, Diahann Carroll, Mary Mary (both of them) and others too numerous to drop. I saved two seats up front for Eric Falkenstein and Senator Wofford, but was asked to give up mine for Dan Rather. Since he is older than me, I agreed.
Strangely, our High Class section was first come first served and I joked with other before-dawn guests that I didn’t usually get up this early for Sunday services. When Eric and Senator Wofford opted to sit with the masses, I gave their carefully guarded seats to Kerry Kennedy and a friend from Texas. Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, a Democratic Whip and movement jailbird, sitting with us, joined Dorothy Cotton, Kerry, me and James Taylor in every lusty chorus, especially Lift Every Voice and Sing. Jumping up and down, we waved and shouted at every well-turned line delivered by good speakers.
Of interest to SNCC, and other once youthful movement veterans, are Joe Lowery, C. T. Vivian, Marian Wright Edelman, Doris Derby and husband, actor Bob Banks, Pam and Julian Bond, along with son, Michael. There was also Frank Smith, Frank Holloway of Atlanta, Marion Barry, Chuck Neblett, Dorothy Cotton, Bernard Lafayette and Kate, big and little Jesse Jackson.
The point of this name dropping orgy is that listing every person in the so called VIP section wouldn’t approach 1% of even the still living movement leadership cadre. Apparently there was no reaching out to great leaders still with us like Gloria Richardson Dandridge, the Ladner ladies, Joyce and Dorie, Dianne Nash, Dottie Miller, Connie Curry, and Jim Lawson - where was he?
The guts of this dedication, however, the 99.9%, stood in front of the Big Stage. They viewed celebs from our section, trundled back and forth, some in wheel chairs, for fleeting appearances before the masses. Not one bold print name up there, we all know, would have, could have, become what or who they are, absent those folks standing just below.
Consulting a voluminous compendium of notes, I’m astonished that so few references to Occupy Wall Street were heard. Ambassador Young’s panel, following the dedication and immediately before going to the White House for a movement veteran’s reception, is instructive. The trio of altacockers, Ambassador Andy Young, Senator Harris Wofford and Congressman John Dingle of Detroit, mentioned only in passing the Occupy America Movement now going worldwide. WE ARE THE WORLD – OCCUPY IT!
I shouted for them to discuss the Occupy America Movement but they missed the point. The old men just didn’t get it until every question during Q and A turned on the inspiring new movement upsurge. Had there been a woman or a young person on the panel things might have been different.
Bob Zellner
October 17, 2011
Occupy the World Movement
October 19, 2011
Southampton, NY: Occupy Wall Street captures the imagination of the people of New York City, possibly the most progressive and diverse city in the world. This is as it should be. The liberal northeast, in our country’s history, often leads movements for social change; Abolition, anti-lynching, a woman’s right to vote, and labor rights are but a few examples.
Next the OWS movement moved to the hinterland, from Wall Street to Main Street, and now, like the Arab Spring, it is going global. WE ARE THE WORLD: OCCUPY IT!
Next the OWS movement moved to the hinterland, from Wall Street to Main Street, and now, like the Arab Spring, it is going global. WE ARE THE WORLD: OCCUPY IT!
For example, this just in: OCCUPY HARLEM MOBILIZATION. We stand in solidarity with Occupiers of Wall Street. Friday, October 28, 2011, 6:30 – 9:30 PM at St. Philip’s Church, 204 West 134th Street (Adam Clayton Powell Blvd).
The freedom struggle of Black people and their allies around the world provides a vital engine moving things forward, always forward. This newest class war, in the finest sense, can avoid the usual trajectory taken in world economic crises. Ruling classes traditionally bail themselves out on the backs of the poor, the working class and relatively powerless, what used to be called, Third World Countries. A favorite saying in the junkyard dog-mean south is, “Don’t worry about the mule, just load the wagon!
The 99% in Greece today launched a general strike against EU and Wall Street austerity measures. All we are saying in the Occupy movement is that the world certainly needs austerity, but it must be of a new kind. No longer can rich 1% nations and individuals appropriate most of the world’s goods and riches.
We talk, organize, and take action to bring about a world class struggle where people, not power elites and power institutions, decide what’s to be cut and how to nurture and protect humans and animals.
