American Priorities
by Mickey Z.
I was walking down the
street when I noticed a man sitting behind the wheel of a car, cursing
and angry. His face was a mask of rage. I stopped and contemplated the
source of his fury and assumed it was the election. Clearly, this man
was fed up with the two-party farce, the barring of non-corporate
candidates from public debates, the lies, the corruption, and the fact
that a vote for either McCain or Obama is a vote for the same
gluttonous, murderous culture.
Then I got a little closer and realized the man was upset because someone had beaten him to a parking spot.
A few steps away, I spied a woman talking on a cell phone—looking
rather glum. Her face was a mask of distress. I stopped and
contemplated the source of her sorrow and assumed it was the war in
Iraq. Clearly, this woman was overcome with angst when contemplating
the countless dead, the 50-60% employment rate, the 4.7 million
refugees, the depleted uranium, and the fact that much of the country
was still without electricity.
Then I got a little closer and
overheard her phone conversation. I realized the woman was upset
because she thought her jeans made her look fat.
On the next
block, I passed another woman who appeared to be consumed with
frustration. I stopped and contemplated the source of her exasperation
and assumed it was the meat-based diet. Clearly, this woman was
overcome with irritation when contemplating the factory farms, the veal
calves, the battery hens, the human health holocaust, and the fact that
rearing cattle produces more greenhouse gases than driving cars.
Then
I got a little closer and she looked at me sheepishly. I realized the
woman was upset because she had forgotten to charge her iPod.
I
was almost home when I saw a man who appeared to be overwhelmed with
melancholy. I stopped and contemplated the source of his despondency
and assumed it was, well, everything. Clearly, this man was overcome
with depression when contemplating global poverty, mass animal and
plant extinctions, widespread slavery, gender inequality, and the fact
that somewhere on planet Earth a human being starves to death every two
seconds.
Then I got a little closer and saw he was reading the
sports pages. I realized the man was bummed because his favorite
football team had lost the day before.
As Gandhi sez: “Action expresses priorities.â€
Mickey Z. is the author of two new books, CPR for Dummies and No Innocent Bystanders, and can be found on the Web here.
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