Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Desperately Grand

I had two thoughts going through my mind today. The first was "Limerick's grand, isn't it?" and the second was "Jesus Ireland's a desperate country!" All sorts of funny memories have been coming back being back in cold, damp Limerick. Like how the girl who's survived numerous Minnesota winters is the one wearing the bulky wintercoat and shivering while the Irish are walking around in wind pants and t-shirts. And how it was so cold some nights back when I lived in Kilmurry Village that I'd sleep with my laptop on right next to my head so it would blow warm air my way and stop my nose from freezing off in the night. In fact, even with the laptop heating up my lap right now and a fire roaring in the hearth I'm still chilled. Seriously, desperate country. Limerick has changed a bit since I lived here. There's a lot of new buildings around, including two new low price supermarkets near the campus. That would have saved a lot of trouble back in the day, instead of driving to the bad side of town through the worst traffic jams to save 10 cent on a loaf of bread that would mold in 3 days anyway. There's a new building on the way to the city centre as well. I remember it being just a hulk of concrete that rose up into the air and none of us knew what in God's name it could be. Turns out it was supposed to be a hotel, but why they'd build a 10 story hotel there is an utter mystery. There's enough hotels near the campus as it is. The building has been finished since summer, but it's just sitting there empty. The hotel deal fell through and there've been no prospective buyers with the economy this bad. Across the road there were 7 cranes working on a large set of buildings, looking to be an expansion of the strip mall. My friend Brian said it was the first day he's seen workers there in weeks. They rarely work on it any more, and its probably destined to sit abandoned like the hotel. So long, Celtic Tiger. But my friend Shane said there's one solid benefit to the economic recession though. It was hard, while the economy was at its strongest, for artists and musicians to get respect for their craft. They were looked down upon for not finding a career and earning good money. Why be a starving artist when you can be a rich softwear engineer? But Shane has hope that, with the economic downturn will come a sort of renaissance of Irish artists and musicians, along with a community of support for what they do.

Limerick is grand though, when the sun is shining and there's a rainbow over the hills in the distance, and the grass is glittering green. Or when the streets are wet and shining in the night and people are out on the town. It's good to be back.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Dumb Down Nothing

My grandma is always clipping articles for me, and she had me read one from the Chicago Tribune right before I left for Europe. On the plane to Germany from Dublin I was listening to Lupe Fiasco and the words of "Dumb it Down" really hit me and I started thinking about that article and getting angrier and angrier until I just started writing. I didn't send this letter to the editor in, because I don't want it edited. But I thought I'd share it with the world anyway because its something I feel really passionate about.


Clarence Page's September 17th article in the Chicago Tribune urging Barack Obama to "dumb it down" if he wants to capture the American citizens' votes struck a disturbing chord in me. It reminded me of the words of another black Chicagoan, the musical artist Lupe Fiasco. In Fiasco's song "Dumb it Down" from his most recent album, The Cool, he discusses calls from fellow rappers, record executives, and critics to make his lyrics more applicable to the perceived common listener. "You're going over n****'s heads, Lu. They tellin' me that they don't feel you. We ain't graduate from school, n****. Them big words ain't cool, n****," the first chorus goes. Lupe echoes the voices of some in the rap community who believe songs with small, easy to understand words like "money" and "ho" are what fans want to hear. These fellow rappers have claimed Lupe's rhymes are too intelligent, his attitude too cultured. It was this same feeling I got from reading Mr. Page's article in the Tribune. I fear that readers of his article will join the bandwagon in condemning shows of intellect, condemning Barack Obama's attempt to bring competence back to the White House. Mr. Page claims that Americans are too stupid to understand Obama's goals for our country. I know that after eight years of President Bush, Britney Spears, and Paris Hilton, America's collective intelligence has been depleted. This miseducation of America has led to our decreased reputation abroad. Our people are viewed as complacent and mindless, and in some cases we have become as such. In this time of forgotten knowledge and widespread apathy, our salvation will not come through idiotic candidates who talk endlessly but say nothing. Instead, our country needs someone with a capable mind, who understands the complex issues which surround our nation daily and can be a role model, not for the elite, but for those seeking a higher level of education.

Furthermore, my fear is that Obama's "dumbing down" is exactly what white conservatives are hoping for. There is a fear, I think, that Obama's eloquence represents more that just a well-spoken politician. Obama's prominence in this race symbolizes a great change in the United States, threatening the current social order. Lupe Fiasco's second chorus corresponds closely to this phenomenon, as a white voice decries with increasing distress, "You done shedding too much light, Lu. You're making 'em wanna do right, Lu… They're trying to graduate from school, Lu. They're starting to think that smart is cool, Lu. They're trying to get up out the 'hood, Lu. I'll tell you what you should do: dumb it down." Obama has proven that he has the power to motivate people. His words, just as they are, coming from a self-made, educated son of an immigrant, who has shown a strong commitment to organizing communities, have already created a world-wide movement of support. His words, just as they are, have given hope and power to people who have been living without those things for generations. But to the current regime, Obama's power to mobilize those with little power represents a threat to the normalcy of the lives they have been allowed to live. They are a threat to the system that has continuously held down those of color and lower socioeconomic status, making the nation believe that is just the way things are. The current regime is beginning to realize that they can no longer get away with the level of ignorance they have been allowed to exist under these past eight years. But they will stop at nothing to turn Obama's words of promise and hope against those he aims to reach. Mr. Page's call for Obama to simplify his message so those effortless and lazy citizens amongst us can understand a few words is not helping the situation in the slightest. So I urge Mr. Obama, like Lupe Fiasco whose album has gone gold, to flatly refuse. Dumb down nothing. It is YOU, American citizen, who needs to wise up.