God bless you, Dr. Kevorkian (14 page)

BOOK: God bless you, Dr. Kevorkian
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"The presence of those cameras finally acknowledges," he said to me, "that justice systems anywhere, anytime, have never cared whether justice was achieved or not. Like Roman games, justice systems are ways for unjust

there is no

other sort of

be enormously entertaining with real lives at stake." I thanked Mr. Darrow for having made American history much more humane than it would have been otherwise, with his eloquent defenses in court of early organizers of labor unions, of teachers of unpopular scientific truths, and for his vociferous contempt for racism, and for his loathing of the death penalty. And the late, great lawyer Clarence Darrow said only this to

"I did my best to

Signing off now. Hey, Jack, waddaya say we go downtown for some of that good

cuisine?

36

during

[keen

a year of interviewing completely dead people, while only half dead myself, I asked Saint Peter again and again if I could meet a particular hero of mine. He is my fellow Hoosier, the late Eugene Victor Debs of Terre Haute, Indiana. He was five times the Socialist Party's candidate for president back when this country still had a strong Socialist Party.

And then, guess what, yesterday afternoon none other than Eugene Victor Debs, organizer and leader of the first successful strike against a major American industry, the railroads, was waiting for me at the far end of the blue tunnel. We

met before. This

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great American died in 1926 at the age of seventy-one when I was only four years

I thanked him for words of his, which I quote again and again in lectures: "As long as there is a lower class, I am in it. As long as there is a criminal element, I am of it. As long as there is a soul in prison, I am not free." He asked me how those words were received here on Earth in America nowadays. I said they were ridiculed. "People snicker and snort," I said. He asked what our fastest growing industry was. "The building of prisons," I

"What a shame," he

And then he asked me how

the Sermon on the Mount was going over these days. And then he spread his wings and flew away.
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BOOK: God bless you, Dr. Kevorkian
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