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Politics Politics Feature

GADFLY: Let’s Hear It for Barristers on the Barricades!

I sat, dumbfounded, as I watched a demonstration, en masse,
in Pakistan against the oppressive rule by that country’s strongman (and our
“ally”), Pervez Musharraf, by a group of outraged citizens. Who were they? Not
members of the typically rebellious masses (i.e., college students, factory
workers, union members, political dissidents, etc.), but a group of LAWYERS!

How could this be, I wondered. Lawyers (a status I proudly
claim) are usually part of the cosseted elite, beneficiaries of the status quo,
recipients of the government’s favors, and cogs in the wheels of justice,
government and societal processes in general. More often than not they go along
to get along as part of the power structure. They are usually well-paid,
respected (stereotype-driven prejudice to the contrary notwithstanding) and
comfortable members of the elite. Yet here they were, raucously demonstrating,
throwing rocks at (and

being beaten
by) the police, and vociferously protesting the policies of
their government. Right on, brothers! Lawyers just don’t do this, I thought.
It’s contrary to their delicate constitutions, and their self-interest.

As it turns out, the Pakistani lawyers were righteously
indignant about Musharraf’s “emergency” measures, dictatorially imposed on the
country, including the suspension of the country’s constitution, cancellation of
elections, the arrest and detention of the country’s chief justice, the closure
of privately-owned broadcast media and the replacement of many of the country’s
high court’s judges with ones more to the dictator’s liking. Wow, I thought;
this sounds vaguely reminiscent of what’s happening right here, in the good ole
US of A. Bush has all but suspended the constitution (i.e., eliminating habeas
corpus, warrantlessly eavesdropping on American citizens, engaging in torture
and stacking the Supreme Court, and the inferior courts, with his ideological
kinsmen). But he doesn’t see the parallels. Indeed, in

a moment of supreme irony
, Bush’s press secretary said (in reference to
Musharraf’s actions) that it was not reasonable to restrict constitutional
freedoms in the name of fighting terrorism.

Bush has relied on compliant (if not complicit) lawyers in
the justice department (headed, until recently, by the ultimate kiss ass,
Alberto Gonzales), to tell him what he wants to hear when it comes to bending or
breaking various laws and the constitution. And now it appears we will be
treated to another Bush lawyer/sycophant at the helm of that department, Michael
Mukasey, who

refused to say that a favored torture tactic, water boarding, is
unconstitutional
. Nonetheless, can you imagine lawyers in this country
taking to the streets to protest our strongman’s infringements of
constitutional and human rights? I know I can’t. And yet, no one is in a better
position to protest our dictator’s policies, or has more at stake, than this
country’s legal establishment.

Musharaf has obviously taken a page from Shakespeare in
dealing with Pakistan’s lawyers. It is a favorite Shakespearean verse, often
quoted by people who hold lawyers in less than high regard, that, paraphrasing,
“the first thing we should do is kill all the lawyers.” I’ve heard this line
many times, once even from a now-deceased federal judge who uttered it,
astonishingly enough, in the courthouse elevator as several lawyers got on to
ride to the courtroom floor. I reminded him, as politely as I could, that in
addition to being a judge, he was also a lawyer and would probably go with the
rest of us (indeed, probably before us) if his prescription were to be followed.
But, the quote from Shakespeare is never cited in the context the Bard wrote it.
In fact, Dick the Butcher, a character in Henry VI, utters the remark as
part of a plot by another character in the play, Jack Cade, a rabble-rouser and
pretender to the throne of England, to take down the government. Eliminating
lawyers, according to Dick, was a necessary part of a successful revolt. Dick
and Perez obviously share the same philosophy.

In this country, far from protesting the abuses of law and
the constitution practiced by the current administration, lawyers have
shamelessly capitulated to, if not facilitated, the excesses of the Bush
administration. Whether it was John Yoo, the Justice Department lawyer (who
John Ashcroft referred to as “Dr. Yes”
for his willingness to tell the White
House what it wanted to hear), who opined that whatever the president wanted to
do in a time of war (including torture) was permissible, whether or not it was
prohibited by statute or the constitution, or Scooter Libby (remember him?) who
outed a covert CIA agent in the service of his own “Dick the Butcher,” or now
Mr. Mukasey, who appears ready to immunize from prosecution for war crimes the
agents of our government who may have engaged in torture, and their superiors
(up to and including Bush) who authorized it, American lawyers (with some

notable exceptions
) have been stunningly, deafeningly silent in the face of
the Bush administration’s abuses . And lawyers like Arlen Specter, Chuck Schumer
and Lindsay Graham (who also happen to be U.S. senators), have, by approving
Mukasey’s nomination, even as they professed outrage at his unwillingness to
declare water boarding torture, have ignominiously shamed their profession by
carrying the administration’s water on that nomination.

