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1monster

(11,012 posts)
Wed Jul 3, 2013, 01:35 PM Jul 2013

"He wanted to be an engineer..."

He wanted to be an engineer, the stories report. He was taking flying lessons. He got A’s and B’s and was majoring, said his teacher, in cheerfulness.

Tom Wolfe, more cynical than I, notes in “The Bonfire of the Vanities” that every kid who dies unjustly and too early retroactively transforms into an honor student with presidential aspirations. This is not quite fair to their memory either, but it is the debt we owe the dead.

Dead children, dead kids, often carry with them the burden of our outsize hopes. “He could have been president,” one commentator noted. He could have been an astronaut. Hope can cast shadows as massive and false as those cast by fear.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/compost/post/the-scariest-thing-about-trayvon-martin/2012/03/20/gIQAfKlLSS_blog.html The scariest thing about Trayvon Martin

By Alexandra Petri
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"He wanted to be an engineer..." (Original Post) 1monster Jul 2013 OP
The standards for setting the bar for a hate crime libodem Jul 2013 #1

libodem

(19,288 posts)
1. The standards for setting the bar for a hate crime
Wed Jul 3, 2013, 02:02 PM
Jul 2013

Are the highest in the land. The standards of shooting because of 'fear' not so much...

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