A recent HBO Documentary reprised the career of Herb Block,
editorial cartoonist of the Washington Post for the major portion of 72 years spent
toiling amidst the ink pots and sketch pads on his way to achieving legendary
status as a media giant.
Herbloc, as he signed his pieces, was awarded three Pulitzer
Prizes and shared a fourth, along with numerous cartoon industry awards, honorary
degrees from Colby College and Harvard, plus the Presidential Freedom Medal.
In a career that extended from the Crash to the Millennium, he
covered presidents from Hoover to the onset of Bush 43, plus all the political
newsmakers and some of the celebrities of his time. He never saw himself as anything other than a
journalistic satirist, someone who “kicked the big boys, who kicked the
underdogs.”
The takeaway from the
Documentary was this Herbloc quote: “The
worst part about corruption is the acceptance of corruption.”
If he were alive, Herbloc’s response to today’s corruption
would be easy to predict. He would scorn
the hideous pederasts of the Catholic Church.
He would flay the Department of Homeland Security for its continuous
violations of the Constitution.
Likewise, the CIA; never accountable, and nefarious at Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib,
and only-they-know-where else. He would
ridicule the NRA for its ludicrous distortion of the Second Amendment. He would revisit the vainglorious allegiance of
the Bush Supreme Court to the right wing in the State of Florida’s fix of the
2000 presidential election. And its
weird interpretations in the Citizens’
United case. Herbloc would expose the
manifest danger of Big Business’ hold on Congress, the endemic rape of women in
the Armed Forces, the fraud of enlistment bounties perpetrated by general officers,
commissioned officers, non-coms and
enlisted men of the Armed
Forces, the uncontained greed of banking and the rest of the tentacles
comprising the financial industry, the hypocrisy of Sun Belt farmers and food
processors who have for generations illegally smuggled aliens for use as cheap
labor only to discard them when they were no longer useful, leaving them to
fend for themselves, old and broken and still alien.
Or would Herbloc, if he were alive today, be permitted to do
any of this?
The late Gore Vidal, author, playwright, and essayist, took
to referring to this country as the National Security State, its government
enmeshed in a military-industrial complex, its media muted by corporate
ownership which is heavily invested in the industrial component of the
military-industrial complex. Vidal, who
revered the Constitution, and the historic role of the media in safe-guarding
its principles, said this: “No first
world country has ever eliminated so entirely from its media all
objectivity…much less dissent.”
Without Herbloc and Gore Vidal, the lone dissenter of note
is Edward Snowden, a twenty-something former employee of a government
contractor, who revealed world-wide spying practices of the U.S. National
Security Agency, including unconstitutional spying on the American public.
Snowden, of course, is a fugitive in exile.
2 comments:
Things aren't the best these days. I guess the only way to get of corruption is to start with ourselves. Nice work and where' the new her berbloc? - Johnny Pecos
I meant, 'get RID of corruption. - Johnny Pecos
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