Friday

April 26th, 2024

Musings

Which side are you on, if I may ask

Garrison Keillor

By Garrison Keillor

Published March 15, 2022

Which side are you on, if I may ask
The war is far away and then it is up close.

I write a parody of Frost's "Stopping By Woods" in which the man stops to pee and out of nowhere I remember the photograph in the Times of a Ukrainian family trying to escape the Russian advance, hurrying through a small town to catch a train to somewhere, a young boy, girl, mother, a family friend, carrying packs and a dog in a carrier, towing a suitcase, and here they lie freshly dead, murdered by Russian mortars shelling civilians, no military engagement nearby, and the image stays with you, the friend face-up, the boy and girl lying on their sides, and who will tell the father who is probably fighting somewhere, who will bury them, who will commemorate these senseless horrible deaths?

The Minneapolis paper ran a story about the Times's decision to run the picture but didn't run the picture, which isn't gruesome or bloody, but simply terribly real. Four people suddenly killed for no reason except to cause suffering. The Russians have shelled power plants, hospitals, refugees, and war crimes are fundamental to Putin's policy, and the photograph was the Times's way to show that. The picture is clear in my mind days later.

I'm at an age where all the people who might've reassured me about this war are long dead and so I steady myself. Most of what agitated us a month ago is gone and forgotten, wiped out by the Russian tanks. We're done talking about gender pronouns and woke tropes and what matters are the women and children fleeing for their lives, no idea what lies ahead, just the thought that Ukraine must survive and the civilized world must punish the war criminals.

And then, after some restless nights, you get one whole night of good sleep and awaken in gratitude and make coffee and read that the Senate has unanimously passed a law against lynching as a hate crime. It only applies here, not to the Russians in Ukraine, but the shock of seeing the words "unanimous" and "Senate" in one sentence — what will happen next? Will the American people — some of them? A fraction? Ten percent? — demand that cheap political blather be given a rest for a while and let us form a united front out of love of our country at its best in crisis?

Inflation is a cost of COVID, along with a million dead: we can game this for political advantage, meanwhile the nation faces the challenge of standing up for our fundamental decent democratic values. We've fought wars that we inherited from colonialism, but this is different.

The Russian people are in the grip of a madman who sits at the end of a forty-foot table, knowing that he might well wind up hanging from a lamppost one of these days. The difference between his rule and our democracy could not be clearer.

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I was looking all over for my phone the other day after it disappeared in plain sight and I bumbled around in a state of confusion — I come from the era when the phone was in the kitchen, at the end of a cord plugged into a wall, and so I'm not used to the free-floating phone, and my Beloved, about whom I've written numerous sonnets, saw me and said, "You look lost," which is a harsh thing to say to an old fundamentalist, it brings back memories of gospel sermons about End Times and the need to repent.

This present tribulation in Europe is a powerful message to America about the seriousness of our situation. Our long-running cultural "wars" are an amusement, the MeToo vigilantes, but now the Cold War has resumed for real, and the lines are clearly drawn between Western democracy and authoritarian regimes.

They stand prepared to wipe out individual freedom and rewrite history, and it's time to decide which side you are on.

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Garrison Keillor is an author and radio personality. His latest book is "The Lake Wobegon Virus: A Novel". Buy it at a 33% discount! by clicking here. Sales help fund JWR.


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