A Letter to Vin
Courtesy of Vin Suprynowicz
[email protected] 
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
Mr. Suprynowicz,
         Your article on the NEA is paternalistic and doesn't understand 
the character of the Arts and their relationship to the minorities and 
poor of this country.  Often the arts have been the only way out of 
the ghetto for minorities of every persuasion and monetary class. 
America's greatest artists and performing artists have found this door 
regularly when the other doors have been closed due to prejudice and 
simple class bigotry.
         Who are your people?  How long have you been in this country?  How 
many generations?  Why do you not know this history?  You seem like 
the ultra-liberals who cut out the competitive sports programs in 
NYCity because they were supposed to foster aggression when in reality 
they were the only way out for many of the most abused folks in the 
Ghetto.  In their secondary reasoning they closed the door on both 
Sports and the Arts because the approved way was through Math and 
Science.  They didn't deserve these extra-curriculars because they 
hadn't taken their 3Rs medicine.
         The NEA has more than paid for itself in rural America as a 
business opportunity and has served many of the poorest folks in ways 
that neither government, with the possible exception of the GI bill,  
or private business has been capable or willing to do.
         Before you go shooting off your mouth and supporting a community 
college historian who lies about American History, I would suggest 
that you not embarrass yourself or your family by shooting from the 
hip.  Study, and learn.  I am from that group that you spoke of,  I 
have lived in a trailer, and my wife is from Knoxville, Tenn.  I am 
from the Quapaw Indian Land in Oklahoma as is America's premier Native 
American Composer Louis Ballard.  Without the outside help, many of 
those who have excelled wouldn't have.  Proof of that is how few have 
gotten out since the oil and lead and zinc has been depleted.  The 
kids are just as smart, the NEA money is just a trickle trying to 
serve the needs of too many and the rest of the country doesn't care. 
There is no profit in it for the market and so nothing will happen 
there.
         So I would suggest that you consider the people who had the first 
prima ballerinas in America.  They proved that Americans could compete 
as a culture with the rest of the world.  I would also suggest that 
you consider the people who have given America its only genuine new 
musical art form (Jazz) and are now poised to rescue the poetry 
connection in the country in the eyes of the rest of the world as 
well.  The former were Ballenchine's and Diagliev's Prima Ballarinas 
who were American Indian and in the latter case I'm speaking of course 
of the Black community.  The community that filled the opera stages of 
Europe after WWII while America still wouldn't go to the Bathroom with 
them or allow them to sit on their sofas.
         I would also suggest that you remember that extreme wealth has 
not rescued the Arab Oil Potentates from their provincial and 
barbarous reputation (whether deserved or not) and neither will 
America's dominant society's wealth rescue them from their lack of 
artistic productivity in the eyes of the world.  To the Europeans you 
seem like a good place to get movies and military hardware but nothing 
serious.  I know the Japanese feel the same (because I've done 
business with them) and the Taiwanese as well with the Communists not 
far behind on this cultural game.  You give two pennies a day to this 
situation and you complain as if you are hurting because of it.  You 
wouldn't give two cents for the American identity.
         You're right about the sucking but it is not by the artists at the 
government, but people like you at the artist's poor sagging dugs.   
No number of pretty blonds chortling sweetly  on the TV, from the Cato 
Institute, about individualism, will change that.  Come to the 
reservation and learn about the individualism of poverty and no exit. 
You would close another door?  And for two pennies?   Thanks a lot. 
That is typical!  Did I hear gambling mentioned?   In Republican 
Libertarian Party State Oklahoma?  How about New York?   You've got to 
be kidding.
         First defeat the Christians then the local businesses, then the 
State governments and in some cases you would have a point, but you 
guys cheat and you always have and probably will as long as the grass 
grows and the water flows.
Regards,
Ray Evans Harrell, artistic director
The Magic Circle Chamber Opera of New York, Inc.
[email protected]
--------------------------- [reply begins] ---------------------------
Greetings --
         What the central government subsidizes, it will quickly politicize 
and control.  If you want to see where government subsidies for (and 
thus, control of) the arts lead, look at painting, architecture, and 
yes, even dance, under Stalin.
         (No, I don't "give" two pennies to the NEA.  Since money is 
fungible, we could just as well say that every penny of income tax I 
and 50 of my closest neighbors have paid in the past decade, has gone 
entirely to fund the NEA ... and all against our will.)
         Stalin poured lots of money into dance.  So why did his dancers 
keep defecting?  Because they could only do it his way.  Without the 
freedom of expression, what is "art" but the decaying flowers in a 
sealed and airless crypt?  And once the politicians fund something, 
why wouldn't they censor it to gain political points with various 
loudmouth constituencies?  They do it every time.
         Members of any minority should be free to pursue any art they wish 
... in the free market. Of course many have escaped the ghettos via 
art.  Hollywood is a classic case in point.  True, blacks were kept 
out for decades (which is pathetic), and virtually everyone except the 
music composers was expected to adopt an anglo name.  But in 
Hollywood, talent could win out.  Hollywood is a great example to the 
world of the triumph of capitalist opportunity ... without 
government "arts" subsidies.
         On the other hand, the tax moneys used to fund the NEA are looted 
from the paychecks of working men and women without their permission. 
While that taxpayer might prefer to use that money to subsidize a 
local blues or jazz club -- and the artists who seek to make a living 
there -- his "pennies" will instead be used to fund some symphony or 
ballet whose professional grant writers have managed to monopolize the 
attention of the politicized grant-issuers in Washington, a 
"government-approved" artistic endeavor that said involuntary 
"contributor" may never get to see, or even want to see.
         As to "how many generations my people" have lived in this country, 
suppose you tell me how many it takes before an American citizen has a 
right to express a political opinion on these matters.  I didn't know 
we had second-class citizenship for those whose grandparents came here 
less than 50 years ago, or less than 100 years ago.  Please do 
explain:  how exactly does this work?  Shouldn't we tell people about 
it, before they immigrate?
         I gather your "Chamber Opera" is a recipient of some of the stolen 
funds in question.  Here is my advice for you:  be more honest about 
your chosen profession, and how it is funded.  The next time you need 
some more money for one of your worthy undertakings, don't enlist 
anonymous bureaucrats in Washington to steal the money you need from 
my paycheck and those of millions like me.  Get a gun, come here, 
stick it in my ribs, and try to steal what you want personally, 
while telling me what a wonderful favor you're doing me.
         I will then have a bit more respect for you, and that clearing 
house for stolen funds you call "The Magic Circle Chamber Opera of New 
York, Inc."
Best Wishes,
Vin Suprynowicz
"The right of self-defense is the first law of nature; in most 
governments it has been the study of rulers to confine this right 
within the narrowest limits possible.  Wherever standing armies are 
kept up, and when the right of the people to keep and bear arms is, 
under any color or pretext whatsoever, prohibited, liberty, if not 
already annihilated, is on the brink of destruction." -- Henry St. 
George Tucker, in Blackstone's 1768 "Commentaries on the Laws of 
England."
Vin Suprynowicz is the assistant editorial page editor of the Las 
Vegas Review-Journal. Readers may contact him via e-mail at 
[email protected]. The web site for the Suprynowicz column is at 
http://www.nguworld.com/vindex/. The column is syndicated in the 
United States and Canada via Mountain Media Syndications, P.O. Box 
4422, Las Vegas Nev. 89127.