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There's a poignant scene in the movie Driving Miss Daisy that ought to stir everyone's conscience. Miss Daisy (Jessica Tandy) and her black chauffeur Hoke Colburn (Morgan Freeman) are driving to Mobile to celebrate the 90th birthday of Miss Daisy's uncle. Along the way they innocently park their car on a beautiful lawn next to a serene lake. There they sit in quiet conversation, sharing a box lunch. Two Alabama state troopers arrive and interrupt this peaceful scene, questioning Colburn's right to drive an automobile. Only when Miss Daisy is able to establish the fact that she is a woman of prominence and wealth do the patrolmen cease their harassment. Harried, Miss Daisy and Colburn leave their lunch half-eaten and depart. Watching the car travel down the highway, one trooper says to his partner, "an old nigger and an old Jew woman taking off down the road together. Now ain't that a sorry sight."
The real sorry sight is the inability of the two troopers to see Miss Daisy and Hoke Colburn as human beings who have the same rights and privileges as all other persons. It is pathetic that our whole society is still blinded by the "isms" -- racism, sexism, ageism -- attitudes that demean and belittle other individuals because one thinks of herself/himself as superior to another person due to some arbitrary standard of skin color or religious affiliation. But it seems that hate is such a natural state of man. Former U.S. Senator George Aiken (1892-1984) said, "If we were to wake up some morning and find that everyone was the same race, creed, and color, we would find some other cause for prejudice by noon."
The real sorry sight is the inability of the two troopers to see Miss Daisy and Hoke Colburn as human beings who have the same rights and privileges as all other persons. It is pathetic that our whole society is still blinded by the "isms" -- racism, sexism, ageism -- attitudes that demean and belittle other individuals because one thinks of herself/himself as superior to another person due to some arbitrary standard of skin color or religious affiliation. But it seems that hate is such a natural state of man. Former U.S. Senator George Aiken (1892-1984) said, "If we were to wake up some morning and find that everyone was the same race, creed, and color, we would find some other cause for prejudice by noon."

