THE MORE WATER WE HAVE, THE MORE OUR UNGRATEFUL
NEIGHBORS WANT
No good
deed goes unpunished. When Gov. Sonny Perdue convened a meeting at the
state Capitol last November to pray for rain, a lot of snooty-noses
scoffed. Not me. I told my friends they had better find their umbrellas
because the governor had asked none other than Dr. Gil Watson, the
World’s Greatest Preacher, to intercede with God and send some H2O to
Georgia.
Serious
times require serious measures, and the governor knew that God would
give strong consideration to whatever Dr. Gil asked. God really likes
Dr. Gil because he doesn’t spew mean-spirited, hate-thy-neighbor poison
like stiff-necked Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Sen. Barack Obama’s preacher.
And he doesn’t promote bigotry and religious intolerance like that fat
toad of an evangelist in San Antonio who disparaged the Catholic Church
with a term not fit for a family newspaper. Those hypocrites have to be
an embarrassment to God. They certainly are to the rest of us.
But, back
to the drought. We are a long way from being out of the woods, but since
the governor’s prayer meeting last fall, Lake Allatoona is a foot higher
than it was this time last year, and according to the Army Corps of
Engineers, Walter F. George Lake and West Point Lake are at more than 80
percent capacity. Only Lake Lanier is still running low, and that is not
Dr. Gil’s fault. Or God’s. It is because Lanier has to furnish a lot of
water to Malfunction Junction, aka Atlanta, and most of it is wasted
since the sewers don’t work. The sewers don’t work because the city is
broke and can’t fix them. The city is broke because nobody wants to live
in a town where the sewers don’t work.
In the
meantime, we are in a big brouhaha with Alabama and Florida over who has
rights to the water from the Chattahoochee River. The last time I
looked, the Chattahoochee originates in North Georgia, which makes it
our river. We could have stopped the water at the state line years ago
had we chosen to do so, but we have shared it with our neighbors because
we are a warm and kindhearted people. Alas, we have ungrateful
neighbors. The more water we have, the more they want. I wouldn’t be
surprised to see them go after our Vidalia onions next.
As if
fighting with Alabama and Florida wasn’t bad enough, now come reports of
a nefarious scheme by the Tennessee Valley Authority to take more
Georgia water — this time to benefit the state of Tennessee. A loyal
reader who asks to remain anonymous (most people who read this column
ask for anonymity because if they give their real names, liberal weenies
would want to invite them to a Sean Penn Film Festival) says the TVA
drains Lake Nottely near Blairsville by 20 feet each fall to “keep the
Tennessee River navigable.”
Why do we
do we give a rip whether or not the Tennessee River is navigable?
Because, says the astute reader, he knows for a fact that big-shot UT
fans want to keep the river full so that they can travel to Knoxville on
their yachts, attend the football games and then float back from whence
they came. And on Georgia water, no less.
Good
grief! It isn’t bad enough that we have to take care of some inedible
mollusks in Florida and a bunch of whiners in Alabama? Now we have to
use our precious resources so Tennessee fans can cruise in their yachts
to the football games while dressed like Nehi sodas?
Maybe
praying for rain wasn’t such a good idea after all if everybody else is
going to take our water away from us. Maybe Gov. Perdue should call Dr.
Gil Watson, the World’s Greatest Preacher, and suggest he ask God to
move our neighboring states somewhere beyond East Boola Boola, Idaho,
where nobody will ever find them, and then throw in Atlanta and their
stopped-up sewers as a bonus. If Gov. Perdue agrees to do so, I would
suggest that the ingrates start looking for moving vans in a hurry. God
listens to Dr. Gil.
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