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http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2006/05/25/moyers/

Following is the full text of a speech given by Bill Moyers on May 20 at
Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y.:


Thank you for inviting Judith and me to share this occasion with you.
Fifty years ago both of us turned the same corner you are turning today
and left college for the great beyond. Looking back across half a century
I wish our speaker at the time had said something really useful --
something that would have better prepared us for what lay ahead. I wish he
had said: "Don't Go."

So I have been thinking seriously about what I might say to you in this
Baccalaureate service. Frankly, I'm not sure anyone from my generation
should be saying anything to your generation except, "We're sorry. We're
really sorry for the mess you're inheriting. We are sorry for the war in
Iraq. For the huge debts you will have to pay for without getting a new
social infrastructure in return. We're sorry for the polarized country.
The corporate scandals. The corrupt politics. Our imperiled democracy.
We're sorry for the sprawl and our addiction to oil and for all those
toxins in the environment. Sorry about all this, class of 2006. Good luck
cleaning it up."

You're going to have your hands full, frankly. I don't need to tell you of
the gloomy scenarios being written for your time. Three books on my desk
right now question whether human beings will even survive the 21st
century. Just listen to their titles: "The Long Emergency: Surviving the
Convergence Catastrophe"; "Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or
Succeed"; "The Winds of Change: Weather and the Destruction of
Civilizations."

These are just three of the recent books that make the apocalypse
prophesied in the Bible ... the Revelations of St. John ... look like
child's play. I won't summarize them for you except to say that they spell
out Doomsday scenarios for global catastrophe. There's another recent book
called "The Revenge of Gaia" that could well have been subtitled, "The
Earth Strikes Back," because the author, James Lovelock, says human
consumption, our obsession with technology, and our habit of "playing God"
are stripping bare nature's assets until the Earth's only consolation will
be to take us down with her. Before this century is over, he writes,
"Billions of us will die and the few breeding pairs of people that survive
will be kept in the Arctic where the climate remains tolerable." So there
you have it: The future of the race, to be joined in a final and fatal
march of the penguins.

Of course that's not the only scenario. You can Google your way to a lot
of optimistic possibilities. For one, the digital revolution that will
transform how we do business and live our lives, including active
intelligent wireless devices that in just a short time could link every
aspect of our physical world and even human brains, creating hundreds of
thousands of small-scale business opportunities. There are medical
breakthroughs that will conquer many ills and extend longevity. Economic
changes will lift hundreds of millions of people out of absolute poverty
in the next 25 years, dwarfing anything that's come along in the previous
100 years. These are possible scenarios, too. But I'm a journalist, not a
prophet. I can't say which of these scenarios will prove true. You won't
be bored, that's for sure. I just wish I were going to be around to see
what you do with the peril and the promise.

Since I won't be around, I want to take this opportunity to say a thing or
two that have nothing to do with my professional work as a journalist.
What I have to say today is very personal. Here it is:

If the world confuses you a little, it confuses me a lot. When I graduated
fifty years ago I thought I had the answers. But life is where you get
your answers questioned, and the odds are that you can look forward to
being even more perplexed fifty years from now than you are at this very
moment. If your parents level with you, truly speak their hearts, I
suspect they would tell you life confuses them, too, and that it rarely
turns out the way you thought it would.

I find I am alternatively afraid, cantankerous, bewildered, often hostile,
sometimes gracious, and battered by a hundred new sensations every day. I
can be filled with a pessimism as gloomy as the depth of the middle ages,
yet deep within me I'm possessed of a hope that simply won't quit. A
friend on Wall Street said one day that he was optimistic about the
market, and I asked him, "Then why do you look so worried?" He replied,
"Because I'm not sure my optimism is justified." Neither am I. So I
vacillate between the determination to act, to change things, and the
desire to retreat into the snuggeries of self, family and friends.

I wonder if any of us in this great, disputatious, over-analyzed,
over-televised and under-tenderized country know what the deuce we're
talking about, myself included. All my illusions are up for grabs, and I
find myself re-assessing many of the assumptions that served me
comfortable much of my life.

Earlier this week I heard on the radio a discussion in New York City about
the new Disney Broadway production of "Tarzan," the jungle hero so popular
when I was growing up. I remember as a kid almost dislocating my tonsils
trying to re-create his unearthly sound, swinging on a great vine in a
graceful arc toward the rescue of his distressed mate, Jane, hollering
bloody murder all the time. So what have we learned since? That Buster
Crabbe and Johnny Weismuller, who played Tarzan in the movies, never made
that noise. It was a recording of three men, one a baritone, one a tenor,
and one a hog caller from Arkansas -- all yelling to the top of their
lungs.

This world is hard on believers.

As a young man I was drawn to politics. I took part in two national
campaigns, served in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, and have
covered politics ever since. But I understand now what Thomas Jefferson
meant back in 1789 when he wrote: "I am not a Federalist because I never
submitted the whole system of my opinions to the creed of any party of
men, whether in religion, in philosophy, in politics, or anything else. If
I could not go to Heaven but with a party, I would not go there at all."
Of course we know there'll be no parties in Heaven. No Democrats, no
Republicans, no liberals, no conservatives, no libertarians or socialists.
Just us Baptists.

