The America Jon Stewart Forgot
Every day at work for the last three years, while I ate my
lunch, I would watch Jon Stewart’s Daily Show. He’s what I want to be: a bridge
between laughter and reflection, between awareness and action, between the wisdom
of adulthood and youth’s naïve optimism. And yet because Jon Stewart holds
America to such high standards (standards America should perhaps hold itself to
more often), his brand of parody emphasises America’s shortcomings. Watching Jon
Stewart, Bill Maher and other comedians has jaundiced my view of this great
country.
I’ve been in America for exactly a month and my friends
always ask me “so how is Yale?”
Yale is everything you’d imagine: unequivocally, unapologetically
Ivy League. It is grand: the gym looks like a cathedral and the resources
available are staggering. Do you want to bring in a guest speaker to augment
with group work? Here’s $1,000. Do you want to spend the summer in Ukraine
working on energy policy? Here’s a blank cheque. But that’s not what captivates
me about this place. On 55 Hillhouse Avenue (that Hemingway and Dickens called
the ‘most beautiful street in America’) sit a group of young people who fill me
with more inspiration than all the regal courtyards we walk through every day.
They are my classmates at the Jackson Institute for Global Affairs and the best
thing about Yale (and my life right now) is that I get to sit with them.
They are the America Jon Stewart forgot. They are 30 men and
women from around the world who have good in their hearts and steel in their
veins. I am hesitant to say “we” because I am still figuring out my place
within this tribe. My biggest goal and erstwhile challenge is to shut up. Shut
up and listen. What I love about my class – and particularly the Americans who
anchor it – is their will to go out into the world and improve things. It is
something that as a journalist, you come to admire – as a writer I am at best
an advocate, at worst an armchair activist. But my classmates left Ohio and New
Jersey and Texas with that same naïve optimism (that Jon ought to recapture)
and built things.
My classmates are the America you don’t see in the news: the
America that wants to be an international force because it feels it has a duty
to ameliorate. An America self-aware and confident enough in its virtues that
it ventures back into Iraq and Afghanistan and Benin and Rwanda simply because
it feels it has the capability to amend. They are army officers supremely
cognizant of their misadventures and fearless enough to go back and fix things;
fearless enough not to give up. They are the Peace Corps volunteers who build
schools and hospitals and help young atheists become more tolerant of the
religious. “Libya? I’ll go there. Kosovo? I’ll go there. You can stay in London
and go to warehouse parties or continue working for your dad’s company in
Bombay. Enjoy your weekend trip to Bangkok. I’m going to South Africa to work
on an anti-AIDS project.”
The Americans I’ve met here have a profound, unerring will
to learn about and improve the world. From my own limited experience, Europeans
seem happy with enjoying their lives and finding the beauty in things (nothing
wrong with that) while Asians want to secure prosperity for their families,
their clans and their countries (in that order). But the Americans here, the
ones that Jon pays scant credence to, are going to venture forth and do their
best, armed with bags of money and hearts of gold. The international students
in my class are no less impressive or loveable. The Russian, who has inserted
himself into the lion’s star-spangled den, finds his proud nation repeatedly
critiqued by the world’s most august historians and responds with a measured
candour we should all aspire to. The Chinese approaches problems (and opinions)
with the understated sincerity that has driven his economy’s logical
resurgence.
You know when you see horrible news on TV? When you forfeit
hope? These people stop you in your tracks. They will not stand for it. It is really
quite incredible.
Everyone brings something unique to the table. You see
someone struggling through economics lecture in the morning. But in the
afternoon, he’s knee deep in Hannah Arendt while you’re still figuring out what
“The Banality of Evil” actually means. It is sobering and intoxicating at the
same time: we’ve all begun this journey together and we have no idea who or
where we’ll be two years from now.
I’ve found myself changing too. Yale is a petri dish for
studying one’s plunge into mediocrity. This is where learning to shut up comes
in handy. As a result, I’ve had to push myself and challenge myself more than
ever before; I naively thought that getting into grad school would be the
toughest part (working full time while also studying for GREs and putting
together solid applications) and then things would get easier. But grad school
is harder. It’s a relentless avalanche of duties and here’s the problem: They
are duties to yourself. If you slack, you lose. Not your parent, not your
employer. The undergraduate zeal for finding the path of least resistance is
quickly disappearing. Procrastination is the last vestibule of a crumbling
empire. There are days when you do calculus for five hours and then come home
to an hour of German homework and two hours of marking undergraduates’ homework.
I find solace, on evenings of mental maelstrom, in America’s single greatest
export bar none: Miles Davis. An hour of jazz and I’m ready to go again. Between
Miles and Jon, I’m good.
Yale is a bigger catalyst for self-improvement than any “90-day
weight loss program” or stupidly titled paperback. Every junction pushes you to
dig deeper and find something within yourself you didn’t know you had. I wrote
a book review the other day that, I think, is some of my best writing. Why? I
had spent a week reading the most compelling memoir I’ve come across: William J
Shirer’s “Nightmare Years”. For me, reading a 600 page novel used to be a
once-a-year event; my first month at Yale requires that I fill my mind with the
words of genii every week. 600 pages worth. I can feel myself getting smarter,
I just hope I don’t try to act smarter too.
Today I attended a classical music recital out of my own
volition – something I’d never have done a few years (or months) ago.
As the pipes of the grand organ tower above you in Woolsey Hall, you suddenly understand the immortal power of a symphony orchestra. The double basses rumble in the deep, like clouds of war gathering ominously in the horizon, tempered only by the playful violins chirping feminine messages of defiant happiness. And when the brass section bellows into earshot, you feel the energy in the room suddenly pick up. It’s a gravity that wasn’t there before – a gravity that only live music can emote out of thin air. It’s the ultimate team sport. It is raw, ethereal compulsion, summoned at the fingertips of musicians who have mastered their craft. Yale had opened my mind to experiencing the beauty of this sonic drama. I was happy I went. The tickets were free (because of course they were free) but I had overcome the inertia that had stymied my intellectual curiosity in the past. In one month, Yale has changed me.
As the pipes of the grand organ tower above you in Woolsey Hall, you suddenly understand the immortal power of a symphony orchestra. The double basses rumble in the deep, like clouds of war gathering ominously in the horizon, tempered only by the playful violins chirping feminine messages of defiant happiness. And when the brass section bellows into earshot, you feel the energy in the room suddenly pick up. It’s a gravity that wasn’t there before – a gravity that only live music can emote out of thin air. It’s the ultimate team sport. It is raw, ethereal compulsion, summoned at the fingertips of musicians who have mastered their craft. Yale had opened my mind to experiencing the beauty of this sonic drama. I was happy I went. The tickets were free (because of course they were free) but I had overcome the inertia that had stymied my intellectual curiosity in the past. In one month, Yale has changed me.
If I were to leave you with one message it would be this:
try to find your tribe. My parents, in the last ten years, seem to have found
theirs and they are happier for it. I think I have found a community where I
can just shut up and absorb the ideas that optimism and rigour churn out. I
hope you are, at whatever level, able to find yours. I hope you’re able to find
a group of people who have similar ideas about finding (and creating) and
happiness. It is like being part of a team. It is comforting and motivating in
equal measure: you know your peers will keep you honest and vault you to
creativity when need be.
Look at me: the temerity to lecture Jon Stewart on America!
Take a plunge into naïveté with me and you may also find a better version of
yourself. “How is Yale?” Yale is good man, Yale is good.