Tuesday, January 15, 2013

four words for you, maybe


We’ve all heard the story about the boy who would not speak.  As he grew up he did the normal things like crawl and then walk and he seemed to be a normal boy, but he never spoke.  His parents tried to teach him to talk but he would remain mute.  They took the boy to a doctor who examined him and proclaimed him to be healthy and declared there was no physical problem.  However, despite all his parents’ attempts to get him to speak, he remained silent.  It was decided that he probably would never speak.

One night at dinner, the boy took a mouthful of food and after swallowing it he said, “The beans are cold.”

His parents were shocked and his father said, “You spoke!  You actually can talk.  Why haven’t you said anything before now?”

“Well,” said the boy, “I haven’t needed to.  Up to now, everything has been okay.”

That old joke reminds me of the goings-on at the Supreme Court yesterday.  Judge Clarence Thomas broke his seven year silence and spoke four words.  Unfortunately, we aren’t sure what they were.

“Well, he did not…” is the best guess of what he said.  He reportedly began to make some kind of a joke and was cut off by laughter and then he shut up.

Thomas has never asked a question in seven years of serving on the court.  The job of the Supreme Court is to question decisions made by lower courts and the justices ask questions in open court to determine whether the rule of law was followed in those lower court proceedings.

In the early days of my own career, I was sometimes intimidated by the more senior people I worked with and usually kept quiet in meetings.  As my career proceeded, however, I felt my own knowledge and experiences were important and I felt I was not doing my job if I didn’t interject that intellectual capital in company decisions.

Sometimes it is better to keep quiet if there is nothing important to contribute, but it seems to me that a senior person who has collected important knowledge over his lifetime should open his mouth sometimes.

I am not saying Clarence Thomas is not doing his job nor am I questioning his qualifications, but I am just saying it would be good for him to put his two cents into the discussion.  I would like to see him ask a question once in a while or, at least, mutter some words so we know he is paying attention.

Or that he is not dozing.  That’s what they pay us retired people to do.

Friday, January 04, 2013

signs of life


There are two squirrels chasing each other

Across the leafless branches of the trees

In the hedgerow behind the house across the street.

Vectors of geese flying north, south, east and west

And various headings in between

On courses toward haphazard locations

Only they know.

A herd (or mob, as some call them) of whitetail

Bounding across the snow that covers the wheat stubble

In the field across from our neighborhood.

There is a small, drab-colored bird in the tree

Outside the back door

Watching the daylight lengthen,

Waiting out the winter.

Just as I am.