Until a few weeks ago, I had never heard of Philip J.
Hubbell. And in fact, there's a good chance that you still
haven't heard of him, and if that's the case, you're missing
out. I guess one way to describe him would be as a uniquely
ordinary sort of guy.
Look how his early childhood experience is described in the
back of his book, Write Winger: Solutions for the Politically
Oblique. He "was accidentally educated when the town's school
system proved too backward to switch over to the new math ...
(etc.) ... in time to protect this child from a competent
learning experience. Forced to learn to read at an early age,
young Philip's self-esteem was allowed to flounder while he was
exposed to such societal horrors as honest work for honest pay,
competition, pursuit of excellence and the innate superiority of
Western Civilization. By the time phonics had been purged from
the classroom and history replaced by social studies it was too
late. Phillip was smart."
Hubbell has moral character and a sense of responsibility
that you don't see much these days. After his elderly father had
a stroke some years ago, he dropped out of college and moved
home to help his mother take care of him.
Then came marriage to Susan in 1986. The Hubbells have three
children, Randy, Jennifer and Hunter, four cats named Lolly,
Rover, Frito and Twinkle and a Black Lab named Gracie. As
Hubbell points out in his book, the old fashioned education he
experienced during his formative years "completely ruined his
chances to obtain a modern college education and left him so
emotionally torn he couldn't relate to females as sexless, human
units. He ... ended up happily married to one woman. Later he
raised his children in a two parent home and took them to
church. Authorities are wary."
Logging about 80,000 air miles annually for his job as a
consultant, Hubbell has lots of down time in hotels and planes.
He puts it to good use by writing columns and articles and his
book Write Winger is a compilation of those columns.
Hubbell isn't shy about sharing his opinions and as you might
guess from the title of the book his thinking is oriented toward
the "right" point of view. I wondered what he thought about the
recent terrorist attack. In a recent e mail, he told me.
Hubbell wrote, "Like everyone I was shocked and angered by
the events (but) ... I am of the opinion that Americans, while
angry, aren't prepared to make many sacrifices ... I believe
that as time passes, the politics of envy from the left will
overtake their current patriotism and things in Washington will
get back to the usual infighting." I wondered if Hubbell thought
that some of the counter-terrorism measures being implemented or
in the works are perhaps an over reaction to 9-11. In other
words, have the terrorists succeeded in their goal by making us
lose some of our freedoms? Hubbell wrote, " I don't have a
problem with losing some freedoms on a temporary basis in order
to protect our nation. I have never considered the Constitution
a suicide pact. I think that the issuing of student visas from
countries in the region should end. All and all I think the
President is doing a good job of handling the situation."
Spending eight years at a state university means that I heard
the word "tolerance" used ad nauseam. (And being a conservative
Christian it wasn't a word that was typically used in the
student newspaper to describe me!). To a liberal, tolerance
means that you tolerate any one and any form of behavior with
the exception of conservatives and evangelical Christians. Then
tolerance goes right out of the window. I wondered what Hubbell
thought about the so-called new tolerance. I didn't have far to
look. It was right there in Write Winger. He wrote, "Tolerance,
as an unqualified noun, is not necessarily a positive virtue. We
are told that if we 'care,' or want to bring about needed
'change,' we must embrace a relative view of the world and
tolerate anything presented to us, no matter how unwelcome or
repulsive. To be other than totally accepting of the popular
culture is to be a hater. To not view the left as mainstream and
the right as extreme is to be intolerant of the good. Hogwash!"
And what does Hubbell have to say about religion? Nice things.
Here's a sampling. The "framers of the Bill of Rights understood
the dynamics of religious belief. In the Creation of the First
Amendment to the Constitution they created wording that would
protect the people of the United States from the establishment
of a state religion. Never in their wildest dreams did they
think that the free exercise of religion by citizens employed by
the government would be construed as establishing a state
religion." I recommend Write Winger. Some books I read (and
believe me, being mid way through my Ph.D. I read a lot of
books), you sleep through, others you plow through and others
captivate you. This was one such book. Currently, you can only
buy it through amazon.com or booklocker.com. It's available to
bookstores through Ingram Books. If you'd like more information
about Hubbell, you can go to
www.hlefty.com, a family web site. And who wouldn't want to
know more? After all, according to his book, look what Hubbell
does when he's not traveling or writing columns. "Philip Hubbell
and his one and only wife keep a low profile in a North Dallas
suburb. They live a 'Leave it to Beaver' existence with Sue
staying home and taking care of the kids. On the advice of his
daughter's school counselor the Hubbell's keep all books,
newspapers and magazines hidden whenever her friends come over.
The Hubbell's own pets as well." Hmmm. Buy the book. Just go on.
Do it. It's almost Christmas and if no one will buy it for you,
buy it for yourself.