Al wanted you to know certain things. He wanted you to know that he invented
the Internet. He would want you to pretend you believed it in his presence. But
nobody really did. And he wanted you to know, strangely enough, that the pop
novel Love Story was written about him
when he was in college in the ’60s. Love Story, like Transcendental Meditation and the Bee Gees,
was a gate-closer: a rite of exit from the ’60s. (So is Al Gore.) Secondary
figures follow the Titans like those little fish that latch onto sharks for the
ride, and strangely enough, Al wanted us to know he was in that book. The book
and movie had the tag line, “Love is never having to say you’re sorry.” It was
on billboards and everywhere. It so nauseated John Lennon, in love again with
Yoko Ono, that he tagged on in small print to the bottom of his “Double
Fantasy” album, “Love is always having to say you’re sorry.”
Al Gore, like the character in Love Story, never seemed to fit into the self-invention that he perceived to be
himself. It seemed odd when Bill Clinton picked him for VP because they were
both from the South. But neither related to the region. It would be a purely
generational team, but Al Gore would always be Bill’s side meat. Then when he
struck out on his own and the vote went wanky in Florida, John E. Mack, head of
psychiatry at Harvard, wrote an op-ed for The New York Times saying the Trickster was at hand.
Apparently it still is.
It was awkward watching him try to kiss his wife. And I got the chills — in a
bad way — during his campaign against Bush when he started giving rousing
speeches in a “Negro dialect” like a black Baptist preacher. White farm people
don’t talk like that in Carthage, Tenn. Or in The Fairfax Hotel on Embassy Row
in Washington where Gore grew up. My mother-in-law has a deep Georgia accent
like Rosalynn Carter’s. People in those parts and on into Texas have accents as
varied as florae and faunae. It may have sounded interesting to his generation
— Al reinventing himself again, this time as a “Negro field hand” from
Mississippi in the mid-1930s — but it was no end of strangeness to Southern
people.
Gore, that is, in the past tense. That he is still reinventing himself is and
has been unsettling. Like the Clintons, they have found the presidency and vice
presidency somehow unfulfilling and see it only as a steppingstone to something
greater. World conquest of some ephemeral sort. The kind Elvis, Michael Jackson
and the actual sharks had. But these people are purely generational and now
they are old. They have no place to go, no piece of earth of their own that
they belong to. They, like the Bhagwan, seem slightly to be not from this
earth. They have only their generation to go to and memories of themselves
together in college. And if you are not that same age, and even so, they just
start at one point to seem strange.
Jerry Rubin, one of the essential leaders of their day, said never to trust
anyone over 30. Maybe that is why they have seemed so untrustworthy these past
several decades.
Visit Mr. Quigley’s website at http://quigleyblog.blogspot.com.