Jean Sara Rohe, American heroine
May 23rd, 2006
Senator McCain decided to stage campaign photo-ops at Jerry Falwell’s Liberty University, Columbia, and at the New School. In order to demonstrate his utter disdain for the graduating students, he delivered the same speech at each site, so he could brag about his “consistency.” He defends free speech and the importance of debate on important issues:
These are important questions; worth arguing about. We should contend over them with one another. It is more than appropriate, it is necessary that even in times of crisis, especially in times of crisis, we fight among ourselves for the things we believe in. It is not just our right, but our civic and moral obligation.
However, he makes clear that freedom of speech is just for those who agree with him, not for the graduating young adults he addressed. The speech went out of its way to insult the students, call them self-righteous idiots, and tell them to shut up:
When I was a young man, I was quite infatuated with self-expression, and rightly so because, if memory conveniently serves, I was so much more eloquent, well-informed, and wiser than anyone else I knew. It seemed I understood the world and the purpose of life so much more profoundly than most people. I believed that to be especially true with many of my elders, people whose only accomplishment, as far as I could tell, was that they had been born before me, and, consequently, had suffered some number of years deprived of my insights. I had opinions on everything, and I was always right. I loved to argue, and I could become understandably belligerent with people who lacked the grace and intelligence to agree with me. With my superior qualities so obvious, it was an intolerable hardship to have to suffer fools gladly. So I rarely did. All their resistance to my brilliantly conceived and cogently argued views proved was that they possessed an inferior intellect and a weaker character than God had blessed me with, and I felt it was my clear duty to so inform them. It’s a pity that there wasn’t a blogosphere then. I would have felt very much at home in the medium.
Unfortunately for thin-skinned Senator McCain, at the New School he met his match in Jean Sara Rohe, the Student Commencement speaker, who felt an obligati9on not to ignore the fact that her peers were being personally dissed by this windbag. Knowing that she was to speak before the Senator, she launched a preemptive strike against him, by reading his speech, already posted on the web and critiquing its hostile inanity:
I feel that it is absolutely necessary to acknowledge the fact that this ceremony has become something other than the celebratory gathering that it was intended to be due to all the media attention surrounding John Mc Cain’s presence here today, and the student and faculty outrage generated by his invitation to speak here. The senator does not reflect the ideals upon which this university was founded. Not only this, but his invitation was a top-down decision that did not take into account the desires and interests of the student body on an occasion that is supposed to honor us above all, and to commemorate our achievements.
What is interesting and bizarre about this whole situation is that Senator Mc Cain has stated that he will be giving the same speech at all three universities where he has been invited to speak recently, of which ours is the last; those being Jerry Falwell’s Liberty University, Columbia University, and finally here at the New School. For this reason I have unusual foresight concerning the themes of his address today. Based on the speech he gave at the other institutions, Senator Mc Cain will tell us today that dissent and disagreement are our “civic and moral obligation” in times of crisis. I consider this a time of crisis and I feel obligated to speak. Senator Mc Cain will also tell us about his cocky self-assuredness in his youth, which prevented him from hearing the ideas of others. In so doing, he will imply that those of us who are young are too naïve to have valid opinions and open ears. I am young, and although I don’t profess to possess the wisdom that time affords us, I do know that preemptive war is dangerous and wrong, that George Bush’s agenda in Iraq is not worth the many lives lost. And I know that despite all the havoc that my country has wrought overseas in my name, Osama bin Laden still has not been found, nor have those weapons of mass destruction.
Finally, Senator Mc Cain will tell us that we, those of us who are Americans, “have nothing to fear from each other.” I agree strongly with this, but I take it one step further. We have nothing to fear from anyone on this living planet. Fear is the greatest impediment to the achievement of peace. We have nothing to fear from people who are different from us, from people who live in other countries, even from the people who run our government–and this we should have learned from our educations here. We can speak truth to power, we can allow our humanity always to come before our nationality, we can refuse to let fear invade our lives and to goad us on to destroy the lives of others. These words I speak do not reflect the arrogance of a young strong-headed woman, but belong to a line of great progressive thought, a history in which the founders of this institution play an important part. I speak today, even through my nervousness, out of a need to honor those voices that came before me, and I hope that we graduates can all strive to do the same.
In response, the straight-shooting Senator who couldn’t take even a hint of polite criticism from his inferiors told the New York Times:
I feel sorry for people living in a dull world where they can’t listen to the views of others.
I assume he really meant that he felt sorry for himself having to listen to the views of others.
