|
 |
|
| Hauser goes into attack dog mode, sinking his teeth into George Bush, who, “acting in concert with the Republican-controlled Congress, has done more damage to the United States than any other group of politicians in our nation's history.” |
|
|
|
| |
 |
|
|
 |
Tom Hauser Gets Out The Vote
By Robert Ecksel
Tom Hauser is not everyone’s friend. For reasons personal, pathological, and in no small part self-created, he has made, and continues to make, enemies, but say what you will about last year’s Nat Fleischer Award winner, nobody has ever been stupid enough to call him dumb.
But calling him disingenuous might be another story.
In his latest essay on SecondsOut.com titled “More Important Than Boxing,” Hauser turns his gaze away from the vagaries of boxing to give his full attention to the vagaries of electoral politics, specifically this week’s critical midterm election in the U.S.
As he recounts, a little less than two years ago, timed to coincide with President George W. Bush’s second inaugural, Hauser wrote an article castigating Bush’s reactionary reign, and the response from some fight fans was underwhelming, if not downright pissy that they had to read about politics from a boxing writer. As one disgruntled reader wrote, "A friend gave me your new book. If I want to read about politics, I'll buy a book about politics.” As if to emphasize his point, the same reader wrote “shove it."
Hauser didn’t take that critic’s advice to heart, but he abandoned the politics of politics for the more familiar turf of the politics of boxing, and dissent was muffled, muted, squelched, until now. In his latest piece, Hauser goes into attack dog mode, sinking his teeth into George Bush, who, “acting in concert with the Republican-controlled Congress, has done more damage to the United States than any other group of politicians in our nation's history.”
No argument there. Bush’s fear mongering, race baiting and grotesque incompetence have been de rigueur since the glorious days of “shock and awe,” but the methodical Hauser breaks down the methods and madness of King George, while the mob on the right has grabbed hold of their scabbards.
Like most critical yet conventional thinkers who never fought a day on anything other than the battlefield of life (where, admittedly, casualties and MIAs abound), Hauser writes that the “invasion of Afghanistan was a necessity. We didn't take military action there on the pretense of bringing freedom to the Afghani people. We did so because the government of Afghanistan condoned, aided, and sheltered the terrorists who were responsible for 9/11.”
Yes, possibly, maybe, so they say, so they’d have us believe. But “necessity” and sheltering the “terrorists who were responsible for 9/11” aside, those who see deceit and profit behind every convenient (mis)truth link Afghanistan inextricably to oil, black gold, and to the zillion dollar production of poppies (i.e. opium, morphine, heroin trade), which has as much to do with our war in Afghanistan as it had to with our wars in Indochina (The Golden Triangle), the fallacious “domino theory” notwithstanding.
Hauser’s writes that the “invasion of Iraq was a poorly-chosen war of choice,” which is old news at its newest, whereupon he breaks down the foibles, follies and plain old screw-ups of this administration and its decider-in-chief: (1) the Saddam Hussein/weapons of mass destruction boondoggle; (2) the let’s bring democracy to our friends the Iraqis smokescreen; (3) the clever but transparent smoking gun/mushroom cloud duopoly of deceit; and (4) the steady drumbeat of agitprop which accompanies Bush and his cronies’ conscious effort to destabilize the Middle East, to their (and Israel’s) own ends.
Hauser, to his credit, leaves no stone unturned (well, some stones are better left where they are) in his condemnation of Bush the Mendacious and his cowboy foreign policy. He draws attention to Baghdad’s lack of electricity (after four years!) and the fact that billions in aid earmarked for the new Iraqi government has somehow disappeared, much of it, incongruously, into the bomb-throwing/gun-toting hands of insurgents. Hauser also draws attention to the “alarming number of [American military] recruits who belong to militant white-supremacist and neo-Nazi organizations.”
Were not enough, Hauser shines a light on the “slaughter of innocent civilians” in Haditha and the perversions (aka torture) at Abu Ghraib, as well as the concomitant “extraordinary renditions” to “secret prisons around the world.” If that strikes you as some form of hell on earth, better keep it to yourself, because Big Brother, not the TV show, the tyrant, is watching, and waiting to pounce. But there’s more: (1) handing over our port security to the Arabs of Dubai; (2) the inevitable mega tax breaks for the mega rich; and (3) the government report which lists “77,069 potential terrorist targets in the United States,” where Indiana is listed number one and Wisconsin number two as the states most likely to be attacked by Islamic Fundamentalists, highlighted by such likely "terrorist targets" as a petting zoo in Alabama, an Amish popcorn factory in Pennsylvania, and a Mule Day Parade in Tennessee.
