<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9102120986
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
911117
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, November 17, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BULLETS AND BALLOTS LACED WITH HATRED
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>
CORRECTION RAN November 19, 199

getting it straight

* Mitch Albom's Sunday column misspelled
Hitler's first name.

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
In his home state, the land of his birth, they were counting the hatred,
one vote at a time. "I've got a few people who will call me tonight," Joe
Dumars said. "I'll find out what's going on, maybe  even at halftime of the
game."
  Dumars is a professional basketball player, but at this moment, this
Saturday morning in his home, life was not about sports, it was about politics
and hate in the  place where he grew up, the state of Louisiana. A man there
was running for governor. A white man. A handsome man. A man who, in college,
used to sleep under a Nazi swastika blanket.

  The man had  a chance of winning.
  "He's playing on people's fears and misconceptions,"' Dumars said of David
Duke, a former grand wizard in the Ku Klux Klan who was in a race with Edwin
Edwards for Louisiana's  top spot.  "He's been talking to the right people at
the right time. He's pushing the right buttons."
  Dumars leaned over the desk and tapped his hands for emphasis. "The thing
is, Duke didn't just  pop up. And the bad feelings that have gotten him this
far, they've been simmering down there for a long time.
  "And what these people are thinking -- it's incomprehensible to me."
  Can you imagine  leaving home for a few years, then calling back to
discover a madman had taken over, a man who believed in white supremacy, said
Jews lied about the Holocaust, who once called Adolph Hitler "the greatest
genius who ever lived" ? Maybe a few years ago you would have thought such a
thing impossible in this country.
  Think again.
 Duke brings out the worst in us
  The fact is, hatred and anger have  become marketable commodities in
America. So many of us seem to be unhappy, full of frustration, ready to blame
someone else for our troubles.
  When a job falls through, we point to the quota system. When our paychecks
are small, we blame welfare recipients for sucking us dry. When a crime is
committed, we shake our heads and say "animals," but often what we mean is
"damn blacks" or "damn Puerto  Ricans" or "damn Jews."
  In prosperous times, maybe people suppress such emotions. But in tough
times, times like today in Louisiana, where the economy has sunk, suddenly
those emotions bubble closer  to the top. And then along comes a David Duke
who says not only are those feelings OK, but he's gonna do something about
them, he'll do the hating for you, he'll make it legitimate, a government
policy.  He looks normal, he sounds normal. He lies about his past, and
sweet-talks the horror with phrases like "conservative government" and
"economic responsibility."
  And next thing you know, you're in  Nazi Germany, 1936.
  "I think Duke brought everything out of the dark, the things people were
thinking deep down but didn't say out loud," Dumars said. "He turned a light
on everyone's feelings."
  He sighed. From the hallway came sounds of a baby crying. Dumars' son,
Jordan. He is eight months old. So many of his relatives still live in
Louisiana, his grandmother, aunts, uncles, people who  can't wait to see him.
  "Would you feel uncomfortable going back home if Duke were the governor?"
  "Uncomfortable? Back home?"
  What a question, huh?
 Dumars knows where he stands
 And yet, it is something we must consider. The results of the Louisiana
election will be in by the time you read this, yet whether Duke won or lost is
only slightly less important than the fact he was  able to get this far. Have
we really grown so selfish in parts of this country that we can pretend a Jew-
hating, Black-hating former Klan leader is somehow not so bad? Here we are, a
nation that demands  to know if its government officials ever once made passes
at women or smoked dope in college, and yet we can consider electing a man who
wrote in a Nazi-like newspaper, "The Negro brain is smaller and housed in a
thicker skull," and, "The media is dominated by Jews. You know it and
everybody knows it."
  Is this where we are in 1991?
  Who knows anymore? Last week, here in Michigan, a 31-year- old  man
marched into a post office and began shooting his gun. He shot and he shot
until three people were dead, and then he turned the gun on himself and put a
bullet into his skull. He was angry over losing  his job. He hated the people
who did it to him.
  Anger and hate. What can be done with those emotions is, at best,
shameful, and, at worst, unthinkable. And you don't always have to pull a
trigger.  Sometimes, as shocking as it seems, all it takes is a voting lever.
  "From here on, no matter what happens in the election, everyone back home
knows where they stand," Dumars said, even as his family  in Louisiana went to
vote. "You were either for him or against him."
  When you're counting hatred, it's a bad number, no matter what the final
tally.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
RACE; DISCRIMINATION; DAVID DUKE; JOE DUMARS
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
