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Horse
Sense Meets Street Smart
I guess
that, like most people, I enjoy patting myself on the back every now and
then, or maybe more often than that. Also like most people, since I’m the
one doing it, I don’t find much of anything wrong with that.
On the
other hand, I do think that this can be taken to unseemly extremes by
folks who are not me, and a case in point, of which I am becoming
particularly bored, involves the use of the term “street smart”.
If I may
be allowed to pretend that you’ve been living in a cave for the last 20
years, let me explain that “street smart” is a label intended to describe
someone who is particularly adept at taking care of him or herself in an
urban setting, usually to the exclusion of everyone else, and despite a
complete lack of any socially redeeming graces.
Time
and Newsweek absolutely LOVE to describe young delinquents as “street
smart”. It’s almost as if those writers secretly admire the astute
business-sense and long-term planning of someone who would start dealing
crack cocaine in the first place.
To give a simple example, if Jimmy has three apples, Big Otis,
the 280-lb., 15-year-old pimp, trigger-man and local mob representative,
has 875 apples, and the creaky old lady down by the bus stop trying for
dear life just to remain standing upright and, God willing, make it
through one more long and painful day, has one apple, Jimmy gives Big Otis
a wide berth and knocks over the old lady for HER apple.
This is
“street smart”.
I guess
what ticks me off is that the term is most often used to glorify the baser
aspects of human existence; to celebrate “me-first” survival, over human
decency.
If
Jimmy had a clue as to who Mother Theresa was, he’d be sure to let you
know that she was a dork.
And
incidentally, you don’t need to get the idea that this is my opinion
simply because I am an Official Hayseed. “Street smart” is just an urban
twist of the old rural term, “horse sense”.
Like the
word “awesome”, “horse sense” once meant something different, but today it
frequently refers to someone like Earnest.
Ernest
may be a third-grade drop-out who lives in an old truck bed and beats his
wife, who in turn beats their 11 sticky-dirty-snotty children (especially
when in the check-out lane at Wal-Mart) but, among his peers, he is said
to have “horse sense” because he never displays anything akin to
generosity, sympathy, or open-mindedness.
The
opposite of having “horse sense” is to be an “educated fool”. The term
“educated fool” is extremely popular among uneducated fools. It
describes someone, who, though literate, ambitious and well-schooled, does
things with which the speaker disagrees. Adlai Stevenson comes to mind.
The
message is, if you’ve ever done anything for anyone else, ever voted in
favor of anything, or ever given away anything, even something
that you didn’t really want, then there’s something wrong with you.
Hmmm.
This all sounds kinda preachy doesn’t it? Funny where things can go when
I get wound up. If I were more street smart, I’d probably trash it and
write something else, but here it is after nine already, and that would be
a lot of extra work.
The
truth is, I got started on this line of thought the other day with a
completely different idea in my head.
I was
out driving the tractor (where I do some a muh bes’ thinkin’) and I
watched a hawk flying over. Naturally, like any red-blooded American boy
who grew up in the fifties, I immediately thought about the lyrics to
Lorenz Hart’s theme from Oklahoma!:
“Every night my
honey-lamb and I
Sit alone and talk, and watch a hawk
Makin' lazy circles in the sky.”
I was
thinking that while Hart may have been a big-time lyricist and probably
used all the right forks and spoons etc., that he obviously didn’t have
much horse sense in the classic definition of simply knowing something
commonplace. (Please ignore everything else I just wrote)
Never
mind the difficulty one encounters in trying to watch anything, but bats,
flying at night, I’m wagering that Hart never, ever, even once, sat with
HIS honey-lamb and watched a hawk similarly.
Hawks
are birds of prey. They don’t make lazy circles in the sky, they find a
nice tree-top to perch in, and then they wait for an unsuspecting victim
to show itself, at which time they swoop down and scoop up fuzzy Peter
Cottontail or whomever.
What
follows involves much blood, hair and gristle.
Scientific tests have shown that baby chicks will go berserk when the
silhouette of a hawk is held over their heads (as opposed to that of, say,
a pigeon) so for a hawk to make lazy circles in the sky would be rather
akin to sending out an all-points bulletin that they were preparing to eat
someone down below. It just wouldn’t be productive from the hawk's
street-smart point of view.
What
poor clueless Lorenz Hart is referring to, is the buzzard or turkey
vulture, who catches slow summer updrafts (in the heat of day) and rides
them in a slow upward spiral in his search for tasty rotting meat.
Ergo,
the proper song lyric SHOULD have been:
“Every DAY my honey-lamb and I
Steep ourselves in culture, and watch a vulture
Makin' lazy circles in the sky.”
So like I say, the fact that you may or
may not be a successful lyricist or a wealthy crack entrepreneur doesn't
mean that you know anything.
If you ask me (which no one seems to do
much anymore) we need to start focusing on the things we don't know
and try to start learning from them.
It might not stop any wars, or end
street crime, but perhaps we'd have fewer dopey musicals.
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