World Class Struggle depends on building a world-class movement using all the energy, creativity and technology at our disposal. Revolutionaries of North America bear a heavy responsibility, being as we are in the very entrails of Kock-crazed Globezilla wreaking havoc astride the world since the beginning of modern times.
Our determination is strong because the whole world is watching the ridiculous position taken by our ruling class here in good old USA. They say the ship of state will remain afloat simply by cutting welfare, Medicare, public education, emergency assistance, foreign aid, and any other program right-wingers and Republicans oppose.
These same oligarchs gleefully spent all our public money on expeditionary and preemptive wars, and then they incurred massive debt bailing out billionaires. Because the public was quiescent, our rightwing-tinted ruling class saw they could do anything they wanted to abuse “the people.”
But they went too far! They know no shame. Amazing how men with millions and billions of personal wealth, still want more. After years of redistributing world and American wealth upward, through tax breaks and loop holes for the rich and the super rich, their party, the Republicans, in the face of national and world depression, refused to increase revenue even by closing unconscionable tax loop holes. No! Only cuts directed at the middle class and the poorest can be used to correct this rotten economy.
Maintaining their voracious amassing of unprecedented personal and private wealth, our rulers helped themselves to what was left of the public treasury in the name of saving “the financial system.”
Well the ruling classes of the world can no longer do as they please. State power can now change hands quickly and relatively nonviolently, thanks to the lessons of our freedom movement.
Reform of the system, even if it once seemed desirable, even doable, is no longer possible. As Stokely/Kuame Ture, Musaka and others famously urged, we now seem Ready for Revolution.
Reform or Revolution, a constant theme in people’s struggle from the beginning, whenever and wherever that was, is now on the table for real.
Reform seems impossible; its time revolutionaries think about ideas for the near and far future – strategy and tactics.
The bedrock of protection for Americans, habeas corpus, was given up without a whimper in the name of being more secure. This strangely unpatriotic action, urged upon our stupid right-wingers by the corporate fascist Kock brothers, sole funders of the Tea Party, was to protect us from terrorist. At the same time, party geniuses like Michelle and Sarah urged common folk to cling to their guns as protection against the government? Why would anyone gladly give up habeas corpus while viewing with alarm the power of the central government? I guess we should be happy that our opposition does not think straight, if at all.
The occupy movement should give President Obama, a center-right politician, an opportunity to turn more leftward. It might not be enough to save capitalism, as FDR did, but possibly a left turn will be enough to give him and us some breathing room.
I’m sure President Obama and his up to now uncomprehending staff wish they had, by executive order, put millions to work on infrastructure, as soon as the bottom fell out. These millions of workers, continuing to pay rent and mortgages, would have allowed housing and jobs, the center piece of the bust, to bounce back quicker. I never understood why this could not be done at the same time measures were being taken to save the banks. Isn’t the bureaucracy big enough to do several big tasks at the same time?
We are in deep cocoa, however, if President Obama fails to get another term. His relative progressivism keeps harsher measures of the Patriot Act off the necks of change agents. A Perry or even Romney, White House might land many of us in prison or underground. We can be “disappeared” due to lack of habeas corpus, PRODUCE THE BODY!
Ready for revolution? Let’s hope that we are. It might be delayed a while but it can no longer be stopped.
Bob Zellner
Southampton, NY.
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Our Pilgrimage in the Rear View Mirror
The trip this year was outstanding.
It was serene and peaceful, as democrat and republican lions bedded down with democrat and republican sheep. Not an angry or radical word was spoken and all was well with the world.
But wait! It transpired during the most horrendous tumult the world has recently seen. Mubarake, the Egyptian dictator, had just fallen to people power as had Tunisia. Remember him, we’ve almost forgotten his name. Libya rose up against Kaddafi. Bahrain’s people were demanding rights while Saudi Arabia and the US were poised to prop up its ruling class. Yemen and Syria were suddenly afflicted with democracy and then the physical world fell apart.
Japan cracked, then went up in smoke and flood while their vaunted technology failed utterly, spewing radioactive clouds over its people before wafting on the winds to California. We were awed at the simple engineering mistake of putting backup generators in basements, vulnerable to the tsunami. Hawaii shook belching flame and ash while waiting for the tidal wave and its native people yearned for freedom. Seismologist and climatologist mused over the possibility that global heating might contribute to the outbreak of quakes and volcanoes.
