Well, he didn’t do it for the glory, that’s for sure.
Maybe he did?
He’s gone. When you immolate –you’re gone. What glory is there in that?
Well, the reason he did it—as I understand it—is because the world is burning up anyway. He made a statement.
Exactly- a single statement. So, who’s getting the glory?
I mean we don’t know the entire impact it has. He took his life for God’s sake. On the Supreme Court steps. April 22, 2022. It means something. He knew he would be immortalized.
But, what difference does it make if he’s gone? I think it was a waste. I wish he would have run for –anything. School Board! Someone that committed should have stuck around and tried to do something.
He did do something. It’s just…he made the ultimate sacrifice.
I’m sorry. He killed himself. And so…we’re left here without him. Without someone who was that committed as an activist.
The world is burning up. We won’t last another thirty years. So good for him for taking a stand. He was a Buddhist monk, right? Good for him.
He was a hippie from Boulder, Colorado. Wynn Alan Bruce.
Well, here’s a hero now. And I bet he’s a hero to Buddhist monks, too. Wynn Alan Bruce? He was a climate activist, not just a hippie. I mean, I’ll give you that he may never be well-known. But he’s known. Just not well- known.
Continue reading “Mission, Not Glory: A Dialogue by Marie Cartier”