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By Jim Hightower, AlterNet
AlterNet
Thursday, Jun 13, 2013
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| Photo Credit: Olivier/Shutterstock.com |
Ironically, June is both the month of the summer solstice and of America's biggest annual blizzard.
I
don't mean a weather event blowing in from the Arctic, but a merciless
storm of words blowing from the mouths of commencement speakers at high
school and college graduation events.
This year, I was one of the
blowhards, the chief speechifyer for some 260 graduates of my old high
school in Denison, Texas. While it was an honor to be chosen as their
ceremonial yakker, it's also a truly humbling experience, since I was
the person that the degree recipients and their 5,000 supporters in the
audience were least interested in.
Plus, commencement
pontificators are expected to offer some sage advice to guide the grads
as they moved on, and I was all out of sage. So, I resorted to three
admonitions I once learned from a West Texas cowboy: "Never squat with
your spurs on;" "Always drink upstream from the herd;" and "Speak the
truth -- but ride a fast horse."
Then I hit them with my main
message: Now that you've had a dozen years in the classroom and earned
this important credential, DON'T BE AN IDIOT! I used "idiot" in the same
way that ancient Greeks originally meant it. Idiotes were not people
with low-watt brains, but individuals who cared only about themselves,
refusing to participate in public efforts to benefit the larger
community -- to serve the common good.
The Greeks, I told the students, considered such people selfish, contemptible and stupid ... and so should we.
The
encouraging news is that this crop of graduates from Denison High
nodded in agreement. After all, they've seen that the idiots are running
things in Washington and on Wall Street, and the youngsters seem to be
hungry for less selfishness and more togetherness as our society's
guiding ethic.
To stress the rich possibilities of a society
working together, I noted that any of us who rise in life do so because
many helping hands give us a lift. While this night of celebration
belonged to the students, the achievement being celebrated belonged to
the whole community -- the families, friends, teachers, taxpayers and
others who were part of the lifting.
I told them about Harrell's
hardware store, located near my home in Austin, Texas. It's an
independent un-chained, small- box store with a knowledgeable staff
willing to help customers figure out how to do most any project.
Harrell's slogan is, "Together, we can do it yourself."
Like most
commencement droners, I urged the bright faces beaming from beneath
their funny square hats to do "Big Things" in life. But my point was
that bigness cannot be measured in terms of personal wealth and self
aggrandizement (the narcissistic ethic presently being preached and
practiced by today's corporate and political elite). Rather, only by
joining with others in democratic actions can you achieve something
bigger than yourself.
As Bill Moyers noted in an earlier
graduation speech: "Civilization is not natural. It's an accomplishment
of culture. It is not just 'what happens,' it is what we make happen."
The key word there is "we," for no "I" is big enough to do the job. But
together, as Harrell's hardware says, "we can do it."
The proof
of this was sitting right in front of me at the graduation ceremonies.
When I was in their place in 1961, every single person in my class and
the audience was a white Anglo. Our schools and town were totally
segregated. On this night, though, the ceremony taking place on a
beautiful night in the football stadium was a glory of Anglo, African,
Latino, Arab, Asian and other ancestries.
Denison became a
better, more civilized place only because so many people (including some
of the grayheads in this audience) had dared to stand together to make
it happen. The class of 2013 applauded this ethic of social progress,
and they gave me hope that they and others like them will pull our
country together again, e pluribus unum.
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