OJ Is Back To Distract

It’s been little more than a week since O.J. Simpson and his band of thugs entered a hotel room in Las Vegas to commandeer a load of football memorabilia from an alleged crooked dealer. The story shows no signs of cooling down as various men involved in the incident have been called in for questioning, while Simpson faces 11 charges and a possible life sentence in prison. Even newscasters are groaning that they don’t want to cover another year of O.J.

The aging football star already deserves to be locked up for writing the offensive book, “If I Did It,� chronicling how he “would have� killed Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman (but stopping short of admitting responsibility for the crime). Rights to the book have been obtained by the Goldman family and it has been re-released with a new title “I Did It: Confessions of the Killer.�

The cast of characters involved in this latest O.J. caper looks like a who’s who of petty criminals, but it isn’t stopping Web sites and television news networks from paying for audio tapes and interviews, pursuing every avenue to get to the bottom of the alleged Simpson crime. Anyone who suffered through Simpson’s 1995 murder trial may be revolted by the thought that the whole saga is about to be replayed again.

As Simpson’s trial did a decade ago, the latest news of felony charges, celebrity lawyers and seedy dealings will distract the public from more important issues around the world and here in the United States. It’s certainly an opportunity for networks to further neglect the disastrous occupation in Iraq, the health care crisis at home and ongoing genocide in Darfur.

That ignorance may be just what certain world leaders want — helicopter’s-eye views of low-speed car movements and photographs of “the Juiceâ€� in private social situations  have already eclipsed a British report last week that an estimated 1.2 million Iraqis have been killed since the United States and coalition forces invaded in 2003.

With any hope, the Simpson case will be dealt with swiftly and it will not become the lead story day after day, ad nauseam, resulting in further deterioration of the international dialogue. In the meantime, news readers and watchers will have to dig a little deeper than usual for pertinent stories.

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