Maybe we should not have been quite so out of it and serene, given the world situation, not to speak of Wisconsin and the continued assaults on our own democracy.
Another outstanding feature of the Faith and Politics Alabama Pilgrimage this year was the large size of the delegation and the enthusiasm with which everyone approached each new adventure – Birmingham local speakers at the 16th Street Baptist Church were inspiring with their stories of recovering from the bombing and death. The band for the p3 young peoples was mind blowing. Average age 14.
The Rosa Parks museum was a high point where every single pilgrim bought my book. It was fun for me to have such a high-powered captive audience at Rev. Abernathy’s church, which is so central to the civil rights movement. Everyone laughed with me over how timid us little white boys were as we got swept up in the movement with veterans like John Lewis and Dianne Nash, Bernard Lafayette, and those gorgeous singers, Betty Fikes and Dorothy Cotton. Every person in the church seemed to understand the power of Ms Parks saying to me that I had to take a stand, or as John Lewis says, “Get in the way.”
To Faith and Politics and its new and old leadership, I say keep the faith and the good works!
Bob Zellner March 21, 2011
It was serene and peaceful, as democrat and republican lions bedded down with democrat and republican sheep. Not an angry or radical word was spoken and all was well with the world.
But wait! It transpired during the most horrendous tumult the world has recently seen. Mubarake, the Egyptian dictator, had just fallen to people power as had Tunisia. Remember him, we’ve almost forgotten his name. Libya rose up against Kaddafi. Bahrain’s people were demanding rights while Saudi Arabia and the US were poised to prop up its ruling class. Yemen and Syria were suddenly afflicted with democracy and then the physical world fell apart.
Japan cracked, then went up in smoke and flood while their vaunted technology failed utterly, spewing radioactive clouds over its people before wafting on the winds to California. We were awed at the simple engineering mistake of putting backup generators in basements, vulnerable to the tsunami. Hawaii shook belching flame and ash while waiting for the tidal wave and its native people yearned for freedom. Seismologist and climatologist mused over the possibility that global heating might contribute to the outbreak of quakes and volcanoes.
Maybe we should not have been quite so out of it and serene, given the world situation, not to speak of Wisconsin and the continued assaults on our own democracy.
Another outstanding feature of the Faith and Politics Alabama Pilgrimage this year was the large size of the delegation and the enthusiasm with which everyone approached each new adventure – Birmingham local speakers at the 16th Street Baptist Church were inspiring with their stories of recovering from the bombing and death. The band for the p3 young peoples was mind blowing. Average age 14.
The Rosa Parks museum was a high point where every single pilgrim bought my book. It was fun for me to have such a high-powered captive audience at Rev. Abernathy’s church, which is so central to the civil rights movement. Everyone laughed with me over how timid us little white boys were as we got swept up in the movement with veterans like John Lewis and Dianne Nash, Bernard Lafayette, and those gorgeous singers, Betty Fikes and Dorothy Cotton. Every person in the church seemed to understand the power of Ms Parks saying to me that I had to take a stand, or as John Lewis says, “Get in the way.”
To Faith and Politics and its new and old leadership, I say keep the faith and the good works!
Bob Zellner March 21, 2011
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Tune in to The Injustice Files, Friday, March 4
Keith Beauchamp has done more to re-open cold case civil rights murder cases than anyone. Please help Keith, CBS, and me get the word out about this great documentary to be shown tomorrow. William Moore is a true American Hero who was murdered in my home state of Alabama. We know who assassinated him but the murderer is still being protected by God knows whom?
Dear Friends,
Please tune in this Friday (March 4, 2011) for "The Injustice Files" Episode 3: He Walks Alone.
On the Investigation Discovery Channel at 9pm est /8pm CST.
Episode 3: 'He Walks Alone ' profiles the murder of William Lewis Moore who was the first known white martyr of the American civil rights movement! Please spread the word!
Thanks in advance for your support.
Sincerely,
Keith A. Beauchamp
Executive Producer/Host
"The Injustice Files"
P. S. View a sneak peek of Episode 3 here:
http://investigation.Discovery.Com/videos/the-injustice-files-the-dangers-of-southern-activism.Html#icpgn=idhpdrl4
Click here for channel finder:
http://investigation.Discovery.Com/channel-finder/?Ecid=icpgn=idtpnv
Click Here for Channel finder:
http://investigation.discovery.com/channel-finder/?ecid=icpgn=idtpnv
Dear Friends,
Please tune in this Friday (March 4, 2011) for "The Injustice Files" Episode 3: He Walks Alone.
