Tag: drive
Nine-Year-Old Steals Car To Avoid Going To School, Police Say

Nine-Year-Old Steals Car To Avoid Going To School, Police Say

By Charles Rabin, The Miami Herald

MIAMI — A nine-year-old Miami Gardens boy was arrested and charged with aggravated assault and grand theft auto Tuesday, after stealing his mother’s car because he didn’t want to go to school.

Miami Gardens police spokesman Michael Wright said that before taking off with the car keys at about 8:15 Tuesday morning, the child threw a brick at his mother and grandmother.

“He took his mom’s keys,” Wright said. “He didn’t want to go to school today.”

The child’s name or school he attends was not known early Tuesday afternoon.

According to Wright, the child took the car, then drove around for about 45 minutes before pulling over when police caught up to him.

Asked if the child appeared to have learned to drive at such a young age, Wright said, “Surprisingly, yes.”

Photo via austinbarrow Flickr

Nicolas Winding Refn’s ‘Drive’ As Lesson For The Obama White House

Art always has a political context, a broader social and economic setting for the work, even if it is not explicitly political. This applies to Velázquez’s “Las Meninas,” a symbol of the emergence of the artist as a significant member of society, as much as it does to Beethoven’s Third Symphony, originally to be dedicated to Napoelon, whom the musician loved and admired as a symbol of revolution — until he made himself Emperor of most of Europe.

Cultural objects aren’t just aesthetic or emotional, then, but informative — they can tell us about the zeitgeist and psychology of an era or a movement, without wading into the nuances of contemporary public debates.

And the politics of the Obama presidency are oozing all over this fall’s most existential action film, “Drive.”

Glistening with pulp, style, and anxious tension, the movie is a classic heist flick. But it’s also a statement about the type of heroes we long for — and the hole in our lives such saviors might fill.

Ryan Gosling, the lead, is unnamed — he’s known only as “The Driver,” and for a protagonist, speaks awful few lines of dialogue.

This tells us quite a bit by itself.

Whereas in 2008 Americans — and the world — longed for a dynamic savior from financial catastrophe, a fresh identity on which to project hopes and dreams (and, by many accounts, got one in the brilliant Barack Obama), by 2011 we have become restless. Identities, oratory, and life stories matter less than competence, ability, and perhaps most important, the willingness to get tough when it’s called for. We’ll settle for stoic, terse, and gritty.

Barack Obama has been fun to watch — but he’s also buckled more often than many of us might like. There are times when many on the left have wished he’d put on his driving gloves and hit the gas — or pull the trigger.

Whether it’s breaking up the big banks and denying them the ability to hold taxpayers hostage, providing a public option for health insurance, or moving a climate change bill through the Congress, this president has negotiated many of us to death. Sometimes, you just need to kick some ass.

This isn’t to say violence or anger are the solution to our problems. Surely, Obama should not start physically assaulting his political adversaries.

But Gosling’s character doesn’t carry a gun in the film — and he avoids violence whenever possible. It is only when the world proves itself so dark and malicious an environment that he takes that route.

We’ve long passed that point in the Obama presidency.

The movie speaks to our despondence and frustration. Whereas the signature film of Obama’s election year, “The Dark Knight,” was about heroes having to compromise their reputations for the public good, “Drive” suggests something more urgent: get tough, or get lost.

What Cantor Wants

Most people don’t think about their high school yearbook quote much after age 18. But Eric Cantor, the U.S. House majority leader, chose a quote 30 years ago that seems particularly prescient given the ongoing debt-ceiling debate: “I want what I want when I want it.” The lyrics from a Henry Blossom operetta appropriately describe Cantor’s drive – his ambition is so great that some have wondered whether he has his eye on John Boehner’s job. Cantor’s advisers insist he’s not aiming for the speaker position, despite the fact that he dramatically walked out of debt-reduction talks last week and thereby stalled negotiations. As the nation faces financial chaos and possible default, perhaps someone should tell Cantor some different lyrics: “You can’t always get what you want.”