We’ll remember through the ages
Rednecks cryin’ in the rain.”
It was inevitable, of course. The Universe (aka “Jim”) always strikes back. And when a madman pushes his luck to the middle of the table, Whoomp! There it is, a downpour of biblical proportions rains frogs on his parade. You might tug on Superman’s cape, spit in the wind or even try to pull the mask off the old Lone Ranger, but you don’t mess around with Jim.
The madman is having a bad spell. Amused by moving his toy soldiers into puny Venezuela to steal its oil, he thought he’d double his pleasure, double his fun by bombing miserable Iran to kingdom come. Alas, a funny thing happened on the way to the surrender ceremony---as with the Hydra, when you cut off the head of the serpent, two heads grow back. The new government of Iran said, Go fish. “Stick and stones may break our bones but see what happens when we close the Straight of Hormuz, Cracker!”
Oopsy! Now what. Okay, war’s over, we were just funnin’ you! Had you goin’ there for a minute, right? We’ll just bring all our ships and planes home now and everything will go back to normal. What? Oh, you’re going to get petulant on me now? Bad Sport! Some people just can’t take a joke. Hello, Pentagon---is this General Pete? Listen, genius, the mullahs are pissed! Maybe we could send a nice card? Yeah, I’m in the Hallmark section right now, but I can’t find the right category. “Have a nice after-war doesn’t seem appropriate.”
The footing is like quicksand out there for Captain Trumpy of the Horse Marines. Every breath he takes, every step he makes, he’s deeper in the soup. He’s out of options, all he can do is emulate the whiny kid in the neighborhood who takes his ball and goes home. Now all the other presidents start to laugh and call him names. They’ll never let poor Trumpy play in any diplomat games. And Santa won’t be baling him out. He has GPS now.
Filled with animus and pain,
And they send him off to Jesus,
Rednecks cryin’ in the rain.
There won’t be any bagpipes
On the hills of Dunsinane,
Just the whimpers of the sheepflock,
Rednecks cryin’ in the rain.”
It all started well enough for Caligula as the third Roman emperor. Unlike his predecessor, the paranoid and secluded Tiberius, Cal was young and charismatic, came from a famous family and began his reign by ending Rome’s despised treason trials. He organized lavish gladiatorial games and chariot races, much to the delight of the populace. The new emperor completed construction of several buildings started under Tiberius, rebuilt temples and began construction of new aqueducts to ensure water supply to the rapidly growing city. He built a new amphitheater in Pompeii and improved the port infrastructure of the capital, allowing for increased grain imports from Europe. But then, like some other emperors we know, he cast an eye toward lavish personal projects. He expanded the imperial palace and constructed two massive floating pleasure barges for his personal use at Lake Nemi. He had affairs with married women, male prostitutes and even his sisters. Then he fell seriously ill, was bedridden with delirium and drifted into madness.
Caligula brought back treason trials, a convenient means of getting rid of enemies. He executed many senators and New York Times reporters. Tales of Caligula’s naming his beloved racehorse Incitatus a government consul, however, seem to have been invented by the Roman Democratic Party. After a failed invasion of Britain due to mutinous troops refusing to fight (“We ain’t got no quarrel with them Limeys”), Caligula declared war on Neptune, god of the sea, and even had the waves whipped. He also ordered legionnaires to collect seashells as the booty of war. Eventually, as always seems to happen with these deranged emperors, he declared himself a god. As the centuries passed, Republican traditions faded away, replaced by autocratic rulers, eventually establishing the Dominate, where the emperor was a godlike king and the Senate had only a ceremonial rule. Sound familiar?
Lost In Space
Much as history will malign its crazy emperors, the supporting casts should not be forgotten. Herewith, our Political Hall of Blathery:
1. Representative Ted Yoho (R.-Fla.) Ted was actually in Siobhan’s class in veterinary school, though nowhere near the top of it. He called when he first ran for office, soliciting contributions. We passed, so don’t blame us. Yoho got elected anyway. One of his early statements was “One side of our government, or two-thirds of it, is running one hundred miles an hour toward socialism. Conservatives like me are like Fred and Barney in the Flintstone-mobile trying to stop that.”
And later, on opposing tanning-bed spas: “I had an Indian doctor in our office the other day, very dark skin and two non-dark-skinned people, and I asked, ‘Have you ever been to a tanning booth?’ And he goes, ‘No, no need.’ So therefore the tax is a racist tax, and I thought I might need to go get to a sun-tanning booth twice so that I can come out and say I got taxed because of the color of my skin.”