On the Investigation Discovery Channel at 9pm est /8pm CST.
Episode 3: 'He Walks Alone ' profiles the murder of William Lewis Moore who was the first known white martyr of the American civil rights movement! Please spread the word!
Thanks in advance for your support.
Sincerely,
Keith A. Beauchamp
Executive Producer/Host
"The Injustice Files"
P. S. View a sneak peek of Episode 3 here:
http://investigation.Discovery.Com/videos/the-injustice-files-the-dangers-of-southern-activism.Html#icpgn=idhpdrl4
Click here for channel finder:
http://investigation.Discovery.Com/channel-finder/?Ecid=icpgn=idtpnv
Click Here for Channel finder:
http://investigation.discovery.com/channel-finder/?ecid=icpgn=idtpnv
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
11th Congressional Civil Rights Pilgrimage
Observations on the occasion of the 11th Congressional Civil Rights Pilgrimage organized by the Faith and Politics Institute and led by Congressman John Lewis from March 4 to March 6, 2011
Fellow Pilgrims,
A lot is happening in our country and the world as we retrace the steps of recent history. When John Lewis and Hosea Williams placed their feet on the Selma side of the bridge that day heading east toward Montgomery they had little idea of their odyssey’s ultimate significance for the South, the nation and the world.
We are witnessing the triumph of the philosophy and tactics of nonviolent direct action worldwide. Al Qaeda terrorist are hanging their heads for the carnage wrought by their nihilistic violence. A simple Tunisian vegetable vendor tired of being disrespected and mistreated by his autocratic government and its police sparked an unstoppable grassroots thrust toward democracy. It is toppling entrenched ruling classes and dictators right and left, leaving heretofore-untouchable power élites checking flight schedules.
As Congressmen and Senators and opinion makers bond together during this long weekend, let’s think and pray about Wisconsin and the rights of working people, the elimination of hate and violent rhetoric from political discourse, and the spread of democracy and humanity world wide.
It took a lot of faith for John and Hosea to take that first step and it takes a lot of faith to do good politics these days.
Bob Zellner March 1, 2011
Fellow Pilgrims,
A lot is happening in our country and the world as we retrace the steps of recent history. When John Lewis and Hosea Williams placed their feet on the Selma side of the bridge that day heading east toward Montgomery they had little idea of their odyssey’s ultimate significance for the South, the nation and the world.
We are witnessing the triumph of the philosophy and tactics of nonviolent direct action worldwide. Al Qaeda terrorist are hanging their heads for the carnage wrought by their nihilistic violence. A simple Tunisian vegetable vendor tired of being disrespected and mistreated by his autocratic government and its police sparked an unstoppable grassroots thrust toward democracy. It is toppling entrenched ruling classes and dictators right and left, leaving heretofore-untouchable power élites checking flight schedules.
As Congressmen and Senators and opinion makers bond together during this long weekend, let’s think and pray about Wisconsin and the rights of working people, the elimination of hate and violent rhetoric from political discourse, and the spread of democracy and humanity world wide.
It took a lot of faith for John and Hosea to take that first step and it takes a lot of faith to do good politics these days.
Bob Zellner March 1, 2011
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Remarks delivered at the community gathering at Southampton Town Hall to respond to the Arizona shooting - “Coming Together for Civility.” Bob Zellner, Community Organizer
Pastor Obama – Bringing Unity to a Divided Nation
“Last Wednesday in Tucson Pastor Obama ministered to his flock to begin the nation’s healing process. His simple request was to make our political discourse worthy of our youngest citizens, like Christina Taylor Green. The nine year old came to learn about government from Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, obviously a role model for her.
Here in front today as I speak are our school children learning about government. May our political discourse and debate in Long Island and the Hamptons be worthy of their optimism and hope for the future.”
At this point Quogue Village Police Chief Robert B. Coughlan collapsed behind me. Luckily the Emergency Response authorities were present and the meeting ended suddenly in the very human scene of caring for others. I checked on the condition of Chief Coughlan and our town supervisors assures us all is well.
