1 Feb. 9, 2007 FORUM www.guilfordian.com Page 9 Greensboro. N.C. Reflections on journalism following the Bryan incident Bryan Cahall I Staff Writer Poe writes, "There are some secrets which do not permit themselves to be told ... Now and then, alas, the conscience of man takes up a burden so heavy in horror that it can be thrown down only into the grave. And thus the essence of all crime is undivulged." Shortly after midnight on Jan. 20, something happened. I know this. I also know that this community is reeling from an "incident." It is an "inci dent" because no word better prevents me from committing libel; I know no more stable ground. I am a journalist. As such, I hold sacred a certain intu ition about the future and the past. The past is certain; it is at least knowable if not known. It is what I report. The future is unstable, unknowable, to be re ported. This is how it was sup posed to go. I feel, instead, that I have been asleep, that this intuition was always a dream. On Jan. 20, I woke up to a phone call describing a maelstrom the night before, of baseball bats and comas, melee combat of mythic proportions, a clash of cultures. The project of "Truth" is to proceed backwards through all this. It is a search for origins, and witnesses, "what hap pened" and wherefore. But our world falls too fast for muck- rakers. I blinked, and Truth had shattered, its parts crystallized, refracting the past violently and in all directions. "We have known freedom's price," said President Bush as he closed his address on Jan. 23. "We have shown freedom's power. And in this great con flict, my fellow Americans, we will see freedom's victory." A certainty of what is yet to come, and then the local FOX station turned our attention to Guil ford. Their pivotal source was a student who claimed to have seen the incident. "It was crazy," he said to FOX, and nothing more. At least it was a fact. The ravishing onslaught of corporate media attention helped to ensure that any seam less portrait of Truth would dissolve. In its place has arisen a mosaic of forceful and agen da-laden "truths." And we are all responsible for this - those of us who have shouted, who have whispered, who have said nothing at all. Institutional administrators, athletes, white anti-racists, and anti-racists of color (and of course those hybrid anti-rac ists who are also administra tors), now police the boundar ies of their tiles, their truths on this mosaic - in open forums, closed meetings, public state ments, leaked letters and un authorized fliers. The future is guaranteed and the past is made to serve it. Activists, Guilford's cher ished Mercenaries to the Good, cry out again for "change" (but for how long); and they know what change means because they know what happened. The administration, of course, has declared Guilford's "allegiance to the truth." They have promised, "The integrity of (the judicial process) will re sult in justice." And they know that this will happen because their truth is neatly compiled Dan Katzman/Guilfordian A REPORTER INTERVIEWS JUNIOR Jeremy Bante about the community response BEFORE AN OPEN FORUM ON JaN. 24. in a stack of witness statements and medical 'reports, none of which mentions the War on Terror. What will the historian of the future write about the inci dent on our campus? Will the "altercation in Bryan Hall" be a footnote, the xenophobic by product of an endless criminal war? Or will it be a shining ex ample of the triumph of "ratio nal, inclusive discourse" and "due process"? It depends on what he wants to prove, I sup pose. Politics everywhere. Every where politics. And I am a jour nalist. I report. I am a journal ist, a historian of the present if you will. As such, I am compro mised, because, unlike so many others it seems, I don't know what will happen tomorrow. Music spreads ^the Gay’ Nasi Easton I Senior Writer THE reality of GRAFITTI In all ihe Internet's endless wisdom and plethora of helpful knowledge, a few Web sites really stand out Goc^e, for example, helps even the least tech- sawy person to surf the World Wide Web with a single ^ck. YouTube allows the humblest among us to become a virtual video star in mere instants. And, meet importantly, LoveGodsWay.oig enlightens any one and everyone about the danger of listening to bands that spread "the Gay." Yes, "the Gay." Before stumbling upon this Web site, I had no idea that homc^exuality was a virus, something akin to the flu tiiat, if caught early enough, can be properly treated and cured. Nor was I aware that this virus doesn't even require person-to-person contact to spread — it's so contagious, apparently that even listening to suggestions of it is enough to con taminate the nmve heterosexual. Now, thanks to this Web site, I can finally consider myself well informed. No longer am I in the dark about the truth behind the lyrics of the "really gay" Elton John or "dark gay" Marilyn Mansoa Never more will I be lulled to sleep by Frank Sinatra's ro mantic melodies or Su^an Stevens' haunting songs about 'Tsalms" — oh no! I'm not letting my sexual- it/s guard down for an instant. I'm so impressed by this utterly unbiased, obvi ously objective list, in fact that I fed the need to follow suit and enhghten the world with an equally reason able list of my own; Bands who spread the Red. Through my years of careful listening and perus ing of many music libraries, I have created a list of art ists that through dther fiieir lyrics or actions, dearly show they are commies. WatA out for these bands, parents, as you never know when your little one may give up his or her J.K Rowling in favor of Karl Marx and go Red. As with "the Gay," the Commie may be stopped if caught early enough, but once it's too late ... there's no turning back. Bands to watch out for — Gnarls Barkley. That music video for "Crazy" may have looked like just a bunch of strange inkblots to the unaware, but some of us saw it for what it truly was — subliminal messages urging listeners towards Marxist ways. A dever tactic on Gnarls' behalf, but I saw throu^ their ambiguity to the dear. Red mes sage underneath. — The Dixie Chicks. Ihis should be obvious. They have expressed their distaste for the Bush administra tion — need I say more? Anti-Bush, pro-Commie... they're practically synonymous. — Anti-Flag. As if their name isn't enough, they have an entire song based around equality. Equd portions for all? Equal chances for everyone? Etees any of this sound familiar to you? Well, ii you know anything about anything, it should sound exactly like what it means: "we love communism." — Red Hot Chili Peppers. Yet another band with a SOTig about equality — and it even says the word "ted" twice! Come on, people, do I have to spell this out for you? — Dave Matthews Band. Yes, even this seem ingly sweet gentle man has communist ties. "And all the little ants are marching, red and black antennrrs waving"? Don't be fooled by his soft exterior. Dave Matthews is a true Red through and through Now, before you get all up in arms over your fa vorite band being induded in this list think it througli logically. And while you're giving yourself a thorough headache attempting that at least entertain the notion that perhaps my list isn't as far-fetched as it seems. It's cert^y not any more far-fetched than the idea that certain bands encourage homosexuality— or. I'm sorry, "the Gay" — through their lyrics and music. LnveGodsWay.org is right In this age of rampant piracy and audio-based viruses, it's crucial to keep watch over what music you and your loved ones listen to. After all, you never know— that song you previously considered innexent may actually be de signed to push you into the ranks of the latest group of victims in our fair land.