The Trash Man
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
Comedian Bill
Maher can be funny, but I don't like him. He can't resist attacking
various religious leaders, as he did on the occasion of the visit
by Pope Benedict XVI.
It's not a
free-speech issue. It's an issue of good judgment and good taste,
or more specifically the lack thereof. Just because we can do something
or say something doesn't mean we should. I personally don't think
people's faith, whatever it is, should be mocked, nor their religious
leaders ridiculed.
Why give religious
leaders a free pass? Because it is a serious thing to cause someone
to lose his or her faith. It's not the same as learning that your
favorite movie star is a mean drunk or your favorite politician
is a crook. That kind of knowledge doesn't alter your worldview.
You already knew some people get mean when they drink and that some
politicians are crooks. You just pick someone else to support.
But suppose
you lose your faith in the existence of God? That alters your worldview
like an earthquake. It opens up the abyss of nothingness and meaninglessness.
It causes a person to question everything he or she ever learned
about the world and about good and evil. That's far too serious
an impact on a human being to be inflicted by some cynical comic
in search of a cheap laugh.
Ayn Rand,
who was herself an atheist, wrote a long passage in "The Fountainhead"
on how to wreck a society. One of the rules she cites is to teach
them (the people) to laugh at everything. Comics like Maher are
doing that. Not only do laughter and ridicule destroy the sacred,
they also destroy the hero and the admirable person. The goal of
such merciless humor is to arrive at a state of nihilism. That's
the spiritual death that precedes physical death.
Comedians
have plenty to laugh at. We humans can be very funny. There's pomposity
to puncture; inflated egos to deflate; foolish and ridiculous ideas
to ridicule. But leave the great people, the serious and good leaders,
the religious people alone. We Americans owe so much to George Washington,
I get angry when I see someone making cheap jokes about his false
teeth or using his image in some commercial advertisement. The same
thing goes for the flag.
My favorite
comedians are Bill Cosby, Larry Miller, Bob Newhart, Dave Gardner
and Dick Gregory. Good comedians can be funny without profanity
and vulgarity. Profanity and vulgarism always indicate a shortage
of brainpower. It doesn't take a lot of wit or ingenuity to say
"go f--- yourself." Legend has it that when a woman Winston
Churchill despised told him at a party, "If you were my husband,
I'd put poison in your coffee," Churchill replied, "If
you were my wife, I'd drink it."
One of my
favorite presidents, Calvin Coolidge, came home from church one
day, and his wife, who was ill, asked him what the sermon was about.
"Sin," said Coolidge. "Well, what did the minister
say about it?" she asked. "He was against it," Coolidge
replied. He was famous for brevity. When a woman at a state dinner
bet him she could make him say more than two words, Coolidge replied,
"You lose."
George Wallace,
a black comedian who is also a favorite of mine, tells about visiting
Taiwan. He buys a tape recorder and turns it over. The label on
the back says, "Made Around the Corner."
I
suspect people like Maher were bullied at school and turned to sarcasm
as a defense mechanism. Now, his slashing style of humor is his
turn to beat up on people. It's too bad we've become so "lawed
up" and "lawyered up" that you can no longer slap
a guy in the face without someone making a federal case of the incident.
I don't know the pope, and I'm not even a Catholic, but he deserves
to be defended against the kind of trash Maher is throwing out.
April
21, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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