Thursday, October 3, 1991 The crossfire of ignorance by Andrew Festa During a heated debate, my dad made a rather valid point. The heart of that point was "rights are not absolutes." With rights being tossed around like a hacky-sack among drunks, I decided to create some characters with whom I could present both sides. Mr. Shoriz Big: "1 want the right to smoke anything I want, any time I choose, and any place I desire. I shouldn't have to freeze my butt off in the the middle of a snow storm." Mrs. Sheez Big: "But what about me? Don't I have the right to breathe fresh air?" Mr. Big: "Sure, babe. Just go in the other room if ya don't wanna smell the smoke." Mrs. Big: "Read my lips, - ---head." Mrs. Raiza Flippin: "It's my body, bub. If I wanna have an abortion, I should have that right." Mr. Izza Flippin: "Don't I have a say in this? I should have some input. It's my kid too." The Unborn Flippin: "Hey! Waita minute, folks! Don't blow smoke -- just get even by Mike Royko I rode a cab the other day that had a hand-drawn sign on the dashboard that said, "No Smoking." Although I smoke, complying with the sign wasn't a problem. I'm not the kind of smoker who makes a fuss about being deprived. If somebody doesn't want me to smoke in his presence, I don't. As nonsmokers everywhere are angrily saying, why should they be subjected to somebody else's smoke? After we had gone about a block, I said, "Will you please turn off the noise?" The cabdriver, a shaggy-haired man in his 30s, looked in his mirror and said, "The what?" "The noise." "You mean my radio?" "Yes, the radio." "What's wrong with it?" he said. "It's giving me a headache. The music is bad and there's static. You ever hear of the problem of noise pollution? That's noise pollution." He shook his head and turned it down. "I can still hear it," I said "You want a different station? Some other kind of music?" "No. I hate music. I haven't liked any music since Spike Jones' band." He shook his head again but First, I'm not an IT. Second, what about my rights?" Mr. and Mrs. Flippin: "Shaddap, kid. Ya ain't livin yet." Mr. Gotta Deal: "I should be able to say what I want, whenever I want. If I see a cute babe, I should be able to tell her what I'm thinking; it's freedom of speech. And, if I say something to my secretary, that's OK; she works for me anyhow." Mrs. Hadda Deal: "You do, and I'll use my rights to file for a divorce--babe." The Deal's daughter: "It's not babe, pop. Me and Mom are ladies or women, not chicks, babes, or any of those other politically incorrect labels you like to use so often." Is there something wrong with this picture? What ever happened to caring about others? This is too much like a "goose the world, I wanna get off' attitude. The Unborn Flippin: "Just let me out, I'll show ya. I'll protect my rights and then, I'll shaft all of ya!" At one time, there was a fear that computers would alienate people from one another. That fear has not been borne out. Instead, we snapped the radio off. We rode in silence for less than a minute, when he said: "You know, it's a funny thing about music. Some people, they like..." I interrupted. "Say, no offense meant, but do you mind if we don't talk?" "You don't want me to talk?" he said, sounding incredulous. "Right." "All right," he said, obviously offended. "Then I won't talk." He probably thought I was rude or worse. Maybe you do, too. And maybe I sounded that way. But just as he didn't want to be exposed to my smoke, why should I be exposed to his lousy taste in music, his radio's static and the sound of his voice? Now, I have to admit that if the no•smoking sign hadn't been there, I might have felt differently. I would have opened the window a couple of inches so the smoke could escape, had a cigarette and listened to his music or his views on life. But it's now my policy to meet intolerance with intolerance. I don't know if that's fair, but when it's over, I feel better. It began a while ago with one of two women at the next table in a restaurant. She was my first exposure to the antismoking crusaders. I was having dinner with a The Collegian are becoming remote simply because of our own selfishness. Mr. Yu Who: "I want the right to do this or that or the other, and I don't want anyone else's ideas to get in my way." Miss Lotsa Cares: "You're just a male chauvinistic gas release." Mr. Yu Who: "And you're just a feminist multiple fornicator!" Miss Lotsa Cares: "Oh yeah?" Reality Check-Anyway "FREEZE FRAME!" Everyone is so concerned with their RIGHTS, no one's examining the consequences. The headlines are filled these pal. We hadn't even ordered when she turned toward me and said very firmly, "I'd appreciate it if