IS THAT A ZIT ON YOUR FOREHEAD OR ARE WE BEING FOLLOWED?
While you
and I have been tending to the mundane matters of life like filing our
taxes and paying our bills, members of the General Assembly have been
watching too many science fiction movies.
Sen. Chip
Pearson (R-Dawsonville) aided by Sen. Majority Leader Chip Rogers
(R-Woodstock), recently pushed a bill through the State Senate making it
illegal to implant microchips or tracking devices into an individual
without their permission. Eat your heart out, Alabama.
Pearson
admits he knows of no case where there has been a complaint made about
such a dastardly act nor has he met anyone who has had a microchip
installed on their forehead disguised as a zit, but decided that with
the state’s budget problems under control, transportation issues
resolved, teacher morale higher than Brasstown Bald, ethics issues
nonexistent and no immediate threat of a Martian invasion, this would be
as good a time as any to solve a problem that doesn’t exist.
The bill
passed the Senate, 47-2 with Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle presiding while
dressed as Mr. Spock.
Rogers
was ecstatic at the overwhelming support of his colleagues and was seen
running up and down the halls at the capitol yelling, “I am Mork from
Ork. Nanoo! Nanoo!”
The
measure now goes to the House, where it will be combined with a bill
prohibiting senators from wasting everybody’s time with stupid stuff
that has all the relevance of an earthworm.
At the
risk of appearing not to appreciate the bold action taken by our
forward-thinking solons, I must admit that I am not necessarily opposed
to sticking a little beeper here and there on some miscellaneous body
parts. I would start with the legislators themselves. We could plant the
little sucker in the middle of their egos and they would never know it
was there. I don’t know about you, but I would rest easier if I knew
somebody or something was watching them. They can get into mischief if
left to their own devices.
I hope to
get one placed on the Woman Who Shares My Name, too. That way, every
time she goes to the grocery store and heads for the broccoli bin an
alarm will sound and I can hide in the attic with the cheese sauce until
she gives up and fixes me some peanut butter squares.
Of
course, it would be just like her to slip one of those high-tech gizmos
on my epiglottis and discover that I am hiding in the attic along with
the cheese sauce. I would get no peanut butter squares, just broccoli
covered in cold cheese sauce. Sometimes high-tech isn’t all it’s cracked
up to be.
Sheila,
the Family Wonderdog can’t understand what all the fuss is about. People
have been putting microchips on dogs for a long time now and she says
nobody in the state Senate ever expressed any concern about that. She
thinks the problem is that senators are jealous of dogs because they are
smarter than senators and don’t need political contributions to survive,
just a can of Alpo.
Sheila
doesn’t like having tracking devices on her body. She said when she has
to answer nature’s call she had just as soon not have everybody in the
neighborhood know. Dogs have feelings, too. I don’t want to upset
Sheila, who is very sensitive, but a tracking device doesn’t seem
necessary for a dog that sleeps 22 hours a day.
Sources
tell me that now that the state Senate has disposed of this critical
matter, they are ready to take up the question of whether or not to
license witch doctors.
“This may
seem like another trivial issue to those Georgians who lie awake at
night wondering if they will have a job tomorrow,” said Pearson, “but
without trivial issues why would we need a state Senate?”
He makes
an excellent point.
I hope
you will express your gratitude to your local senator for not allowing
us to become a walking GPS. The next time you see him or her on the
street, raise your light saber and declare “The force be with you.”
Nanoo! Nanoo!
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