Jean Rohe followed up her marvelous speech by explaining why she refused to stay silent and in her place, as expected by McCain, in an article in the Huffington Post: Why I Spoke Up :
When I got home Thursday night after a rehearsal, I decided I needed to at least insert a line in my speech about the armbands. And I would’ve left it there, had the other student speaker, Christina Antonakis-Wallace, not reminded me in a telephone conversation that night that I should read John McCain’s speech from his other two speaking engagements which was conveniently posted on his website. Of course! I had to do my research. I checked the schedule for the ceremony and realized that I would be speaking just before the senator got his award. And that’s when the idea for a preemptive strike began to brew in my little stressed-out brain. What if I tore McCain’s speech apart before he even opened his mouth? After reading his speech a couple of times I picked out a few particularly loathsome sections–and believe it or not, none of these actually came from the extensive section where he defends his position on the war in Iraq–and I began planning an attack against him using his own words.
Rohe also stakes her right to a few other opinions:
It’s been noted in several columns that anti-McCain sentiment coming from the left may actually help him to garner support from the conservatives by giving him the opportunity to paint us as extremist liberals, so we should all keep our mouths shut. I say we need some “extremist liberals” if we’re ever going to get our democracy back. Others have said that he’s a moderate at heart and that we should let him continue pandering to the religious right so he can get the vote. Once he gets into office he’ll show his true colors and be the centrist he always was. I don’t buy that. People who truly care about human beings don’t vote for an unjust war, among other things, simply as a political maneuver. Enough said.
More importantly, I feel obligated to respond to one thing that McCain told the New York Times. “I feel sorry for people living in a dull world where they can’t listen to the views of others,” he said. This is just preposterous. Yes, McCain was undoubtedly shouted-out and heckled by people who were not politely absorbing his words so as to consider them fully from every angle. But what did he expect? We could’ve all printed out his speech and chanted it with him in chorus. Did he think that no one knew exactly what he was about to say? And it was precisely because we listen to the views of others, and because, as I said in my speech, we don’t fear them, that we as a school were able to mount such a thorough and intelligent opposition to his presence. Ignorant, closed-minded people would not have been able to do what we did. We chose to be in New York for our years of higher education for the very reason that we would be challenged to listen to opposing viewpoints each and every day and to deal with that challenge in a nonviolent manner. We’ve gotten very good at listening to the views of others and learning how to also make our views heard, even when we don’t have the power of national political office and the media on our side.
In response, coward McCain sent one of goons, aka “aide” Mark Salter, to attack Rohe in comments in the Huffington Post:
What, pray tell, have you risked? The only person you have succeeded in making look like an idiot is yourself.
You took exception to the paragraph in which he lightly deprecated the vanity of youth. Well, Ms. Rohe, and your fellow graduates’s comical self-importance deserves a rebuke far stronger than the gentle suggestions he offered you. So, let me leave you with this. Should you grow up and ever get down to the hard business of making a living and finding a purpose for your lives beyond self-indulgence some of you might then know a happiness far more sublime than the fleeting pleasure of living in an echo chamber. And if you are that fortunate, you might look back on the day of your graduation and your discourtesy to a good and honest man with a little shame and the certain knowledge that it very unlikely any of you will ever posses the one small fraction of the character of John McCain.
Fortunately, McCain and his goons did not succeed in silencing this heroine of democracy. Her Response to McCain’s Aide Mark Salter shows what a class act she is, as does her appearance on MSNBC’s Countdown.
The following is addressed directly to Mr. Salter:
Without taking issue with your statement point by point, I’d just like to draw attention for a moment to a few things you said. Firstly, it was clear to me why Senator McCain chose to give the same speech at every school. It was meant to show consistency in his message, and, contrary to what you suggested, there is no place in my speech or my other writing where I take issue with that. However, interestingly, it is precisely because the senator’s speech had nothing to do with our graduation or anyone else’s that it worked so marvelously in all settings. It was equally out of place no matter where it was delivered.
So, here’s to Jean Sara Rohe, heroine of democracy.
Entry Filed under: Electoral Politics, Politics, Rights and Liberties, Social Change, Social Issues
3 Comments Add your own
1. Grenville Rogers | June 10th, 2006 at 1:40 am
Jean Sara Rohe has rekindled hope for the country. Her Mum and Dad must be very proud of her. I am. An old man once wrote to a young man, “Let no man despise thy youth.”
I am a 79-year old man in Canada, and I would like our Prime Minister to demonstrate the wisdom and courage of the young lady, Jean Sara Rohe.
I’ll be sending my grandson a copy of her speech.
Thank you, Miss Rohe.
Grenville Rogers
Lively, Ontario
Canada
2. Greg | February 1st, 2007 at 4:31 pm
Jean Sara Rohe is disgusting. Her communist traits shined through. Thank goodness people like her are usually weak and feeble minded….
3. Arancaytar | July 17th, 2008 at 11:54 am
^ Yay for sarcasm. =)
You need to work on the delivery though; it’s only a good joke if it’s not quite obvious whether or not you are serious. You had me up to “people [who dare to voice dissent] are weak”.
–
I’m very impressed. There need to be more people like Jean.
Leave a Comment
Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>
Trackback this post | Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed