AN IDENTITY CRISIS THAT ONLY A
SQUIRREL CAN LOVE
I am having an identity crisis. Identity
crises are much more serious than mid-life crises. For the latter, you
can buy a toupee or a convertible or visit a tanning salon. If you have
an identity crisis, you tend to talk to yourself and people assume you
are nuts. I have learned to get around that by putting a walnut in my
ear. That way I can fool passersby into thinking I am a hot-shot
business mogul talking to my investment advisor on one of those
new-fangled cell phones about buying North Dakota. I wish I could say
that helps, but all the walnut seems to do is attract squirrels who want
to chew on my ear.
I am sorry to whine like this but I have
just received a snippy note from a reader who has a Ph.D. (She has a
Ph.D. and reads my column? Go figure.) She says she is waiting for me to
give President Barack Obama credit for his quick response to the
flooding in the Atlanta suburbs because “I know you’re not a fan of the
President (to put it mildly).” Ouch!
She must assume that I am to the right of
Glenn Beck or Glenn Miller, or whoever that guy is that talks so fast on
television. I am loathe to argue with anyone who has more brainpower
than I have socks, but I have not said anything negative about our
president, as far as I can recall.
In fact, I have lauded him for keeping
President Peanut out of our hair and out of North Korea. This means that
we will probably have to endure more bad poetry and handmade doorknobs
coming out of the Carter Center but that beats getting blown to
smithereens by a bunch of Third-World punks who aren’t sure who is
running our country.
Just as I had finished reeling from her
blow to my delicate psyche, here comes an e-mail from a reader
chastising me for continuing to pick on former President George W. Bush.
The writer said he is getting tired of me doing that. Ouch again! When
have I said ugly things about our former president?
OK, maybe I did suggest that he just
might not go into the pantheon of our greatest presidents like
Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln. But I do believe with all my heart
that he will easily surpass the legacy of Millard Fillmore, whose
greatest claim to fame is that he was thought to have installed the
first bathtub in the White House. Alas, he didn’t. That was a hoax,
which means Millard Fillmore didn’t accomplish much while president if
he couldn’t even get a bathtub installed. (I don’t want to get too far
off the subject, but California was admitted to the union while Fillmore
was president. Given a choice, I would rather have had the bathtub.)
So, here is my dilemma: If I say that
Barack Obama seems to think more taxes and bigger government will cure
everything from global warming to carbuncles, and that he couldn’t even
do something simple like get the Olympic Games for Chicago even though
he is the president of the United States and that Billy Payne got the
Games for Atlanta and was just a real estate attorney, there are those
among you who will accuse me of being a right-wing whacko and a secret
agent for the Halliburton Company and Big Oil.
On the other hand, if I say that Laura
Bush should have been president and George W. Bush the First Man and
that Barbara Bush is smarter than her whole family put together, I am
sure to get letters saying I love Nancy Pelosi and that I think Obama’s
health care reform is the best thing to happen to us since Ray Charles
first sang “Georgia on my Mind.”
I am so confused. I just don’t know what
to do. Until I can figure this mess out, I am going to continue to walk
around with a walnut in my ear and act like I am buying North Dakota. At
least the squirrels will love me.
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