American lawyers have stood by and watched Bush nominate
candidates for the Supreme Court who swore, under oath, that they would honor
the principle of “stare decisis” (precedent), and then proceeded, in several
cases,

to violate that oath and decimate long-standing precedents
. They stood by in
2000 when the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Bush vs. Gore,

one of the most political decisions in its 200 plus year existence
(with the
possible exception of its DredScott pro-slavery opinion), which

robbed the winner of that election of his rightful victory
. Sadly, American
lawyers have frequently been more a part of the problem in the decimation of the
rule of law in this country than part of the solution.

So I stand with my Pakistani brothers in law, in spirit if
not in body, and say, “I support your cause, because it is just.” But call me a
hypocrite, because I just don’t think I’ll be throwing any rocks (at least not
literally), manning any barricades, or suffering any police beatings over here
protesting Pervez Bush’s violations of the constitution or the rule of law over
here, anytime soon. When all is said and done, I’m afraid I’m just another
proud, and chicken, member of the establishment.

Categories
News

Tucson Writer Visits Memphis — Not Impressed

A writer from the Tucson Citizen visited Memphis recently and gave a less-than-glowing report on her trip to the Bluff City:

Downtown Memphis has an eerie ghost-town feel, other than the late-night music scene on the famed Beale Street. The street that gave birth to the blues had action on a Tuesday night but, frankly, probably not that much more than Tucson’s downtown club scene.

This column is not a slam on Memphis, but rather an observation of how Tucson’s touted downtown revitalization efforts may not be a guarantee of swarming masses of people all the time.

Okay, it was the off-season in Memphis, mid-October, middle of the week. But let’s face it, Tucson has an offseason that runs, what, nine or 10 months?

Memphis has three downtown trolley routes, all stocked with vintage streetcars, many from New Orleans and Australia. During my weekday rides, there were typically three to six riders aboard and at most 10 passengers …

Read the rest of Teya Vitu’s article at the Citizen website.

Categories
News

A Fresh Look at Ernest Withers

“On Christmas Day, 1954, an inebriated young singer named John Marshall Alexander Jr. took a break between sets at the City Auditorium in Houston, Texas, and played a game of Russian roulette, pulling the trigger on a revolver—first on his girlfriend, Olivia Gibbs, then on her friend, Mary Carter. The gun failed to go off. The third time, when he pointed the gun at himself, the hammer finally fell on a bullet in the chamber, killing Alexander—a.k.a. ‘Johnny Ace’, instantly.

“‘Big Mama’ Thornton was a witness to Ace’s death, but the name of the witness on his death certificate when Ace was buried on Jan. 2, 1955 was Ernest C. Withers …

“In the late spring of 2004, I was wandering down Beale Street in Memphis when I happened to look above a door and notice a faded, torn piece of paper that had the words ‘Ernest C. Withers, photographer,’ scrawled on it …”

Photographer Eric Meola has written a moving and evocative story about the late Ernest Withers. Read it here.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

FROM MY SEAT: In Which Our Online Sports Columnist Reaches a Milestone

A weekly
columnist must be careful in measuring the life span of his or her work. The
math is precisely the opposite of the way we examine a car’s “life”: it’s the
age, not the mileage. This being my 300th column in this corner of cyberspace, it’s not so much the nice round number that matters, but all that’s happened to the sports world — and naturally, my world — since Week 1 back in February 2002.

Allow me
a few lines of self-indulgence (or bewildered attempts at perspective):

• “From
My Seat” has now been a part of my life longer than was high school or college.

• I’ve
got to be careful in calling this space “my baby,” as it happens to be older
than my actual daughter, Elena.

• While
I’ve spent most of my 30s wondering when I’d finally find inspiration for my
first book, I’ve now written — cumulatively — more than 180,000 words for a website that archives the copy. Not exactly a leather-bound bestseller, but let’s just say my keyboard is ready for the real deal.

Among the attractions that brought me to sports in the first place was the beauty of
numbers, and how they reflect — maybe even illuminate — the games we watch and
the athletes we cheer. St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony LaRussa reduces baseball
games down to the cold, hard numbers we all read each morning in the newspaper.
A win goes in the left column, a loss in the right. Add them up at season’s end,
and the best teams will reveal themselves.

Which
has me considering some Memphis sports numbers, less than or greater than 300,
but all of significance over the last five years.

• 0 —
Number of coaching changes by the University of Memphis football and men’s
basketball programs. The current seven-year stretch without a change atop the U
of M’s flagship teams is the longest since Zach Curlin coached BOTH programs
from 1924 to 1936. There’s much to like about stability, particularly in the
fickle world of big-time college sports.

• 66 —
Number of wins by the Tiger basketball team over the last two seasons.

• 61 —
Number of Tiger basketball wins over the FOUR seasons before John Calipari
arrived in 2000.

• 6,026
— Number of rushing yards by former Tiger All-America DeAngelo Williams from
2002 to 2005.

• 6,039
— Combined total of yards by the Tigers’ leading runners over the NINE seasons
before Williams arrived on campus.


633,129 — Number of tickets sold by the Memphis Redbirds in 2007, the lowest
total in eight years at AutoZone Park, and a figure that has the Redbird brass
scrambling for new promotional ideas for 2008.


