| Here’s
an example of how I think.
I was walking down Third Avenue recently and saw a couple
outside their car. They looked like they were preparing
to drive off. But, first, a Boston Terrier attached by
leash to the female half of the couple performed a work
of nature. Then the male half said, “Good boy! Good
job!” and I thought about liberal movements.
I mean, you have your liberal movements and the public
either approves or it doesn’t. If they approve,
it’s “Good boy! Good job!” But do they
let you off the leash? No. Do they let you drive? Never.
That’s not the example of how I think I was going
to show you. I’ll go on.
When I got home I learned about “Live Earth.”
I hadn’t learned much about “Live Earth”
earlier, because I knew it was a liberal movement, and,
so, I was too busy looking away to get the details. I
now know that it was 7,000 concerts all over the world
and that it had to do with Madonna and Sting, in different
places and ways, that the South African concert ended
with the audience clapping out an SOS, and that you could
see the famous giant statue of Christ the Redeemer from
where they held the concert in Rio. I hope there were
good drugs for that, that’s awesome. (Giant statues
of Jesus really put me in the mood.)
In Toronto, other concerts from around the world were
shown on a gigantic television screen fashioned by modern
technology from the residue of acres of Jurassic ferns
laced with rare earths that in 20 years will only be found
in toxic dumps and powered by “wind and low-impact
water sources.” If only we could find a way to harness
the unlimited power emanating from the performers’
egos.
In London, critics were complaining that Springsteen hadn’t
been booked, and they got Spinal Tap instead. They’re
so stuck in the 80s in London.
So I’m thinking, if they’d got Springsteen,
they’d get “Good liberals! Good job!”
and maybe a check in the mail, but 10 minutes later it
would be all about whether the cable was paid and the
liberals would be on the floor in the back having nothing
to say about it.
That’s not the example of how I think I was going
to show you. I’ll go on.
The public often likes liberal movements. The anti-slavery
movement was a good example. The public likes that there
was an anti-slavery movement. In my entire life, I’ve
only met one guy who expressed regrets about the anti-slavery
movement. He didn’t want slaves, but wanted to be
able to have one if he ever changed his mind. Everybody
else has said “Good liberals! Good job!” on
that one, but the only way it affects how things are done
is that they elect Republicans. “Lincoln was a Republican,
you know.”
People love the GI Bill. After WW II, a liberal clause
added to the GI Bill enabled millions of Americans to
get college educations, many of whom were the first in
their families ever to do so. The result wasa booming
middle class like no country had ever seen before. The
public says, “Good job!” to the GI Bill, then
votes in a George Bush, who gives us No Child Left Behind,
the choke-collar of education.
The people who brought us “Live Earth” know
all this. That’s why they couldn’t just ask
the public for help stopping the mistakes being made that
cause global warming. The people would all just look the
other way down the street and wait for the liberals to
finish their business. The liberals know they have to
get their attention some how.
So, I get this image in my head of a Boston Terrier engaging
the sidewalk while doing a cover of Bon Jovi’s “You
Want to Make a Memory,” so he’ll have your
attention.
There, that’s the example. That’s how my mind
works. |