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Tue Dec 02 2008
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Columns
Norman Solomon
The unpardonable Lenny Bruce
December 26, 2003
No doubt Lenny Bruce would have laughed with at least a tinge of
bitterness if -- like millions of Americans -- he picked up a newspaper
the day before Christmas 2003 and read that he’d been “pardoned” by the
governor of New York for an obscenity conviction.
In their own time, people who are stubbornly ahead of it usually get
a lot more grief than accolades. And decades later -- in this case, 39
years after Bruce’s bust for a nightclub performance and 37 years after
his death -- the belated praise from on high is predictably insufferable.
The New York Times lead sentence on Dec. 24 called Bruce “the
potty-mouthed wit who turned stand-up comedy into social commentary.”
Actually, far from being “potty-mouthed” in an emblematic way, Lenny
Bruce was a Fool in the Shakespearean sense, jousting with a society
dominated by various aspiring Lears -- and quite a few Elmer Gantrys.
Most people who can remember Lenny Bruce have their favorite
moments. I think of when he took the opportunity, on a network TV show,
to “play” a dollar bill as a percussion device, snapping it in front of
the microphone. Or his bits, taped and then captured on record albums,
satirizing the entrepreneurial zeal of evangelical moralists. He
anticipated the unctuous likes of Jimmy Swaggart, Pat Robertson, Jerry
Falwell and, yes, George W. Bush.
Lenny Bruce lampooned hypocrisy, yet he avoided the earnest fervor
that dulls the teeth of much would-be biting humor. Bruce may have
occasionally lapsed into sermonizing, but he was not pious. The 1974
movie “Lenny” strayed when actor Dustin Hoffman wasn’t quite able to
portray Bruce’s righteousness without preceding it with the hyphenated
“self.”
Bruce was a consummate mimic who spent many hours fiddling with tape
from his on-stage routines. As an instrument of enormous versatility, his
voice was orchestral in scope.
Protracted struggles with judicial repression for saying “bad” words
made him obsessed with absurdities in law books. For Bruce, legalistic
labyrinths culminated in August 1966 with a morphine overdose, two months
short of his 40th birthday.
We ought to note that his last two years spanned from the Gulf of
Tonkin Resolution through a period of rapid military escalation in
Vietnam, with U.S. troop deployments mounting into the hundreds of
thousands.
On a noncommercial radio station about 30 years ago, while the war
was still raging, I used to air an obscure record that featured some of
Bruce’s final performance. He did a bit he’d presented many times before,
reciting (with a thick German accent) a poem by the radically humanistic
Trappist monk Thomas Merton -- a meditation on the high-ranking Nazi
official Adolf Eichmann.
Here are words I’ve often remembered over the course of three
decades:
“My defense: I was a soldier. I saw the end of a conscientious day’s
effort. I watched through the portholes. I saw every Jew burned and
turned into soap. Do you people think yourselves better because you
burned your enemies at long distance with missiles without ever seeing
what you had done to them?”
Such questions are still too hot for mainstream media to handle. We
may congratulate ourselves on how risque the words and images are now, in
mass media, but the lasting power of Lenny Bruce’s caustic humor has
nothing to do with four-letter words. Today, naughty language and sexual
images are big media sellers. The tacit taboos are in other realms of
expression.
Though it wasn’t then the propaganda mantra that it has recently
become, President Johnson referred to people violently resisting the U.S.
occupation of Vietnam as “terrorists.” These days, President Bush is fond
of applying the “terrorist” label to people violently resisting the U.S.
occupation of Iraq.
Naturally, as one of the home-front politicos eager to boost the
latest war, New York’s Gov. George Pataki could not resist combining the
announcement of his pardon for Bruce with a plug for the sanctification
of present-day militarism under the guise of combating terrorism.
“Freedom of speech is one of the greatest American liberties,” Pataki
declared, “and I hope this pardon serves as a reminder of the precious
freedoms we are fighting to preserve as we continue to wage the war on
terror.”
But the question that Lenny Bruce kept voicing from the stage,
meanwhile, still hangs in the air: “Do you people think yourselves better
because you burned your enemies at long distance with missiles without
ever seeing what you had done to them?”
___________________________________
Norman Solomon is co-author of “Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn’t
Tell You.” For an excerpt and other information, go to:
www.contextbooks.com/new.html#target
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Norman Solomon
"The unpardonable Lenny Bruce" December 26, 2003
"Announcing the P.U.-litzer prizes for 2003" December 23, 2003
"Breakthrough and Peril for the Green Party" December 11, 2003
"Dean and the Corporate Media Machine" December 5, 2003
"Linking the Occupation of Iraq With the 'War on Terrorism'" November 21, 2003
"Media Clash in Brazil: A Distant Mirror " November 19, 2003
"The steady theft of our name" November 5, 2003
"Brand Loyalty and the Absence of Remorse" October 18, 2003
"Media Tips for the Next Recall " October 10, 2003
" Unmasking the Ugly 'Anti-American'" October 1, 2003
"'Wesley & Me': A Real-Life Docudrama" September 25, 2003
"The get-rich con: are media values better now?" September 18, 2003
"Triumph of the media mill" September 11, 2003
"The Political Capital of 9/11" September 8, 2003
"The quagmire of denouncing a "quagmire"" September 5, 2003
"The Ten Commandments -- are they fair and balanced?" August 29, 2003
"SPECIAL COLUMN: Dean Hopes and Green Dreams: The 2004 Presidential Race " August 25, 2003
"If Famous Journalists Became Honest Rappers" August 21, 2003
"News Flash: This is not a "Silly Season"" August 14, 2003
"Tilting Democrats in the presidential race" August 1, 2003
"The gang that couldn't talk straight" July 31, 2003
"War Boosters Unlikely to Voice Regret " July 17, 2003
"Visual images and how we see the world" June 30, 2003
"Tilting Democrats in the Presidential race" June 26, 2003
"The media politics of impeachment" June 20, 2003
"Trust, war and terrorism" June 15, 2003
"Britain -- not quite a parallel media universe" June 12, 2003
"The spamming of America: another brick in the wall" June 2, 2003
"Decoding the media fixation on terrorism" May 22, 2003
"Introspective media not in the cards" May 8, 2003
"A Different Approach for the 2004 Campaign " May 1, 2003
"Mark Twain Speaks to Us: 'I Am an Anti-Imperialist'" April 15, 2003
"A leathal way to 'dispatch' the news" April 11, 2003
"The thick fog of war on American television" April 3, 2003
"Media war: obsessed with tactics and technology" March 27, 2003
"Casualties of war -- first truth, then conscience" March 20, 2003
"The conventional media wisdom of obedience" March 13, 2003
"American media dodging U.N. surveillance story" March 6, 2003
"Followup needed after Newsweek story on Iraqi weapons" February 27, 2003
""Globalization" and its malcontents" February 20, 2003
"Playing the "Terrorism" Card" February 13, 2003
"Colin Powell is flawless -- inside a media bubble" February 7, 2003
"Decoding some top buzz words of 2002" January 26, 2003
"Memo: When war is a rush" January 21, 2003
Read Articles by Year: 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

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