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December 26, 2008
View From Lodi, CA Pittsburgh, PA: The Lone Ranger’s Creed [With JoeNote for VDARE.COM Readers]
By Joe Guzzardi
Several years ago, while rummaging through an antique
store, I found a magnificent
Lone Ranger pin, circa 1950. About 2” inches in
diameter, the light blue pin pictured the white-hatted
Masked Man on his equally white steed, Silver, galloping
directly ahead hot on the trail of desperados, red scarf
trailing in the breeze.
I snapped it up, immediately attached it to my jean
jacket, and set about rediscovering “Who was that
masked man?””—as characters saved by the Lone Ranger
invariably asked in the closing seconds of each
adventure.
The
Lone Ranger was, as readers with good memories
already know, Texas Ranger (no first name) Reid, shot
and left for dead by
Butch Cavendish, leader of the bloodthirsty
Cavendish Gang. Reid is rescued and nursed back to
health by an old childhood friend,
Tonto.
Once he regained his strength, the Lone Ranger and Tonto
teamed up and set out in pursuit of bad guys everywhere.
As I watched the old videos and read about the Lone
Ranger and the man who most famously played him,
Clayton Moore, a sense of guilt slowly overwhelmed
me.
All of my life, I had been a
Hopalong Cassidy fan, even naming one of my dogs
“Hoppy.”
Now I confess that I’m a Lone Ranger convert.
You may be surprised to learn that the Lone Ranger is
not merely a part of the
“thrilling days of yesteryear” as it was
advertised on his radio and television programs.
The Mask Man is experiencing a surge of popularity.
To commemorate the 75thth Anniversary of the
first Lone Ranger broadcast from Detroit in 1933,
Classic Media released a digitally re-mastered 13-DVD set
of seasons
one and two
that include 78 episodes (1,900 plus minutes), three
bonus chapters from a 1960 cartoon series, a classic
with a starring appearance by the wonder dog Lassie, an
original radio show as well as an 88-page commemorative
book and reprints of rare comic books.
Moore’s daughter Dawn, working with the families of Roy
Rogers and
Gene Autry, is lobbying the United States Post
Office to issue
a 2009 commemorative stamp that would honor all
three Western heroes and mark the 60th
anniversary of the Lone Ranger’s 1949 television
premier.
According to
Moore, the
westerns immortalized by her father, Rogers and
Autry reflect:
“Americana and patriotism …
It’s purely an American-based general.”
And in what could be the biggest boost to a resurgence
of Lone Ranger enthusiasm, the
Walt Disney Studio is considering a 2010 release of
a full-length movie that would co-star Johnny Depp
as Tonto. No leading actor has been chosen yet.
Moore
died ten
years ago on December 27th. In his
autobiography, I Was That Masked Man ,
Moore
professed that he tried to conduct his own life
according to the Lone Ranger’s principles: "to live
up to the standards of honesty, decency, respect, and
patriotism that have defined the Lone Ranger since
1933."
As we begin to put together our New Year’s Resolutions,
a look at the
Creed that Moore developed for the
Lone Ranger represents excellent 2009 goals for all of
us.
“I believe…
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That to have a friend, a man must be one.
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That all men are created equal and that everyone has
within himself
the power to make this a better
world.
-
That God put the firewood there but that every man
must gather and
light it himself.
-
In being prepared physically, mentally, and morally
to
fight when necessary for that which is right.
-
That a man should make the most of what gifts God
gave him.
-
That this government, of the people, by the people
and for the people
shall live always.
-
That men should live by the rule of what is best for
the greatest number.
-
That sooner or later ... somewhere ... somehow ...
we must settle with the world and make payment for
what we have taken.
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That all things change but truth, and that truth
alone, lives on forever.
-
In my Creator, my country, my fellow man.”
In these uncertain times, the Lone Ranger
represents justice, humanity and loyalty—the values
on which America was founded.
JOENOTE TO VDARE.COM readers:
The Lone Ranger’s statement that man should live by what is best
for the greatest number summarizes the immigration
reform movement.
Immigration may be good for the individuals who come to
the U.S., the lawyers who help pave
their way and the people who eventually employ them. But
immigration does clearly not serve the
common good—it
adds to
America’s population
growth, damages our delicate ecology, drains our
ever-scarce financial resources and strains to the point
of breaking, our social fabric.
Joe Guzzardi
[email
him]
is a California native who recently fled the state
because of over-immigration, over-population and a
rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to
Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth
rate stable.
A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School,
Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It
currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.
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