Throw in the thieves, fools and perverts in the do-nothing Congress, the rise of Iran and a nuclear North Korea, the antipathy to cutting edge science and the health of the nation, the economic malfeasance that has left the economy in tatters, the Hurricane Katrina debacle (Nero fiddled while Rome burned, whereas Bush played air guitar while New Orleans drowned), and you have what ought to be a perfect recipe for change… if only there were something genuine to change to, and not just more of the same old, same old posturing (i.e. change for change’s sake).
Hauser writes that “The world is moving dangerously close to an irrevocable tipping point. We are living in a time that cries out for a leader like Franklin Roosevelt.” Is that the same Franklin Roosevelt who did nothing to prevent the bombing of Pearl Harbor, even though he had advance warning, because he needed an excuse for an isolationist nation opposed to war for engage in World Wat Two(shades of 9/11)? The same Franklin Roosevelt who was dragged kicking and screaming, against all odds, by his wife Eleanor into the progressive (the opposite of regressive) camp? The same Franklin Roosevelt who sat on his hands while knowing about Auschwitz and Treblinka and Bergen-Belsen during WW II, yet whose enemies derogatorily called him Franklin Rosenfeld for not cozying up to Hitler and the Nazis? (Yes, Virginia, there were fascists hereabouts even way back when.)
Tom, we love ya, but stop mythologizing and let’s get real.
Hauser says the way to begin to turn things around “is by electing a Democratic majority in both houses of Congress on November 7th.” Sounds good on the face of it, but what exactly have the Democrats done lately, like in the last 40 years, to deserve our support, except for the fact they’re not their opponents?
Having a false choice is, sad to say, hardly better than having no choice at all.
(The complete text of Thomas Hauser’s "More Important Than Boxing" can be read at SecondsOut.com)
|
Pat:
|
I'm surprised Mr. Hauser doesn't recommend Ali for President, having devoted so much of his professional life to canonizing him. Hauser's ego is as unmanagable and preposterous as the war in Iraq. Making Nancy Pelosi Speaker of the House will help about as much as the Ali Reform Act for which Hauser was a chief shill has helped boxing. Even less, in fact. No matter which of the two major parties wins next Tuesday, not a lot is going to change. What Tom Hauser really thinks is "more important than boxing"is ... Tom Hauser.
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 10:22:55 AM
|
|
Swann:
|
I'm neither republican nor democrat, but to suggest that putting the democrats in charge of the house and senate will result in some positive, tangible, and marked change is lunacy. Gridlock will continue to exist, no matter what party is in power. The WBC, WBA, and IBF have about the same legitimacy as today's political parties. And Nancy Pelosi as the 3rd successor to the presidency is frighteningly laughable.
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 11:10:32 AM
|
|
bk:
|
Pat and Swann said it all.
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 12:14:09 PM
|
|
Larry:
|
Nice to see Michael Swann weighing in on the subject of a writer he's tried to pull apart for his paymaster Gary Shaw. How many articles have you written about him now, Mike? Suppose you'll be off into MMA as soon as Shaw decides he can't get anymore from boxing.
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 01:13:07 PM
|
|
Michael Swann:
|
Hey Larry, I'm sorry to disappoint you but you have the wrong Swann. This one is a democrat if it matters. As for Hauser, I continue to admire his body of work. I'll take the rest as a constructive criticism.
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 07:54:01 PM
|
|
Bob Mladinich:
|
Wonderful story. Having grown up in a home where FDR was considered a demigod, I was disillusioned to learn so many forgotten facts about him in college. He was actually a fiscal conservative who implemented the New Deal only because of a very real American sentiment toward fascism during the Great Depression. Moreover, his gross miscalculation about the attack on Pearl Harbor was viewed in many quarters as being akin to our current presidential administration's missing the boat on the 9/11 attacks despite an abundance of forewarning. Tom Hauser brings up many valid points, but the implication that installing a bunch of Democrats in office will salvage the world does not seem very realistic. If they are the answer to this country's woes, our problems won't go away. There doesn't seem to be a truly effective leader among them. Never in history have we been more in need of an effective leader and there doesn't appear to be one in sight. We can only hope that one will emerge from the shadows, just like, of much less importance, a boxer emerges who can excite the mainstream masses. Klitchko has a shot because he is a heavyweight and he seems like a genuinely honest and decent man with a philanthropic heart. Unfortunately there are no Democrats on the horizon who, despite their assertions to the countrary, seem to have anything on their minds but bashing the Republicans. I wish there was a politician of either stripe, as well as boxer of any weight, who I could stand behind with exuberance and enthusiasm as great representatives of "the future."