397,339 — Highest baseball attendance in Memphis history before AutoZone Park
was opened in 2000. The Redbirds have been pitiful on the field for some time
now, but baseball in the Bluff City is alive and well. Wait till the Cardinals
finally fuel their farm system.

• 3 —
Number of former Sam’s Town 250 winners competing in this year’s NASCAR Nextel
Cup Chase for the Championship (Martin Truex Jr., Clint Bowyer, and Kevin
Harvick). The ST250 is the most underrated sporting event in the Mid-South, and
I’m not sure what’s second.

Numbers,
of course, only scratch the surface in the stories the sports world provides.
Watching Anthony Reyes shut down the Round Rock Express one night, then win Game
1 of the World Series merely a few weeks later provided a rather direct link
between AutoZone Park and the St. Louis Cardinals’ 10th world championship.

If you
saw Darius Washington miss those two free throws that cost his Tigers — his city
— the 2005 Conference USA tournament championship and an NCAA tournament berth,
there’s no number to represent the heartbreak . . . or the courage Washington
showed in leading his team to the Elite Eight a year later.

And how
about the taken-for-granted number search Memphis sports fans get to enjoy every
winter now: our place in the NBA standings. Right before our eyes, the Bluff
City went big league! This column space came into being as the Grizzlies wrapped
up their first season at The Pyramid. May it still be here when the first
championship parade turns from Beale to Front Street.

Categories
Special Sections

Noted Memphis-born Dancer Lowell Dennis Smith Dies

Lowell Dennis Smith, a ballet dancer and teacher who for some years was a principal dancer with the Dance Theatre of Harlem and later was director of the company’s school, died October 22 at UCLA Medical Center. He was 56.

The cause of death was lung cancer, said his longtime friend Rick Frey. Smith had been dividing his time between Los Angeles and New York City.

Born in 1951 in Memphis, he studied dance at the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem and then performed as a dancer and actor in Memphis and later with the Eglevsky Ballet on Long Island, New York.

He joined the Dance Theatre of Harlem in the late 1970s and danced with the company for 17 years. One of his best known roles was as Stanley Kowalski in a dance adaptation by Valerie Bettis of the Tennessee Williams play “A Streetcar Named Desire.”

Read more about Smith at the Los Angeles Times website.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

CBS News: Huckabee is Gaining Ground

CBS News online takes a look at former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee’s campaign. An excerpt:

[Huckabee] would seem to be a natural to attract the support of social conservatives in the Republican presidential contest.

But the Baptist minister who wows audiences with a mix of down-home folksiness and traditional values has spent most of the year struggling to gain a foothold in the race for the GOP nomination.

Lately, however, there are signs that Huckabee may be catching on.

In the latest Iowa poll by the American Research Group, Huckabee is within striking distance of Mitt Romney, whom he trails 27 percent to 19 percent. Other polls in Iowa, host of the first statewide nominating contests on Jan. 3, also show Huckabee gaining ground …

Read it all at CBSNews.com.

Categories
News

Magic and Memphis, Along With a Little Bit of Music

Former Memphian Katori Hall’s play, “Hoodoo Love,” opened at the Cherry Lane Theatre in New York this week. The New York Times weighed in with a review:

“Ms. Hall casts a sprawling net around her tale, hauling in a fair number of cliches, some rather arbitrary plot points and some strong moments in her right-minded but ambling opus.

“The play, which was workshopped in Cherry Lane’s Mentor Project under the eye of the MacArthur Fellowship-winning playwright Lynn Nottage, is really about a woman involved with two men: a blues singer and ladies’ man named Ace of Spades, and her huckster no-account brother, Jib. Rather than being honest with Ace, she turns to the hoodoo of her elderly neighbor, Candy Lady, to bind him to her.”

Read the entire review at the NYTimes website.

Categories
News News Feature

Who Should You REALLY Vote For For President?

Sure, you may have a presidential candidate all picked out, but does he or she really represent your views? The Glass Booth organization has created a quiz — a series of questions on issues and attitudes — that might just surprise you.

Check out the quiz here. And don’t blame us if you find out you’re a Mike Gravel fan.

Categories
Music Music Features

Guy Sebastian’s Memphis Album is Out

Regular visitors to this website know that we occasionally get obsessed with somebody, i.e. David Gest, Ginnifer Goodwin, and most weirdly, Australian Idol singer Guy Sebastian, who a few weeks back recorded an album here in Memphis.

We became intriqued by the whole concept and began running excerpts from “Guy’s Memphis Diary.” Now, the album is out and Guy’s apparently taking Stax greats Steve Cropper, Duck Dunn, and Steve Potts on tour with him.

You can read more about all at Guy’s website. Or not.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

East Carolina Outguns Memphis, 56-40

If you like offense, this was the game for you. East Carolina ran up 641 yards (491 on the ground) and 56 points to blow by the University of Memphis at the Tigers’ homecoming game at the Liberty Bowl Saturday.

The Tigers’ QB Martin Hankins threw for more than 400 yards and four touchdowns, but it wasn’t enough for defense-challenged Memphis, who couldn’t stop ECU running back Chris Johnson, who rushed for 301 yards.

For stats and more, check out SI.com.