The hardest struggle of all is to reconcile life's polar realities. I love
books, Beethoven, and chocolate brownies. Yet how do I justify my pleasure
in these in a world where millions are illiterate, the music never plays,
and children go hungry through the night? How do I live sanely in a world
so unsafe for so many?

I don't know what they taught you here at Hamilton about all this, but I
trust you are not leaving here without thinking about how you will respond
to the dissonance in our culture, the rivalry between beauty and
bestiality in the world, and the conflicts in your own soul. All of us
have to choose sides on this journey. But the question is not so much who
we are going to fight against as it is which side of our own nature will
we nurture: The side that can grow weary and even cynical and believe that
everything is futile, or the side that for all the vulgarity, brutality
and cruelty, yearns to affirm, connect and signify.

Albert Camus got it right: There is beauty in the world as well as
humiliation, "And we have to strive, hard as it is, not to be unfaithful
... in the presence of one or the other."

That's really what brings me here this afternoon. I did put myself in your
place, and asked what I'd want a stranger from another generation to tell
me if I had to sit through his speech. Well, I'd want to hear the truth:
The truth is, life's a tough act, the world's a hard place, and along the
way you will meet a fair share of fools, knaves and clowns -- even act the
fool yourself from time to time when your guard is down or you've had too
much wine. I'd like to be told that I will experience separation, loss and
betrayal, that I'll wonder at times where have all the flowers gone.

I would want to be told that while life includes a lot of luck, life is
more than luck. It is sacrifice, study, and work; appointments kept,
deadlines met, promises honored. I'd like to be told that it's okay to
love your country right or wrong, but it's not right to be silent when
your country is wrong. And I would like to be encouraged not to give up on
the American experience. To remember that the same culture which produced
the Ku Klux Klan, Tom DeLay and Abu Ghraib, also brought forth the Peace
Corps, Martin Luther King and Hamilton College.

And I would like to be told that there is more to this life than I can
see, earn, or learn in my time. That beyond the day-to-day spectacle are
cosmic mysteries we don't understand. That in the meantime -- and the
meantime is where we live -- we infinitesimal particles of creation carry
on the miracle of loving, laughing and being here now, by giving, sharing
and growing now.

Let me tell you one of my favorite stories. It’s by Shalom Aleichem and it
has stayed with me for many years now. The story is about Bontshe Shvayg,
one of the accursed of the Earth. Every misfortune imaginable befell him.
He lost his wife, his children neglected him, his house burned down, his
job disappeared—everything he touched turned to dust. Yet through all this
Bontshe kept returning good for evil everywhere he could until he died.
When the angels heard he was arriving at Heaven’s gate, they hurried down
to greet him. Even the Lord was there, so great was this man’s fame for
goodness. It was the custom in Heaven that every newcomer was interrogated
by the prosecuting angel, to assure that all trespasses on Earth had been
atoned. But when Bontshe reached those gates, the prosecuting angel arose,
and for the first time in the memory of Heaven, said, “There are no
charges.” Then the angel for the defense arose and rehearsed all the
hardships this man had endured and recounted how in all the difficult
circumstances of his life he had remained true to himself and returned
good for evil.

When the angel was finished, the Lord said, "Not since Job himself have we
heard of a life such as this one." And then, turning to Bontshe, he said,
"Ask, and it shall be given to you."

The old man raised his eyes and said, "Well, if I could start every day
with a hot buttered roll..." And at that the Lord and all the angels wept,
at the preciousness of what he was asking for, at the beauty of simple
things: a buttered roll, a clean bed, a beautiful summer day, someone to
love and be loved by. These supply joy and meaning on this earthly
journey.

So I brought this with me. It's an ordinary breakfast roll, perhaps one
like Bontshe asked for. I brought it because it drives home the last thing
I want to say to you.

Bread is the great re-enforcer of the reality principle. Bread is life.
But if you're like me you have a thousand and more times repeated the
ordinary experience of eating bread without a thought for the process that
brings it to your table. The reality is physical: I need this bread to
live. But the reality is also social: I need others to provide the bread.
I depend for bread on hundreds of people I don't know and will never meet.
If they fail me, I go hungry. If I offer them nothing of value in exchange
for their loaf, I betray them. The people who grow the wheat, process and
store the grain, and transport it from farm to city; who bake it, package
it, and market it -- these people and I are bound together in an intricate
reciprocal bargain. We exchange value.

This reciprocity sustains us. If you doubt it, look around you. Hamilton
College was raised here by people before your time, people you'll never
know, who were nonetheless thinking of you before you were born. You have
received what they built and bequeathed, and in your time you will give
something back. That's the deal. On and on it goes, from generation to
generation.

Civilization sustains and supports us. The core of its value is bread. But
bread is its great metaphor. All my life I've prayed the Lord's Prayer,
and I've never prayed, "Give me this day my daily bread." It is always,
"Give us this day our daily bread." Bread and life are shared realities.
They do not happen in isolation. Civilization is an unnatural act. We have
to make it happen, you and I, together with all the other strangers. And
because we and strangers have to agree on the difference between a horse
thief and a horse trader, the distinction is ethical. Without it, a
society becomes a war against all, and a market for the wolves becomes a
slaughter for the lambs. My generation hasn't done the best job at
honoring this ethical bargain, and our failure explains the mess we're
handing over to you. You may be our last chance to get it right. So good
luck, Godspeed, enjoy these last few hours together, and don't forget to
pass the bread.

_____________________________

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