It felt like
something was coming full circle.
As I celebrated my
2lst anniversary at the Las Cruces Sun-News, I was working on a story about Joe
Bullock, author of in “Walking with Herb: A Spiritual Golfing
Journey to the Masters.” ( He's Artist of the Week . Read about him in today's SunLife section.)
Joe is also the dad
of Nick, the subject of one of my first
stories for the Sun-News, shortly after my arrival in 1994.
Joe called the
newsroom to tell us Nick, then 11, had received a notice from the IRS that he
owed about $62 million in taxes. He
didn't, of course, and most of the elementary school student's income had come
from a part-time job that involved "selling frogs to friends."
The story went viral,
in a time long before "viral" was an official thing, or called that,
anyway.
AP picked up my story
and it eventually attracted attention from national TV networks and financial
publications.
"We even got a
call from Johnny Carson," Joe told me recently.
Though Nick didn't
make it to the old "Tonight Show," he did do several interviews, and
his issues with the feds were successfully resolved.
And little Nick is
all grown up now and a lawyer in Albuquerque, Joe reports.
The fight for truth
and justice just might have influenced a career path.
Joe's book, by the
by, is about a 60-something banker who receives
a message from God on his office computer, assigning a mission that includes
winning the prestigious Masters Tournament, so Joe will have a platform to
deliver some important messages to humanity.
It put me in mind of
the classic 1977 comedy "Oh, God!" in which George Burns, as God,
appears to a grocery store manager portrayed by John Denver with a similar
mandate.
I got to know Denver
when I was working as a consultant for the nation's first nuclear safeguard
ballot measure in Oregon, an effort to ensure that there would be adequate
testing of safety systems and a sound
plan for safe nuclear waste material management before new nuclear power plants
could be built. (Prophetically good ideas, as Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima
disasters would later demonstrate.)
Denver later also
helped arrange for "Oh, God!" to be screened at a benefit for Tenny
Hale, the prophetic soul who had predicted the exact day of the Three Mile
Island Disaster.
It was one of her many
prophetic hits chronicled in my book, "Tenny Hale: American Prophet,"
and an award-winning documentary by the same name.
I first met Hale in
1970, when she gave me a little book of predictions, in which she predicted the
Watergate scandal, by name, long before the break-ins that toppled a presidency. It was among a
group of prophecies received when she was a small child, before she knew how to
write, in the form of rhymes so she could remember them, she told me.
And I recalled her
last days, and her predictions that the major population decimations in our
time would come not from nuclear war, but nuclear accidents, climate and earth
changes that would result in dam breaks, and ferocious virus that would prey on our
compromised immune systems. And I
recalled her predictions of advance technological developments that still
seemed so far-fetched at the time of her passing in 1981, things that are part
of my everyday life, now.
I thought about all
that while I writing about the recent OYE! (Listen up!) ecology-oriented overnight gathering in
downtown Las Cruces, which was meant to inspire us to envision a better city,
working with what we have, and brainstorm new ideas to help create a
sustainable, creative and compassionate future for ourselves, our kids and our
grandkids.
And I pondered some
more while I was reading Joe's inspiring little book, a reminder that God works
in mysterious ways.
And that He always sends us prophets, warnings
and answers to seemingly impossible dilemmas.
It's up to us to
listen and pay attention, to believe in and love ourselves and one another
enough to work on solutions. There's help out there, and a way, if there
is faith, and the will.
S. Derrickson Moore
may be reached at dmoore@lcsun-news.com,
@derricksonmoore on Twitter and Tout, or
call 575-541-5450.
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