Monday, February 8, 2010

The One About Abortion

When I was sixteen or seventeen, I was part of a group called Junior State of America. We held little debates at school, we traveled to a convention, lots of kids got drunk and felt up and danced to terrible music. It was a hoot.

During said convention, I was asked to take place in a number of debates, some scheduled (I prepared for my strict constructionist constitutional debate for three weeks) and some were discussions where ad hoc statements of support for one position or another. After obliterating the diminutive Indian student in the constitutional thing (he was actually tough, though, but I got under his skin, funny story, ask me some day), I saw everybody and their mom rushing for this huge ball room in a larger section of the hotel holding the conference, so I followed the pack squeezed my way in.

Inside were probably three hundred teenagers. At the front of the room was a raised dais, with two long tables draped with white cloth, each having five seats separated by a mic-wielding podium between them. The debate taking place was one about abortion, and it'd just started moments before I got there. Notepad in hand, I listened and jotted down notes, cautiously working my way near the line for people to speak after the main debaters got done. I should note now that this is all the preparation I had, as I'd not thought about the topic beforehand.

To be fair, the pro-lifers were kicking a lot of behind in the debate, looking to be probably four points ahead on most scorecards. Weaving biblical references with biographical tidbits about founding fathers, they presented a much better show and story than their opponents, three girls and two guys, all of whom looked shaken like they'd eaten some bad shellfish. After the main arguments and rebuttals were presented, I was called up as the first audience speaker.

I stood behind the podium, my lips near the mic, wearing a baseball cap tilted to a 45 degree angle off my forehead, a bolo tie, a gray cardigan sweater and gray cargo pants (What do you want, it was 1990, Chubb Rock was jumping on the scene?). I held my words for a moment, letting the tension build in the room as people murmured, all eyes on this weird Black teenager on stage, before I finally spoke.
"It is my studied opinion that the government should keep its damned hands off of women's bodies," I said simply. Letting it hang, I was only slightly surprised when the cheers and clapping and standing and what not began. I wasn't able to continue for probably fifty seconds as people yelled back and forth and the applause finally died down.

"I am not a woman," I continued. "I would hope this comes as no surprise to any of you." (I glanced at a girl who was standing in the back of the room. I'd made out with her at the dance the night before and she giggled at my regard, her hands flying up to cover her mouth) "I don't know much more than the basics any teenaged boy would know about a woman's body, but I am absolutely certain that I don't want any woman making decisions for things that happen to my body. Therefore, with all due respect to the distinguished panelists here ..." (there I gestured to the pro-lifers, all but one of whom were male) "neither I nor any of these guys deserve any opinion in this discussion."

More standing, more applause, blood everywhere. The pro-choice team looked relieved, I actually heard one whisper "thank you."

"So let's start with that," I said. "I'm all in favor of considered and contemplative debate. I believe this is an important issue and respect that many people have strong feelings about it. However, in the same way none of us can vote due to disqualifications of age, I believe that nobody with my gender assignment gets to weigh in on this topic. Unlike voting, I will never grow the requisite experience to have a say here, and neither will most of these guys ..." Again I gestured to the pro-lifers, and the laughs from the crowd were loud and lengthy.

"Now, once we have the people who will be actually affected by the outcome of this discussion as the sole participants, maybe they can come up with something reasonable. My mother always tells me girls are smarter anyway. But for me, or most of the presenters to my right, or most elected officials, or most members of the Supreme Court, to have the unmitigated gall to even believe they deserve to debate this ... well, I don't know about you, ladies, but I find that pretty damned insulting. So, to that end, I'll yield the rest of my time, and hope only people who deserve to discuss this can find their voice. Thank you."

I walked off the stage to thunderous applause. The stairs were rushed by dozens -- mostly girls (yes, I planned a lot of this as I was approaching the stage) -- as the moderator (another guy) struggled to retain control. To be honest, I didn't even stay for the rest of the debate. I left with a group of people -- six girls (including the one from the night before), a guy I knew who came with my team and another guy we met who we thought was cool -- and we all went to get something to eat together and discuss politics and policy.

I was told the original debaters got closing statements. When I read the report on who won what the next day, pro-life went down by a margin of two points.

In my mind, all was as it should be.

So, in case you're asking, here's my position on abortion: women should be able to do whatever the heck they want. Anything I might believe they should or should not do, anything I feel about when life begins, anything I think about what is or isn't murder ... sophistry. None of that matters. It's a woman's body. It's a woman's decision. End of argument.

As with all things, your mileage may vary.

Playing (Music): "La Vie Boheme" from Rent

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Sunday, July 19, 2009

Blog Fu: Iron Monkey

The Hundred and Four* will, among many other purposes, serve as an information clearinghouse. The ancient art of blog-fu helps with that, practiced by many but mastered by few, and which I practiced for years aggregating content for CBR's Comic Reel column (now run by the illustrious and praiseworthy Erik Amaya, who I did my best to train in the Sith ways).

Let us begin with a quote from the brilliant but cancelled TV show Kings (much beloved of Entertainment Weekly's Marc Bernardin)** ...

Jessie Shepherd: "People with destinies, things don't go well for them. They die old and unhappy, or young and unfinished."
Are you sitting comfortably? Good, then I'll begin:

- Let's start with some news about living in the future. Like what? How about a computer that can read lips, which is a wonderful advance for all the Big Brother/Dick Cheney wet dreams of capturing information that wants to be free?

Not far enough for you? How about scientists creating a star right here on earth? Yes, that sounds outlandishly unsafe, but that's probably part of the appeal. Kind of a Venkman and Spengler sort of thing, doncha think?***

Why there's even practice for a mission to Mars, because so many of us are desperate to get away from this potentially godforsaken rock that people are lining up to take a ride even close to space? Perhaps they can see the writing on the wall about how it will all end**** and are trying to plan ahead like a macro-scale game of Civilization 2. Hard to say.

