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Saturday, September 8, 2012

Coulda been a contender

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Well, whatever, I guess. Liberal bloggers everywhere all pumped by the "open letter" that Vikings punter Chris Kluwe wrote to a bullying, homophobic Maryland state legislator on Friday. You can read here, in addition to the letter, the circumstances prompting Kluwe to write it. I don't have any reason to doubt the authenticity of his motives for writing it, and he falls on the same side of both issues he addresses---freedom of speech and equal rights for gays---that I do. Hooray for both of us and all our fellow travelers! But after reading the piece line by line I ended up feeling like I had wasted my time.

I have a classical view of public communication: in order to have impact, it should have a clear purpose and a target audience. In a case like this, I'd expect Kluwe's purpose to be persuasion, and the target audience---beyond the purported addressee, Maryland state delegate Emmett C. Burns Jr.---to be the mainstream media for maximum reach. If not, then why not... and what instead? The only two answers I can think of are (1) self promotion and (2) stirring up the pot for laughs.

Kluwe is obviously articulate and thoughtful, so I thought it was too bad that he squandered his shot at the public ear with pointless obscenities and stock badboy smack talk. An articulate and thoughtful person can cut any stupid asshole to ribbons with a simple, logical rebuttal and festoon it with plenty of invective that could still feasibly be discussed on Sunday morning networks or even NFL pregame shows (assuming the purpose of saying anything in the first place is impact and reach). Even assuming that probably wouldn't happen, because they are the corporate media, after all, there would still be no room for anyone to dismiss what Kluwe wrote with prejudice simply because he couldn't restrain himself from using the swear words.

Yet check out the second-to-last paragraph in his letter, where he buries the serious, well-thought-out point of his piece:
I can assure you that gay people getting married will have zero effect on your life. They won't come into your house and steal your children. They won't magically turn you into a lustful cockmonster. They won't even overthrow the government in an orgy of hedonistic debauchery because all of a sudden they have the same legal rights as the other 90 percent of our population—rights like Social Security benefits, child care tax credits, Family and Medical Leave to take care of loved ones, and COBRA healthcare for spouses and children. You know what having these rights will make gays? Full-fledged American citizens just like everyone else, with the freedom to pursue happiness and all that entails. Do the civil-rights struggles of the past 200 years mean absolutely nothing to you?
I don't object to Kluwe's deft deployment of the term "cockmonster" here, because it forcefully and justifiably ridicules the consciously rationalized premise of homophobes. (Myself, I would have framed the word in quotation marks since it is a term of art, so to speak.) It's too bad that this---Kluwe's actual point---is virtually invisible, and it's one purposeful obscenity neutered by the three gratuitous paragraphs that precede it.

The story could have been "NFL player treats politician, club owner to lesson in rights". Instead we have a patronizing story line, relegated to the liberal blog ghetto, about a pro athlete playing against the widely held public stereotypes of ignorance, homophobia, and conservatism. In other words, the story is mostly about Kluwe the celebrity and the novelty of his letter, and hardly at all about the thuggish and chilling machinations of whistledick state lawmaker Emmett C. Burns Jr. That's too bad: Kluwe coulda been a contender.

8 comments:

  1. "liberal bloggers everywhere all pumped by the open letter..."

    Well, there's your reach and impact. And sometimes shit is just funny-- even "whistledick" legislators.

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  2. Preaching to the choir isn't "reach," and links by on liberal blogs aren't "impact." Political blogs serve a purpose, but they're a closed system. An endlessly recursive tribal dialog doesn't drive political change, which is why the present-day Republican Party is failing and the present-day Democratic Party is unlikely to succeed. So we'll live with our political impasse until the asteroid, the plague, the famine, or whatever propels us toward the next phase.

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  3. One credible measure of "reach" is how much coverage it gets on Monday in the newspapers; or on TV news reports.

    I suspect a fair bit of reach by that measure, but we'll see.

    There's going to be a lot about the language in reporting, but the point of the letter is not going to be lost.

    I think you are wrong about the main point of the letter. The main point is the one he emphasized first -- the issue of a government official trying to restrain free speech. The second point is the one about the history of political opinion within sports, over the issue of racial segregation.

    You've highlighted the third issue as the main one; but everything I've seen on this indicates that Kluwe himself really is making his first and most important points front and center in the letter. He sees the issue of speech free from government restraint, and the value of free speech generally for social reform, as the primary points, which is why they are front and center in his letter as well.

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    1. Sylas: I didn't mean to say that was the main point of his letter (writing carelessly, late, trying to finish up), but that it comes across as his main point because it is the most cogently expressed one and he uses language that avoids trivializing his meaning. Also, it's outside of the numbered list, occupying a position a summation usually occupies in persuasive writing. In Kluwe's shoes, I would have stuck to one point in this particular letter for greatest impact. I doubt this will have any reach beyond the blogs unless Vikings owners or the league try to "sanction" him for speaking his mind.

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  4. ---So we'll live with our political impasse until the asteroid, the plague, the famine, or whatever propels us toward the next phase.---

    This is very true. Change hasn't come in this country in any other way. Wars, depressions, riots-- so far no plagues or asteroids. I can't think of a written persuasion that had any massive effect (if they really did) beyond Swift or Payne in the 18th century. You think the books by Voltaire or Marx or Hitler or Mao really reached the masses? No, Kluwe's missive was just plain funny, like Colbert calling Limbaugh a weather balloon. Now lets laugh whilst we await the aliens.

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    1. BO: I think that most people who think about the predicament of our civilization are considering too short of a time horizon. The West has had plenty of inflection points in the past several hundred years, including the Enlightenment, the French and Bolshevik revolutions, the World Wars. But I don't believe any of that amounts to the combined effects of the famines, plagues, Catholic schism, and the 100 Years War (mid 14th to 15th centuries). Those conditions knocked a thousand-year civilization off its evolutionary course, spawned capitalism, the Renaissance, and what have you.

      Not sure what you're saying about the impact of the written word, but you may be responding to an argument that I didn't make. The reason I don't think Kluwe's letter is very funny is because we've heard it all before, just with different pols and sassy commentators. I just suggested a more classical approach to public rhetoric for your consideration, the idea being to differentiate one's own words from the noise.

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  5. endlessly recursive tribal dialog

    Four perfect words.

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    1. Gurlitzer: when I used to shoot pictures on 36-exposure rolls of film and process the images myself, I considered myself a success if I ended up with one image that was worth enlarging, either to mount or publish. I think that the four-perfect-word standard for a blog post is probably not a bad goal to shoot for. Thanks for saying so.

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