Anyone who glances over my columns knows I’m a rabid reader.
Books, newspapers, magazines — I’m a junkie.
And though I definitely don’t always succeed, I also try to make sense of the pieces in my readings that can reveal a larger truth.
Reading and dot-connecting, of course, go hand in hand.
Take, for instance, Jose Saramago’s brilliant book “Blindness.” A line in it floored me: “If, before every action, we were to begin by weighing up the consequences, thinking about them in earnest, first the immediate consequences, then the probable, then the possible, then the imaginable ones, we should never move beyond the point where our first thought brought us to a halt.”
Let that sink in. I had to.
Then I connected that weighty dot to another one: West Virginia, where 7,500 gallons of a chemical used to clean coal leaked from an antiquated storage tank into the Elk River. It left more than 300,000 people without usable water for days.
Many arrows point to neglect on the part of Freedom Industries, the owner of the storage tank, and a look-the-other-way attitude on the part of regulators — an attitude supported by overwhelming corporate influence and glaring gaps in government inspections under anti-pollution laws.