you didn't smoke." Before I could do anything but look surprised, she launched a California-style lecture. "Respecting rights of others...menace to the environment...intruding on my space..." Before she was finished, I had squashed my cigarette and said, "OK, OK." Because I'm a fair person, I could see her point. A little of my smoke might have drifted in her direction, although the place seemed well ventilated. About half way through the meal, I turned to her and said, "Excuse me, but could I tell you something?" "Yes?" she said, glaring at me days with cries for protection of rights. Seldom discussed, however, are the effects those protections produce. If a smoker smokes indoors, others suffer, if they are shoved outside, as they are, they suffer. Big deal, say the non-smokers, at least our rights are protected. If an abortion is performed, fetuses suffer, but if abortions are made illegal, women suffer. If people are censored by the PC "hit squad," they suffer restrictions on their freedom of speech; but full freedom of speech would have casualties as well. One person's rights protected can prove to be another's pains. How do we deal with all the rights of Political Correctness versus its antithesis? Heck, ya got me on that one. In a world where everything must be put into a finite model (good-bad, beautiful-ugly, right-wrong), it's hard not to view the extremes. Because we don't debate, rather tending to argue, we push ourselves or others into opposing corners. No one wants to be the first to make in anticipation of the request she knew would come: Could I have just one cigarette? But I fooled her. I didn't mention smoking at all. I just said: "I really don't care about your neighbor's medical problems. Or your job. Or your vacation plans. Would you lower your voices so your conversation doesn't intrude on my space?" She knew exactly what I was up to. She gave me a look of contempt and said: "Really. The tables here are so close together that we'd have to whisper." "Try." I said. "I'd appreciate it." But they didn't. She said, loudly and clearly: "Oh, he just thinks he's being clever. Oh, he's so" -- and she dragged the word out -- "so clevvverrr." And they went on talking just as loudly. That was it. War. I attacked on two fronts. First, I told my friend a dirty joke. No, it wasn't dirty, it was filthy. It had no swearing or gutter language. But a really good, filthy joke is even filthier if told in clinical terms. Then I told another. And their nostrils quivered and they ate faster. It seemed only fair. If I had to hear about their neighbor's intestinal malfunctions, why shouldn't they hear my filthy jokes? When I told the jokes, I took Page concessions. Few want to admit the existence of a middle ground, but it's there, waiting in the cross-fire of our ignorances. America, for the most part, is divided into two main camps: those who want to protect rights, each person with his or her own motive and with little regard to the consequences; and those at the other end, the apathetic corner where efforts are not made nor energies spent. One group looks at the issues and says, "We need to make changes so rights are protected." The other group is too busy sucking down yogurt or watching the butterflies whiz by. One should not be insistent on smacking a ball with full force without considering where that ball might go, who it might hit, or the resulting damages. But then, where would the fun be in playing the game? Someone: "Big flippin deal." Someone else: "Who cares anyway?" Andrew Festa is a ninth semester English major. His column appears every other week in The Collegian. out my cigarettes and lighter and put them on the edge of the table. When my last bite was gone, and the coffee cups filled, I picked up the cigarette package and sort of fondled it. I could see them watching. Then I slowly slid out a cigarette and tapped it on the table. And tapped and tapped it. Then I put it between my lips. She was not only watching, she was starting to look homicidal. I just kept it there for a minute. I took it out while I said something. Then napped it some more. I picked up the lighter. But I just held lighter and cigarette in my hand, as if distracted by conversation. Finally, I snapped the lighter a couple of times. She snapped under the pressure. "Waiter," she said. "Check." And they hadn't even had coffee and dessert As they rose, she glared at me and said, "Do you know what you are?" I smiled, put down the unlit cigarette and said: "Thanks to you, much healthier." So, you see, we can all coexist, if we just try. Mike Royko is a Chicago based, nationally syndicated columnist. His column appears weekly in The Collegian.