Oh, shut up, Ted.
2. Sheriff Joe Arpaio, Maricopa County, Ariz. Joe forced inmates to wear pink underwear, served them rotting food and housed them in a tent city which he proudly described as a “concentration camp,” where temperatures once reached a toasty 145 degrees, which isn’t easy. Arpaio denied Latina inmates sanitary products and forced them to sleep on sheets soiled with menstrual blood. He once created an armed posse which included brain-dead Steven Seagal, alleged movie star.
A quote: “I needed a place to put the dogs. The prisoners ruined the jail, so I put the prisoners in the tents and I had a nice jail to put the dogs. We treat the cats nice, too. And the horses. If a nation is only as strong as its weakest link, then America may be in trouble. Hawaii may be our weakest link.”
We knew it. There’s something in the pineapples.
3. Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky.) Claimed the Obama administration went after BP because the giant Gulf oil spill was “part of this sort of blame game society, in the sense that it’s always got to be someone’s fault when a catastrophe occurs, instead of just, you know,,,accidents happen.” Paul also warned that unchecked illegal immigration would lead to a “borderless mass continent” that used a conspiracy theorist currency called “the amero.”
A quote: “With regard to the idea of whether you have a right to health care, you have to realize what that implies. It’s not an abstraction. I’m a physician. That means that you have a right to come to my house and conscript me. It means you’re going to enslave not only me but the janitor at my hospital, the person who cleans my office, the assistants who work in my office, the nurses.”
We asked the janitor, Rand, and he was okay with it.
4. State Representative Gordon Klingenschmitt )R.-Colo.) Representative K. bragged about performing a gay exorcism to relieve a woman of “the foul spirit of lesbianism.” He was once a Navy chaplain, so he could do that. He also tried his best to perform a long-distance exorcism on President Obama because of some issue with the NSA. Gordon swears that Obamacare “causes cancer” and that Obama’s former FCC chairman was driven by the Devil to “molest and visually rape children.” Disturbingly, however, he calls himself “Dr. Chaps.”
5. Marjorie Taylor Greene. “They’re changing our kids’ genders and they’re also, I think, putting chemicals in the water that are turning the frogs gay.”
Attention Sheriff Thacker—please get this information to Froggy the Gremlin ASAP. The ramifications are unimaginable.
Always Leave ‘Em Laughing!
Good advice to any would-be dictator. A little pudding with the bread and water humanizes a despot, makes him look like one of the guys. But a little advice to all you tyrants out there---make sure they’re laughing with you, not at you.
It was one thing when Ugandan overlord Idi Amin titled himself “Conquerer of the British Empire” and “King of Scotland.” It was those love letters he wrote to Queen Elizabeth II that got him hooted out of town.
Jean-Bedel Bokassa declared himself emperor of the Central African Republic in 1977 and threw a coronation which cost one-third of the country’s GDP. He had a solid gold throne shaped like an eagle that cost a mere $2.5 million, and 100 white horses pulled his carriage. The 2000 guests at the party dined on peacock and elephant meat. Alas, he pissed off the French, who overthrew him in 1979. They gave the throne to Jerry Lewis.
Francisco Macias Nguema, of Equatorial Guinea, who had the pleasant nickname “The Madman of Africa,” didn’t like smart people. He banned the word “intellectual” and anyone with glasses was suspect. Frankie had his personal portrait on every banknote, even one-peso bills. In 1978, he cancelled Christmas because he didn’t particularly like it, but relented two days later when the Pope scolded him.
Saparmurat Niyazov of Turkmenistan, however, was in a league of his own. They laughed when he sat down to rule, but not for long. First off, he decided to rename January “Turkmenbashi” after himself and April became “Gurbansoltan,” after his mother. You can imagine the trouble singers had with April Showers.
Sappy also banned beards, opera, lip-syncing and all cars that weren’t white, also gold teeth (he had his own extracted to set a good example).
As dictators are wont to do, Saparmurat also built a 12-meter gold statue of himself which rotated 360 degrees so it was always facing the sun. He also wrote a book, Ruhnama, or “Book of the Soul,” which every student, driver and government worker was required to read because there was an exam coming. He said reading it three times would get you to heaven. Hopefully, he followed his own instructions because he bit the bag in 2006 with a heart attack attributed to his heavy smoking, which, of course, he had banned for everyone else.
Anybody looking for a cheap rotating statue? It’s gold, you know. We’ll throw in a dog-eared copy of the Ruhnama for those dreary nights when you just can’t sleep.
That’s all, folks….