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Hunting Oswald
Townhall ^ | 12/22/06 | Charles Krauthammer

Posted on 12/22/2006 9:01:27 AM PST by Molly Pitcher

ROUNDS: the ritual whereby a senior doctor goes from bed to bed seeing patients, trailed by a gaggle of students.

ROUNDSMANSHIP: the art of distinguishing oneself from the gaggle with relentless displays of erudition.

WASHINGTON -- The roundsman is the guy who, with the class huddled at the bed of a patient who has developed a rash after taking penicillin, raises his hand to ask the professor -- obnoxious ingratiation is best expressed in the form of a question -- whether this might not instead be a case of Shmendrick's Syndrome reported in the latest issue of the Journal of Ridiculously Obscure Tropical Diseases.

None of the rest of us gathered around the bed has ever heard of Shmendrick's. But that's the point. The point is for the prof to remember this hyper-motivated stiff who stays up nights reading journals in preparation for rounds. That's the upside. The downside, which the roundsman, let's call him Oswald, ignores at his peril, is that this apple polishing does not endear him to his colleagues, a slovenly lot, mostly hung over from a terrific night at the Blue Parrot.

The general feeling among the rest of us is that we should have Oswald killed. A physiology major suggests a simple potassium injection that would stop his heart and leave no trace. We agree this is a splendid idea, and entirely just. But it would not solve the problem. Kill him and another Oswald will arise in his place.

There's always an Oswald. There's always the husband who takes his wife to Paris for Valentine's Day. Valentine's Day? The rest of us schlubs can barely remember to come home with a single long stem rose. What does he think he's doing? And love is no defense. We don't care how much you love her -- you don't do Paris. It's bad for the team.

Baseball has its own way of taking care of those who commit the capital offense of showing up another player. Drop your bat to admire the trajectory of your home run and, chances are, the next time up the unappreciative pitcher tries to take your head off with high cheese that whistles behind your skull.

Now, you might take this the wrong way and think that I am making the case for mediocrity -- what Australians call the ``the tall poppy syndrome'' of unspoken bias against achievement, lest one presume to be elevated above one's mates. No. There is a distinction between show and substance. It is the ostentation that rankles, not the achievement. I'm talking about dancing in the end zone. Find a cure for cancer, and you deserve whatever honors and riches come your way. But the check-writer who wears blinding bling to the cancer ball is quite another manner.

Americans abroad have long been accused of such blinging arrogance and display. I find the charge generally unfair. Arrogance is incorrectly ascribed to what is really the cultural clumsiness of an insular (if continental) people less exposed to foreign ways and languages than most other people on earth.

True, America as a nation is not very good at humility. But it would be completely unnatural for the dominant military, cultural and technological power on the planet to adopt the demeanor of, say, Liechtenstein. The ensuing criticism is particularly grating when it comes from the likes of the French, British, Spanish, Dutch (there are many others) who just yesterday claimed dominion over every land and people their Captain Cooks ever stumbled upon.

My beef with American arrogance is not that we act like a traditional great power, occasionally knocking off foreign bad guys who richly deserve it. My problem is that we don't know where to stop -- the trivial victories we insist on having in arenas that are quite superfluous. Like that women's hockey game in the 2002 Winter Olympics. Did the U.S. team really have to beat China 12-1? Can't we get the coaches -- there's gotta be some provision in the Patriot Act authorizing the CIA to engineer this -- to throw a game or two, or at least make it close? We're trying to contain China. Why then gratuitously crush them in something Americans don't even care about? Why not throw them a bone?

I say we keep the big ones for ourselves -- laser-guided munitions, Google, Warren Buffett -- and let the rest of the world have ice hockey, ballroom dancing and every Nobel Peace Prize. And throw in the Ryder Cup. I always root for the Europeans in that one. They lost entire empires, for God's sake; let them have golf supremacy for one weekend. No one likes an Oswald.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: applepolishers; arrogance; showoffs
Anybody get what Krauthammer is aiming at here?? Maybe I've just exhausted from too much Christmas whatever...
1 posted on 12/22/2006 9:01:28 AM PST by Molly Pitcher
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To: Molly Pitcher

I thik he's saying we should strut in matters of importance (SDI, capitalism and the like) and be weenies for the "unimportant" things.

I think he's an idiot in this essay. We don't need to dance jigs in the end zone but we shouldn't shy away from credit where credit is due.


2 posted on 12/22/2006 9:05:31 AM PST by cinives (On some planets what I do is considered normal.)
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To: Molly Pitcher

I guess this qualifies as Charles' Christmas essay. I kinda liked it....


3 posted on 12/22/2006 9:12:57 AM PST by Rummyfan (Iraq: Give therapeutic violence a chance!)
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To: Molly Pitcher

At first, I thought this was another article on John Kerry.


4 posted on 12/22/2006 10:08:51 AM PST by Gritty (At what point does a society become simply too genteel to wage war? - Mark Steyn)
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To: Molly Pitcher

I think he says he was drunk in college and considered ways to kill people. And also, golf is a sissy European sport.

;)


5 posted on 12/22/2006 10:46:23 AM PST by brothers4thID (Being lectured by Ted Kennedy on ethics is not unlike being lectured on dating protocol by Ted Bundy)
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To: Molly Pitcher
Krauthammer is the ONLY TV talking head I will stop what I am doing (multitasking, yikes) and pay very close attention to what he says.

He is thoughtful, literate without being pretentious, makes his point in a concise manner and has elocution worthy of an orator. This, in contrast to the the braying asses found in the mold of J. Mclaughlin, E. Clift and company.
6 posted on 12/22/2006 11:09:41 AM PST by ASOC (The phrase "What if" or "If only" are for children.)
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To: Molly Pitcher
I kind of thought I did until the last paragraph:

I say we keep the big ones for ourselves -- laser-guided munitions, Google, Warren Buffett --

WTF?!?!

7 posted on 12/22/2006 11:09:54 AM PST by DManA
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To: Molly Pitcher; rhema

Pretty close, Charles. I say let's keep ice hockey and given 'em Warren Buffet, George Soros, and another liberal to be named later.


8 posted on 12/22/2006 12:15:55 PM PST by Caleb1411 ("These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G. K. C)
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To: Caleb1411
". . . and given 'em" = and give 'em
9 posted on 12/22/2006 12:26:17 PM PST by Caleb1411 ("These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G. K. C)
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To: Molly Pitcher
I think he's talking about this: "Arrogance is incorrectly ascribed to what is really the cultural clumsiness of an insular (if continental) people less exposed to foreign ways and languages than most other people on earth."

We are among the best travelled people in the world, and if we aren't going to some other country, the other country's people are coming here. His statement is arrogant. We don't share his 'unique' sympathies with European socialists and African tyrants, so we're provincial. It hardly occurs to people like this that in any large US city, a person encounters a cross section of the entire world by walking a few blocks. Conservatives walk those same blocks.

Of course, people like Krauthammer also think that anyone outside their own personal fiefdom is a redneck.

10 posted on 12/22/2006 3:11:36 PM PST by sig226 (See my profile for the democrat culture of corruption list.)
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To: DManA

"I say we keep the big ones for ourselves -- laser-guided munitions, Google, Warren Buffett --"

This is a totally sarcastic editorial. He wrote that tongue-in-cheek. It's very funny from that perspective.


11 posted on 12/24/2006 8:03:09 AM PST by GovernmentIsTheProblem (Now accepting tagline donations.)
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