Clocks from Hell
Last night I finished Mother Night by Kurt Vonnegut. Its one of his earlier works, published in 61. At the end his main character gives an interesting analogy on extremist like Nazis or the KKK, etc. He describes them as clocks from hell. Not exactly.
Part of the book is that Auschwitz played Beethoven over the loudspeaker with occasional interruption to call for new volunteers as corpse carriers.
Today, driving to the coffee shop I saw a Landrover with a sticker using the Starbucks icon, but encircling the emblem was Guns and Coffee. I thought, this person has been filing off some of their gear teeth. I have no idea why liking coffee would be part of someones identity. ; )
Or a random hipster bungalow in Cabbagetown (Atlanta) has a sign that says EAT THE RICH out front, I am guessing they have filed off some teeth. Do they know their English history, where this phrase is from (I think)? Do they know how much their house is worth? Do they know much about Adam Smith vs. Karl Marx? My best guess is no.
I am not sure when to employ this analogy and how far it goes. Human cognition is limited by experience and location and access to information. I wouldn’t think not knowing is the same as filing off a tooth. The character, Howard Campbell, distinguishes himself from the people he falls in with because he has refused to file off any teeth. I think there is something here to admire, but I can’t tell on first reading whether to believe or accept at face value what Mr. Campbell says.
However, to keep with the analogy, I do not want to file down any of my teeth. I want each tooth to connect and keep the time rolling. Maybe old projectors had gears, I bet they did. I want the story to continue unfolding, tick tick tick.
I grew up going to church and I went to a Christian liberal arts college (would be classed conservative for sure), I helped start a church and worked there (also would be classed conservative, I say it that way because these words are shorthand for the reader, but also full of missing teeth … often dumb distribution of binaries). You would think, in all that Christian culture I would be somewhat aware of the most famous and greatest Christians in US history. Thinking back, I think it would have included Billy Graham. We were nondenominational, so strange small figures like John Wimber. But here is the missing teeth part, not Martin Luther King, Jr? Not Mahalia Jackson? Not Howard Thurman? Not Mary Lou Hamer? I mean I knew them as historical figures, well King at least, but not as Christians. Why? Someone filed off our teeth.
The gears slipped and my time jumped from Lincoln’s emancipation 1863 to 1980s when Christians were singing We shall overcome outside of abortion clinics. (I never did this actually and was still in elementary school in the 80s, but this was my understanding of US history pertaining to Christian witness). I missed that brief southern period where we tried democracy and elected some black leaders due to Federal troops and the Reconstruction. I also missed the compromise of 1876 when their was a tie for president and the south agreed to let Hayes become president if they withdrew federal troops.
I could go at length on the teeth missing. But heres the thing, lets work on A) not filing our teeth off; B) working on getting a complete set wherever possible. It is going to take some work. It is going to take our listening less to loud and shiny people and with a much more open mind to what we can learn.
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