Speaking of family pyrotechnic treks.

For the past two years, the Significant Republican and I have watched Fourth of July fireworks in Sparks from the parking lot of Target on Prater Way. The parkingโ€™s great. Easy in, easy out. Oooh. Aaah.

This year, we headed for the Sparks Marina, where we could soak up community and celebrate our countryโ€™s freedom with a seething mass of humanity.

A recent spurt of e-mails tags me as unpatriotic, anti-American, etc. Iโ€™ve been told to โ€œpitch [my] filthy opinion tentโ€ in Iraq, where the โ€œanimalsโ€ will surely welcome me, right before they โ€œbutcherโ€ me.

Iโ€™ve been told to โ€œreallyโ€ read my Bible. (Note: Read the whole deal through twice, the New Testament more than a dozen times. Committed much to memory. Once spent a year memorizing Ecclesiastes.)

In recent e-mails, Iโ€™ve been lectured on the many fine uses of war, reminded that Christ will lead a future battle on a white horseโ€”โ€œTexas-styleโ€โ€”and urged to consider whence came my freedom.

So here I am on a hillside overlooking the Marina considering whence came my freedom. Kids are rolling down the steep grass slope, giggling and screaming. Nearby, a guy downs Bud Lights and gushes about the Raiders. A half-dozen teens crowd onto a blanket, checking cell phones frequently and squirting one another with water bottles.

I inhale freedom. It smells like beer, hamburgers cooking on a charcoal grill, patchouli oil and laundry detergent. I love this smell. I describe it to my Significant Republican, and he mentions the occasional waft of cigarette smoke. Mmm.

I love my community. If the lives and freedoms of my fellow Sparks-dwellers were at risk from an irrational enemy, Iโ€™d fight.

Letโ€™s be hypothetical: Another country, say Canada, decides that the people of the United States are oppressed by our leaders. War-mongering Canucks, backed by the majority of voting Canadians, opt to liberate us. Whether we like it or not. A fierce battle is fought. Canadaโ€™s vastly superior military forces our guys and gals underground. The war moves to our streets. Family members are maimed and killed. Husbands and sons are arrested for questioning and torturedโ€”because they know someone who knows someone whose brother makes bombs.

Consider if, while Iโ€™m at the Marina, Canada drops a bomb, killing suspected insurgents along with a couple hundred families. The child playing on the grassy hill survives, face mangled beyond recognition.

Would I fight back? Would you? Would Raider fans set down their Bud Lights and take hostages from the invading forces? Would some of us turn into โ€œanimalsโ€ and โ€œbutchersโ€ to defend our loved ones? Would media attention become so important to our cause that weโ€™d even behead someone as a desperate symbolic act?

Would the world care that our children were dying? Experts interviewed on Canadian TV would intone a familiar refrain: โ€œWeโ€™re just trying to help. After all weโ€™ve done, we donโ€™t know why they hate us.โ€

End hypothetical. Canadaโ€™s good.

So freedom. Hooray for Iraqโ€™s new independent government. By many accounts, things are worse than ever. Iraqโ€™s so-called โ€œliberationโ€ cost the lives of thousands, many civilians, along with around 850 U.S. soldiers.

OK, enough bitching. Iโ€™m safe here, living well, free to work and write and read what I want.

The Sparks fireworks delight. A gaggle of girls in short shorts stumbles along and stops in front of us. One girl turns to me to apologize for blocking my view. Her words slur: โ€œThey suck from this far away anyway.โ€ Iโ€™m free to disagree.

Halfway through the display, thereโ€™s a sprinkler scare. Though it turns out to be a false alarm, dozens of people make a mass exodus off the grass and to their cars.

As the Great Prophet himself once noted, we are sheep without a shepherd.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *