I'm
sitting in my apartment, windows open, listening to the Indianapolis
International Violin Competition on PBS. I
hear the rain on the streets and the sound of tires swishing through puddles on North Delaware. It is 61 degrees and cloudy
and foggy outside.
I recognize this scene from childhood. Something I read. Dickens? Singer? Aunt Alice?
Earlier
I drove out to the West Side to get some supplies for an art project
that I thought up in bed last night. This involved buying paint
and glaze and 'stealing' fabric samples.
At
Joanne's Fabrics, near each bolt of fabric, there is a plastic
bag of small swatches. Like paint sample cards in Home Depot. I
collected maybe 35 different swatches. I guess technically this is
not stealing. Obversely, come to think of it, one could say, I
guess technically this is stealing. The fact that I
did it surreptitiously, furtively, sneakily may be
considered implied interior commentary. But I did buy some lovely expensive
fabric. In the wilderness of my mind, that compensates.
Is
this an ethical dilemma?
Should
I go with Aquinas, who wrote, "It is not theft, properly
speaking, to take secretly and use another's property in a case of
extreme need: because that which he takes for the support of his life
becomes his own property by reason of that need."
*Somewhere
somebody said Art is Life”, so that seems to make it okay with
Aquinas.
Or
the Quran, which says, "The hand (of the thief) should be cut
off for (the theft of) a quarter of a Dinar or more.
Today's
value of a Dinar, in US dollars, is 0.00086 which is rather trifling
for a chopped off hand. But, of course, the point is that the value
is not the point; but the act, the intention is what condemns?
Blah,
blah, blah. Camels on the head of a needle, etc. Sophistry, after a while, gets boring, right? Even for
the most self-absorbed Sophist. Maybe I should turn off that violin
music now.
As
far as the ethical dilemma, here I sit with a pocket full of patches,
feeling not the least bit guilty.
Moving
on...
Earlier,
45 minutes from home, thinking about stopping at Home Depot, I became
sure I had left the Chicken with Rice cooking on Hi. I could almost
smell it. Internal panic. Maybe I did turn it off, but rack my brain as I might, I
couldn't picture the moment when I clicked that burner off. I couldn't hear the sound of that click.
I went
the obvious route. The pan burned, smoke filled the apartment, the
kitchen caught fire. Soon the apartment was filled with flames. The unfortunate part, the whole apartment building burned to the ground, killing
all inhabitants and I lost my new electronic play-pretties.. The worst part, Linda's dog and cat burned to
death, trapped by the smoke and flames. A lot like having an auto
accident while chauffering someone else's kids in your car. Nothing
for it but suicide. No redemption. For a nanosecond the thought of
striking a bargain with you know who made a flitting shadow in the
vicinity of my mind, but I fought it off by picturing a giant Buddha
filling my head.
Forty--five
minutes of dread, visions of firetrucks, dirty looks from homeless
neighbors. I started scanning the rooftops in the East at Speedway
and sniffing the air from downtown at Indiana Avenue.
On PBS the
violin was playing Sonata No. 1 in F minor, Op. 80- S Prokofiev, A heavy, dark piece, and
the violinist was an Australian woman named Suyeon Kang. For me, at the
moment, it evoked visions of Rome in flames. Hell on North Delaware
Street.
The
apartment did not burn, Linda's animals did not die at my hands and
I gave myself the rest of the day off. Hence this squib. I have a headache from all this concentration, thus, the end.
*
Parts I made up to satisfy the argument.
2 comments:
There is something missing from the Aquinas; namely, that stealing is depriving someone else of their need. Your acquisition, as it wuz, fulfilled your need; did it deprive anyone else of theirs?
Picky picky picky. You expect everybody to come up smelling like roses?
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