The Southamton Press reported that he was “taken to Southampton Hospital from the event by Southampton Village Volunteer Ambulance [where he] was reported to be in stable condition following the event, …[and] would most likely return to work on Monday.
The chief, who the mayor believes is in his late 50s, was seen clutching a flagpole to hold himself up during the outdoor ceremony, according to Mr. Sartorius. Temperatures were in the low 20s at the time, with an even lower windchill factor.
Chief Coughlan then collapsed. His face was ashen and he was unresponsive, the mayor said.
“He’s fine. He’s talking. He’s coherent. He has the flu,” Town Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst said following the event. “We think he’s going to be just fine, OK?”
I had planned to comment on the fact that Dr. Martin Luther King’s birthday falls exactly one week after the savage shootings in Tucson. I wondered why more attention had not been shown to that fact by President Obama and others who were commenting on the national level.
But what I intended to say can wait until tomorrow’s blog. Suffith it to say that winter has come to the Hamptons. Back to back blizzards have driven even the foxes out of the deep woods to forage for scraps near our compost. Early sunsets make the huge pale yellow sun look like heavens spotlight bouncing off the darkening snow drifts.
Even in the bitter cold, however, our little community came together to celebrate civility in politics, peace in politics, and that is a good thing. All notches on the spectrum were present but one note still reminds me of how far we have to go. I was late getting to the meeting and did not know, when I was invited to speak, that no representative from the non-office holding community had addressed the assembly. Lou Ware our NAACP Branch President, Rev. Marvin Dozier, Rector Mike Smith from the Shinnecock Nation, and many many more community activists were present and could have been asked to say a few words of unity. Martin Luther King spent a lot of time talking to children. Our little school children need these role models to be held up continually.
Peace in Politics, amen!
Bob Zellner, January 15, 2011
“Last Wednesday in Tucson Pastor Obama ministered to his flock to begin the nation’s healing process. His simple request was to make our political discourse worthy of our youngest citizens, like Christina Taylor Green. The nine year old came to learn about government from Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, obviously a role model for her.
Here in front today as I speak are our school children learning about government. May our political discourse and debate in Long Island and the Hamptons be worthy of their optimism and hope for the future.”
At this point Quogue Village Police Chief Robert B. Coughlan collapsed behind me. Luckily the Emergency Response authorities were present and the meeting ended suddenly in the very human scene of caring for others. I checked on the condition of Chief Coughlan and our town supervisors assures us all is well.
The Southamton Press reported that he was “taken to Southampton Hospital from the event by Southampton Village Volunteer Ambulance [where he] was reported to be in stable condition following the event, …[and] would most likely return to work on Monday.
The chief, who the mayor believes is in his late 50s, was seen clutching a flagpole to hold himself up during the outdoor ceremony, according to Mr. Sartorius. Temperatures were in the low 20s at the time, with an even lower windchill factor.
Chief Coughlan then collapsed. His face was ashen and he was unresponsive, the mayor said.
“He’s fine. He’s talking. He’s coherent. He has the flu,” Town Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst said following the event. “We think he’s going to be just fine, OK?”
I had planned to comment on the fact that Dr. Martin Luther King’s birthday falls exactly one week after the savage shootings in Tucson. I wondered why more attention had not been shown to that fact by President Obama and others who were commenting on the national level.
But what I intended to say can wait until tomorrow’s blog. Suffith it to say that winter has come to the Hamptons. Back to back blizzards have driven even the foxes out of the deep woods to forage for scraps near our compost. Early sunsets make the huge pale yellow sun look like heavens spotlight bouncing off the darkening snow drifts.
Even in the bitter cold, however, our little community came together to celebrate civility in politics, peace in politics, and that is a good thing. All notches on the spectrum were present but one note still reminds me of how far we have to go. I was late getting to the meeting and did not know, when I was invited to speak, that no representative from the non-office holding community had addressed the assembly. Lou Ware our NAACP Branch President, Rev. Marvin Dozier, Rector Mike Smith from the Shinnecock Nation, and many many more community activists were present and could have been asked to say a few words of unity. Martin Luther King spent a lot of time talking to children. Our little school children need these role models to be held up continually.
Peace in Politics, amen!
Bob Zellner, January 15, 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)