LEAVE
IT TO SKEETER SKATES TO PUT THINGS IN PERSPECTIVE
Whenever this world starts looking too complicated, I call my friend
Skeeter Skates, owner of Skeeter’s Tree Stump Removal and Plow Repair in
Greater Metropolitan Pooler. Skeeter has a wonderful way of putting
things into perspective.
“Hoss, this is going to have to be a
quick conversation,” he said, “I am right in the middle of trying to
grease up the hydraulics on a 1200D heavy-duty Marshall bi-directional
chain saw with a 29-inch stroke. Trust me, it ain’t nearly as easy as
writing one them egghead columns like you do.”
Skeeter considers tree stump removal
and plow repair a much higher calling than writing columns. There are
many who would agree with him.
“I was talking to a buddy of mine who
runs a tractor company,” Skeeter informed me, “and he is pretty sore at
you. He says you are picking on politicians in the Legislature who are
small business people and can’t always pay their taxes on time because
the economy has been rough on little businesses like his and mine. I
told him not to fret about it because nobody much reads your column and
what few do can’t understand it.”
I told Skeeter I had heard from the
same person and that I wasn’t criticizing small business people in the
Legislature who might not have filed their taxes on time; I was talking
about people who didn’t file at all.
“Well, now,” he mused, “that’s
different. I got no sympathy for people that don’t file their taxes.
That’s un-American. You call some of them hot-shot government leaders
you know in Atlanta and tell them to send those deadbeats down here to
Pooler. I’ll put them to work digging up tree stumps. I’ll pay them
minimum wage because I doubt they are worth more than that. Then they
can file their taxes like the rest of us.”
I told Skeeter that I would pass
along that information. What I didn’t tell him was that I am not very
popular in the governor’s office or in the Legislature and wasn’t sure
anybody would return my calls. That’s more detail than he wants to know.
I asked Skeeter if any of the
stimulus money from Washington had flowed down to his tree stump removal
and plow repair business.
The only thing flowing around here,”
he growled, “is the Ogeechee River. People like me won’t see one dime of
that so-called stimulus money. It’s all going to them big boys in New
York who messed up, got bailed out and then gave fat bonuses to the ones
that screwed things up in the first place. Like that big insurance
company, HOG.”
I think Skeeter was referring to AIG,
but it is best not to interrupt him when he is on a roll.
“I’d love to have a business where I
could remove the wrong tree stumps or dull every plow blade I put my
hands on and get a bailout and a bonus,” he said. “Maybe I need to move
out of Pooler and up to New York City.”
I was not about to tell Skeeter that
there isn’t much demand for tree stump removal or plow repair in New
York City. Besides, he wouldn’t be happy there. He hates the New York
Times and people who yell when they talk.
I asked Skeeter if he had any
thoughts on the current state of politics. He said, “My daddy used to
say, ‘Politicians are like squirrels. They look harmless, but they can
cause a mess if you don’t watch ’em.’ I can’t see things have changed
much.”
Before I could respond, he said,
“Hoss, I’d like to talk more but I got a Massey Harris P4086 14-inch
plow blade sittin’ here that ain’t going to sharpen itself. In the
meantime, I trust you will continue to distress the humorless and the
self-important and take up for the folks who can’t take up for
themselves. You do that and you may amount to something someday.” Then
he hung up.
I always enjoy my conversations with
Skeeter Skates. Whether the subject is politics or plow blades, he makes
his points well.
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