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I like to set challenges for myself like that. In the
past I have tried to find funny things to say about such
ordinarily non-funny subjects as agony, Beacon Hill, bumvertising,
and contusions, to name a few. People wonder why I push
myself so hard to find humor where it doesn't stick. I
point to Catch-22's Orr.
Yossarian, the main character of Catch-22, says of bomber-pilot
Orr that he hasn't got brains enough to be unhappy. Orr's
planes get shot down more than any other pilot's, but
he never minds and greets each new assignment with cheerful
enthusiasm. Why? He must be crazy! Doesn't he know he's
going to die?
Well, it turns out, he was practicing, so he could get
himself shot down in the Baltic Sea close enough to swim
to Sweden. Likewise I'm practicing so when the Grim Reaper
comes to get me I can laugh at his ass and go out giggling.
Alberto Gonzales is just a stand-in for Death.
Here's something funny-ironic. Gonzales grew up in Humble,
Texas! Ha! I guess he's trying to get as far from his
roots as he possibly can.
In 1996, Alberto Gonzales helped get the Governor of Texas
George W. Bush out of jury duty in a drunk-driving case.
Among other things he said Bush couldn't serve on the
case because he might later be called upon to pardon the
accused. An argument so broad it would pretty much excuse
all governors and presidents from all jury duty, even
where there's no exemption in law. An argument that neglected
to mention that Bush had been convicted of drunk-driving.
The defense attorney in the case called Gonzales' arguments
"laughable!" So we're on the right track! We
need to find more stuff Gonzales has done for W!
Speaking of Death, Gonzales was in charge of reviewing
death row cases subject to clemency by Governor Bush.
Thanks in part to his diligent disregard of most of those
cases, the Bush & Gonzales term in Texas is credited
with overseeing more executions than in any state ever,
in any equal period of time. That's a record you can go
to the White House on. I do think, though, they should
have taken more care not to execute so many of the feeble
of mind, because that could come back to haunt them later.
I'm specifically thinking of Alberto's prize observations
this January on the legal theory and practice concerning
the writ of habeas corpus. He said, to Congress, that
"there is no express grant of habeas in the Constitution.
There is [only] a prohibition against taking it away."
Now, I don't really believe that Gonzales is so feeble-minded.
I think he was just dishing out scraps of offal to our
Representatives just to watch them have to eat it. But
not everyone would give him the benefit of the doubt as
I would. They might think, "Alberto Gonzales isn't
shining us on; that would mean he was showing contempt
for Congress; that cannot be. Therefore he must be dumb
as a rock."
Now Gonzales has exploited a recent amendment to the PATRIOT
Act to fire a bunch of US attorneys, more and more of
whom we are finding out happened to have resisted Republican
pressures to prosecute Democrats. This is funnier than
it first appears. It's like when some character in a farce
methodically places a banana peel on the floor in the
middle of the stage just before another character is due
to make his entry. This is called comedic irony, wherein
the audience knows someone is going to slip and fall and
gets to tittering over the comedic suspense. It's really
hilarious when it's the jerk who set the banana peel who
finally slips on it.
Of course the fall shouldn't happen too soon, you want
to draw it out. Bush & Gonzales should work on their
timing.
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