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 08:02:51 PM
|
|
Pugilist:
|
www-jihadwatch-org - he is right about one thing, we are close to the tipping point...only thing is that the tipping point is Muslims making the greatest move in modern times to control significant numbers of countries not previously Islamic...Iraq was a huge mistake supposedly but just today Saudi Arabia public officials stated that the USA and only the USA can resolve the issues of violence in the Middle East - whether we, the USA, want to or not. Democrats clearly do not want the US to be powerful or resolve issues related to the survival of a powerful USA.
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 08:54:32 PM
|
|
Pete Ehrmann:
|
I'm writing in Mladinich next Tuesday.
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 09:10:05 PM
|
|
Larry:
|
However you slice it Swann, you're a pawn for a promoter, which is a shame because some of the stuff you write is alright. Shame it's compromised by the fact that you spend all your time focusing on how great a guy Shaw is in your eyes. Fighters are getting ripped off left, right and center, and you publish an interview with Shaw's son, an unknown actor? With all that's wrong with boxing today, that's how you contribute to fixing it?
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 10:15:18 PM
|
|
Pete:
|
And here we thought that thing attached to Ali's ass was a mere 'roid, but now it apparently has literary mobility!
Tom, we are all, in America at any rate, allowed to worship whatever God we choose, so please, continue your worship of Muhammad Ali.
As far as politics, I will e-mail you ASAP if I find someone that can send you back to your time, nineteen-sixty-what again?
IF one wants to point out the obvious, I'd suggest doing it to limousine liberals, those that are rich, complacent, and in denial. Not to those working class folks of either party that have sons and daughters, nieces and nephews, serving in harm's way right now and damn well know whats what. Float like a lava lamp and sting like a draft deferment!
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006 11:30:19 PM
|
|
Ultraray:
|
Tom Hauser draws his income from the same bank as Don King. Don King does not pretend to be virtuous. Yet Hauser does.Boxing is made up of pimps, whores, and customers
Don King can accept who he is. Hauser cannot. Hauser must pretend
Hauser is a boxing writer.There is nothing noble in that. Even Hauser cannot pretend that there is. Hauser is comparable to a voyeur in crack house. He watches fighters take off and then watches them crash. Then he writes how unfair life is.
Don King can accept who he is. Hauser cannot. It is plainly ridiculous for Hauser to pretend he is some pious virgin seeking virtue. Tom Hauser is an aging Ivy league pimp waiting for Joe Frazier to die, so he can a sell another story about Muhammad Ali for the 100th time. Hauser forgets the old saying, "if your living in a glass house don\'t throw no stones."
Wednesday Nov 1, 2006 01:33:41 AM
|
|
Michael Swann:
|
Larry,
I write one column a week, Thursdays on another site. I\\\'ve interviewed a number of people, some as news, and some for entertainment.I\\\'ve also written fight reports, opinion, and analysis. I don\\\'t expect that everyone will agree with everything I say. Mr. Shaw has been in the news quite frequently this year and has been kind enough to take my calls and answer my questions. If you think it\\\'s been too much, you\\\'re certainly entitled to your opinion. I\\\'m just grateful that you are a regular reader of my column. Feel free to contact me at any time to discuss any issue. You won\\\'t be the only one and I return every email.
Wednesday Nov 1, 2006 09:05:26 PM
|
|
Larry:
|
Look Michael, why spend your time discussing the virtues of Gary Shaw and his family with all that's happening with boxing today? Are we supposed to feel some sort of empathy for his son who probably lives in a mansion and has choices in life as opposed to the people you should be writing about who have to have their heads smashed in for a living, and that don't have choices? Castillo doesn't make weight and you write an article praising Shaw's integrity. Golden Boy scoop up Corrales and you write articles on how Golden Boy is bad for boxing. If Gary Shaw is the knight in shining armor as opposed to the likes of Golden Boy, then why has every major talent deserted Shaw in the last year? Why don't you use the platform you have to discuss those people that are really sacrificing in the business, those people that have nothing, instead of the likes of Shaw with millions at his disposal. Yes, I did read your column, especially the one published a while ago where you detailed how you don't get paid. Well, if you want to get paid, I suppose you're going the right way about it now.
Wednesday Nov 1, 2006 10:21:06 PM
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Angie And Goody...23 Years Later
Twenty three years later after they seconded Marvin Hagler and Ray Leonard in Las Vegas, Goody Petronelli and Angelo Dundee crossed paths again. This time, it was at Foxwoods. Photo/friend of TSS "The Iceman" John Scully reports there were only pleasantries exchanged. Goody didn't debate the split decision victory enjoyed by Leonard, which to this day Hagler disputes.
|
|
|
|
|