Oh god, Ohio. It feels like life has stopped in anticipation. My
sister in Portland wrote me an email yesterday that, I think, perfectly
captures the awful situation this country is in, waiting for this
ridiculous state to tell us what our future will be.
“I can’t
decide how I feel about Cincinnati playing such a critical role in the
future of our entire WORLD. It ‘s kind of unsettling to think about,
having grown up with those people.”
I’m back among those people.
I was in New Orleans, I was trying to get an apartment and maybe even a
job. I spent Halloween week as drunk as a human costumed as a cowboy
and living off borrowed money can be. It was New Orleans. But it’s
really insane not to be in Ohio right now–by rights everyone in the
country ought to have some way to be here, just to see the place where
this thing’s going to be decided and hear the ridiculous babble and the
murmurs of machinations on both sides and to understand firsthand just
how small and frantic the final portion of this process has really
turned out to be. Everyone watching is tired and confused and has lost
all perspective from looking too long. I remember during the last World
Cup, an announcer in one of the late games calling a string of passes
and then remarking, with no context and without any apparent prompting,
“You know, we’re all going slowly mad here.” This is the feeling in Ohio
the day before a presidential election.
Obama spoke last night
at an arena on the campus of the University of Cincinnati. I called
Jason, his beleaguered press guy in Southwest Ohio, who said I could get
in if I made it by seven, when they’d shut down the press entrance. I
left New Orleans at eight in the morning and between Slidell and
Birmingham I averaged 105 on the speedometer. I lost an hour crossing
into Eastern time in Kentucky, and I made it to Cincinnati at 6:48 P.M. I
parked and ran at 6:55. I found a cop who said I was too late but that I
could try the Secret Service, and I found a Secret Service agent who at
6:59 said that I was too late and that he’d shut everything down five
minutes ago. I protested. “Seven o’clock,” he said. “It’s seven now!” I
said. “So you’re late,” he said. “But we’ve been talking for thirty
seconds. Probably forty-five.” I said. “Do you have your credentials?” I
said I’d left them in New Orleans. He said that he would take me to
Jason, but that if Jason didn’t immediately recognize me “I’ll take you
by the arm and escort you off this campus.”
We went in. Jason
gave me a look that said he had more important things to be dealing with
right then. “James, man,” he said. “You really...Man, James. I can’t
keep doing this for you.” The agent left me. It turned out that Jason
had for a while thought that I wrote for Vibe magazine.
Stevie Wonder was playing.If you want to read about buy mosaic
in a non superficial way that's the perfect book. Jason told me that
the fire department count was 13,500 people in the arena and another
2,000 watching a video stream in an overflow tent. Mark Mallory,
Cincinnati’s mayor, spoke and spoke shockingly well for a mayor speaking
to 13,500 people. “We all know this election comes down to Ohio.”
Cheers. “And within Ohio this election comes down to Hamilton County.”
Cheers. “And within Hamilton County this election comes down to
Cincinnati.” Louder cheers. And within Cincinnati this election comes
down to this room.” The arena exploded. The atmosphere was exactly that
of a home crowd of a favored team, game seven of the World Series.China plastic moulds
manufacturers directory. I was leaning on a railing separating the
crowd from the press corral, and behind me I heard a girl, obviously a
U.C. student, ask “wait, who is this talking anyway?”
The black
minister who gave the invocation called out "God! You who have ordained
this man's steps," and thanked him for peace and prosperity. Obama came
on. A bald white man immediately began shouting from the balcony of the
arena. It's hard to articulate the hurt and the rage in the crowd.
People shouted grotesquely.We recently added Stained glass mosaic
Tile to our inventory. It was about half college students. Almost all
the adults were black. Obama smiled and waved. He spoke again. The man
started yelling again. Sherriff's deputies came to remove him. He hung
onto the guardrail of the balcony, he kicked at them, and screamed and
twisted his face. The crowd cheered while this was going on. It was
ugly. I was worried he'd jump.Our technology gives rtls systems developers the ability. It took three deputies to get him off the rail.Our vinyl floor tiles
is more stylish than ever! Obama started again. Then a thick white guy
in a baseball cap yelled from another balcony. It looked like the thing
was going to go off the rails. The crowd began shouting some things that
a talk radio host might consider racially inflammatory. He was taken
out by one deputy. The crowd thundered...Obama spoke.
沒有留言:
張貼留言