- Let's move on. Remember Friendster? Few people do.***** The numbers seem to indicate that MySpace is learning some hard lessons about obsolescence. Sure, 70 million users is far from chicken feed, but trends being what they are ... in my own limited experience, I'm seeing more young people return to or adhere to MySpace (judging from the customers at bars where I host karaoke -- more on that in a bit******) whereas more adults in their late 20s and onwards are Facebooking it up. Twitter? It plays by no rules I've seen (with its tools for power users, artists using it as an alternative revenue stream and even ways to share music, plus everybody knows I love Twitpic), and in my own idiosyncratic experiences, has kept the annoying outages to a dull roar.

Anyway, Rupert Murdoch-powered MySpace soon afterwards announced a big staffing cut, which makes MySpace look like a wounded elephant. Only important because our virtual homes are becoming more of where we spend our lives and interact, so looking at the management becomes relevant for a grasp of the zeitgeist. Developing ...

- Speaking of battling multi-million dollar companies, Google is ready to get into the OS game and Micro$oft strikes back with a web-based, free Office option. Whaaaat? It's all true.

Google's hippie PR and egalitarian image belies a corporate juggernaut, but one far less obvious and mean-spirited in its rapaciousness than the rowdies in Redmond. As a lifelong Mac evangelist*******, any attack on the House that Gates Built, Stole and Oppressed His Way Into******** gets a cheer from me, and this fight is a battle for the way people think digitally, so it's surely worth keeping an eye on.

- Fnord.

- What else is up? Well, of course that Philadelphia swimming pool incident proved that, Obama or not, plus le change, plus le meme chose (or as Talib Kweli once said, "conditions in the hood don't change with the president"). Racism? Discrimination? Prejudice? Alive and well even far from the fields of Dixie. One has to look no farther than the Inglewood police department (which, fun fact, is in a predominantly Black city, ha ha, funny old life) to see that in action every single day. Thanks to Boston's Dart Adams for the heads up on that.

- Don't think about escaping into music, pal. Not when those bastards at the RIAA wanna fine a 32-year-old single mother eighty thousand dollars a song for downloading. What's the total on that? Brace yourself -- one point nine two millon US freaking dollars. That had to be typed out so it'd be clear that the number of zeroes wasn't a typo. On a daily basis, you can see LAPD cops running red lights sans sirens or not using hands free devices to speak on cell phones as they drive. But they have more guns than you. Bend over and relax your muscles, it's easier that way.

- To quote the erstwhile Blade, "bu-bu-bu-but wait, it gets worse!" In "fan fiction goes horribly, horribly wrong" news, Eli Stone visionary and Green Lantern scriptwriter Marc Guggenheim is -- wait for it -- writing a new comic book for Dynamite Entertainment -- brace yourself -- based on Galactica 1980.

Get up off the floor. Yes, you read that correctly. This is really happening. Yes, someone thinks this is a good idea. Spirit help us all, yes, someone will probably buy this. What's next, a comic book adaptation of Hell Comes to Frogtown by Robert Kirkman? Listen, people -- some things just need to die. I know we all love the nostalgia wave ... well, some of us. Anyway, some things don't need to come back.

If Guggenheim creates a work of such awe-inspiring wonder that Eisner Awards will cloud around it like a butterfly crown,********* I will let Marc Guggenheim punch me in the stomach. Chances are, this is a catastrophically bad idea, even in the hands of a writer as skilled as this one. Oy.

- "Damn, Hannibal, you're awfully negative!" Actually, no I'm not. I have a beautiful pregnant wife and an adorable, brilliant stepdaughter. I have a job where I make good money and I'm good at it. I even recently closed a deal to bring one of my novels to life as a comic book and possibly an animated project as well. Despite a lot more gray hairs than I ever expected and quite possibly being clinically insane, I am essentially fine and dandy.********** The rest of you seem to be almost irreparably f***ed up. Don't blame me as I hold up a mirror to your lunacy.

How do I illustrate the new wonder of me, the one that makes so many so sick to see me so fly that NASA calls me for directions? I do it by sharing love, with all of you. How do I do that? With karaoke Skeletor drinking Pabst Blue Ribbon (thanks to Robot 6 for that one). I give you the opposite of gangsta. With you I share the statistics of red shirts, give you a peek at the awesomeness of a Death Star grill and let you know about the world's largest air sex competition.

I'm a giver. It's not my fault so many of you are cuckoo for crack-o-puffs.

In the end, who should you blame? I believe this*********** closes the book on that discussion.

Behave.

Or else.

FOOTNOTES:

* = Yes, I will bold the name everywhere. That's consistency of style. Learn it, live it, love it.

** = It's kind of scary how gay he is for that show.

*** = Yes, Ghostbusters 3 is happening, and you probably can't do anything to stop it. I'm sorry. Well, I would be, if I cared. Maybe.

**** = Would you have preferred accelerated heat death instead?

***** = Go on, Google "love" and "friendster." It's sad.

****** = Maybe not today. Maybe not even on this blog. But soon.

******* = My 15" Macbook Pro is called, by virtually everyone who knows it, "the precious."

******** = Please don't forget that the entire Windows OS is stolen from an early build of Mac OS, and then bloatwared to death. After Microsoft Word 5.1, that company hasn't done a single thing right.

********* = Like that call back to Kings? That's how you do it. However, whenever I see the show, I think in my brain, "have you ever seen a kingdom with a butter fly crown? Rulin' is a habit, get like me ..." Hm ... maybe I shouldn't tell people these things.

********** = Si se puede. Universal paradigm shift. Choose joy. Patent pending.

*********** = Anedge hirak Michael Joseph Jackson.

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