Dealing with labels for a lifetime
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FLO MARTIN
I’m sad, very sad. In her Wednesday column, “Republicans as far as
the eye can see,” Lolita Harper reacted with “Wow.”
She’s young. I reacted with sadness, because I’ve been around a
lot longer. I have experienced first hand the horrible effects of
man’s blind prejudice and consequent cruelty.
Harper described a certain colorful character who had decorated
himself with a variety of buttons. This fellow apparently hates
liberals. He feels that Hollywood, not Iraq, should be wiped off the
map. And said that liberals are un-American, anti-Christian,
Constitution-hating, antitraditional revolutionaries. The man also
had Harper pegged as liberal. Her gender, her profession and her
marital status all point to her politics, right? Harper’s “wow” was
my “sigh.”
Too many of us are quick to judge our fellow man. Our shallow
mentality allows us to categorize one another into convenient
profiles. Why do you think that is? One possible answer: Profiling
allows us to deal with strangers, allows us to pigeonhole them into
people we think we already know. This way, we don’t have to get to
know them. This way, we can keep our distance and not get too
involved with them. This way, we’re reassured that everyone who
thinks, acts or looks like us is OK, and everyone who’s different is
not.
A second possible answer: We’re leery and distrustful of folks we
don’t know. The distrust sometimes is sometimes pure fear. We’re
fearful of our neighbors, of people who are different from us or who
look different from us, or who talk differently from us, or who think
differently from us.
Recently, my family rented and watched “Bowling for Columbine,”
written and directed by Michael Moore. In the film, he interviews
several locals from Ontario, Canada, who are all very comfortable
with leaving their front doors unlocked. Moore can’t believe his
ears. He decides to find out for himself and surprised to find many
doors in Windsor indeed unlocked. He discovers that Ontarians
generally trust one another.
Moore also uses his lifetime membership in the National Rifle
Association to get an interview with Charlton Heston. Heston welcomes
Moore very graciously into his home and sits down with him for a
friendly chat. However, the chat very quickly turns sour. Heston is
challenged by Moore to justify -- or simply explain -- how a gun got
into the hands of a first-grader who killed a classmate. Moore also
wants Heston to explain why the NRA held a rally in the Columbine
community shortly after the tragedy. Obviously, Moore is no longer a
friend in Heston’s eyes and Heston, no longer feeling very gracious,
walks away without even showing his guest to the door. We can almost
see Heston’s thought process: “OK, this Moore fellow is a lifetime
NRA’er. He’s like me. He thinks like me. He must be a good guy, just
like me.” However, the minute Heston perceives Moore as the political
or social enemy, Heston flees.
I’ve been pigeonholed or prejudged many times. In the late ‘40s, I
was the immigrant Nazi kid who didn’t speak English. In the ‘50s, I
was the weirdo new kid at school who wore weirdo clothes. In the
‘60s, my father, a former teacher at the Army Language School, was
told by its military administration to muzzle his “anti-American”
daughter and not allow her to write such inflammatory, antiwar
letters to the Monterey Peninsula Herald editor. During the Vietnam
era, men in gray suits and aviator glasses openly videotaped me as I
walked into a Malvina Reynolds concert.
Once, a San Francisco police officer drew his gun on me when I
begged him and his partners to not be so rough on a teenage boy who
had just overturned a trashcan. In the ‘70s, my husband lost his
high-security clearance because his wife’s family lived behind the
Iron Curtain. (Currently, my brother-in-law is in the same position
because his wife, my sister, comes from a family that is considered
suspect.) In the ‘80s, I was considered “a liberal” because of my
leadership role in the Garden Grove Education Association. In the
‘90s, I was labeled as a “Jesus freak” because of my involvement with
Mariners Church. An elderly couple cursed me as a “damned
abortionist” just outside the entry as I walked into the Pacific
Amphitheater to hear President Clinton.
Now, some people look at me sideways when they see my ankle
tattoo. And, just last week, the Secretary of Education labeled me “a
terrorist” because of my membership in the National Education
Association.
Well, Mr. “Colorful Character,” how would you categorize me? I
love America. I’m part of a small Bible study group. I’m a faithful
Christian. I participate in a women’s group at Mariners Church that
provides services to pregnant teens and teen moms. I’m a property
owner. I’ve run for public office in Costa Mesa. And, to top it all
off, I have a wedding ring on my finger.
Now here’s where you might get confused. I’m a registered
Democrat. I also hate handguns and semiautomatic weapons. And, the
bumper sticker on my car reads, “Leave no billionaire behind.” Do you
believe that the road to hell is paved with the likes of me? Do you
believe that we’re all going to hell because of me? Do you want to
forego Iraq and bomb my home instead? I sure hope not -- and for your
sake, not mine.
* FLO MARTIN is a retired high school teacher, lectures part-time
at Cal State Fullerton in the Foreign Language Education program and
supervises student teachers in their classrooms.
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