We Should All Be Afraid of What Donald Trump Gets Right

 

Most of the Tuesday-morning quarterbacks for last night’s debate have declared Hillary Clinton the “winner” because, you know, she spoke in complete sentences that seemed to flow logically from one to the next, and she outlined her actual (as opposed to imaginary) plans and ideas for improving the country, beating back ISIS, and preventing homegrown anarchists from looking up “how to make a bomb” on the internet.

And, except for right-wing media outlets like Breitbart, which charged moderator Lester Holt with bias for saying the word “birther” but not “Benghazi,” Trump has been dutifully savaged by the pundit-industrial complex for being a foreign-policy idiot, lying about everything, talking gibberish about everything else, interrupting, pouting, sniffling, and generally behaving like a sixth-grade boy bullshitting his way through an interrogation by his parents.

Many folks left of Vlad the Impaler think anyone who votes for Donald Trump is, by definition, an idiot. What very few people give Donald Trump credit for is that he is right about a number of crucial things about America and American life (there’s a reason he’s up there), and he is dangerously close to tapping into a volcanic undercurrent of despair and resentment that could blow this whole democracy thing sky high.

What Donald Trump understands and gets absolutely right is that millions of people in America are so angry they can’t think straight. Furthermore they don’t want to, because thinking “straight”—that is, playing by the rules they were taught, that working hard and being a good person is all you need to do to have a decent life in this country—is what landed them in their current mess in the first place. They don’t care that Donald Trump doesn’t have all the answers. In fact, they prefer his brand of blatant ignorance to the pretense, by Hillary and her ilk, that they do have an answer for everything. If you’re so smart, they wonder, why is my life swirling down the shitter? If your answers are so great, why does life outside my window look so goddamn miserable?

Trump understands that, for millions of people, Hillary Clinton does indeed represent the status quo—that nefarious force that has disenfranchised millions and can be blamed for pretty much everything, because it doesn’t really mean anything. The “status quo” is simply what is and has been, and criticizing it for not being “better” is the easiest thing in the world. It’s also Hillary’s biggest weakness. Because while she can argue that things could be a lot worse under a Trump presidency, and might have been worse if she weren’t part of the power structure, she cannot argue that things are better than they are to people who wake up in the morning wondering how things could get much worse.

If you lost your job because it got outsourced to Singapore, and your kids need clothes and food but you have no money, you are not an idiot for wanting to blame someone, somewhere for your troubles. You are not an idiot for thinking that you don’t have time to “re-train” yourself for another career. And you are not an idiot for recognizing that what you really, truly need is another job—now—because, you know, rent is due at the first of every month.

Trump also is correct when he says that America is a nation in decline in many areas. Our airports and infrastructure are, in some cases, worse than those in third-world countries. More than a dozen African countries have faster average internet speeds than those in the U.S., as do most other industrialized countries. Our roads and bridges are crumbling. Our mass transit is laughable compared to many European countries. Our infant mortality rate is higher than 27 other industrialized nations, including Cuba, despite our having the highest healthcare costs in the world. Raising children in America is an exercise in anxiety and exhaustion. The cost of going to college has reached the point of insanity. It is now almost impossible for most Americans to save enough money to retire. Rates of depression and suicide have never been higher. We are no longer the most educated country in the world, and, for good or ill, we no longer lead the world the way we used to. One huge reason: Our national politics is, in Trump's favorite word, a "disaster."

So there is a lot wrong with the American picture. And to many, Trump’s promises to “fix it,” however hollow, sound better than Hillary Clinton’s assurances that she won’t fix it very fast or very dramatically.

Hillary is arguing for gradual change in a complex world. But many Americans don’t feel like they can wait for that kind of change, and plenty can’t stand the “new normal” of the 21st-century economy. They are against Hillary precisely because she represents calm, cautious, reasonable progress—not the sort of decisive, “let’s fix this” attitude of Donald Trump, which, though it is little more than an empty posture, is a sentiment that aligns perfectly with the emotional frustration of millions in America who feel powerless to change anything themselves, and who suspect they are being held hostage by a dark cadre of do-nothing bureaucrats, politicians, and plutocrats who have rigged the system in their favor. This also happens to be the truth (none other than Jimmy Carter has stated that we no longer live in a democracy, we live in a plutocracy), and no amount of reasonable, stay-the-course progressivism will satisfy those who feel as if they’re good-faith efforts to achieve the American Dream have left them completely and utterly screwed.

The problem with Donald Trump is he gets so much so wrong that it’s impossible to take him seriously. Besides, he is such an improbable spokesman for the frustrations of the common man that the message tends to gets lost somewhere between his narcissistic gibberish and his claim that he started out in business with a “small” $14 million loan from his father. On the left, Bernie Sanders appealed to precisely the same emotions—frustration, powerlessness, betrayal—and was much more articulate, but running as a socialist curmudgeon in America has never been a winning strategy. So what are we left with this year?

Trump vs. Clinton: The Battle to the Bottom

Many people are afraid of what might happen if Donald Trump is elected. But Trump is not the problem. The problem is what and who Trump represents. What America’s ruling class should be afraid of is the rising tide of distrust and growing hatred for America’s government and institutions, which are the foundation of any functioning democracy. They should also be afraid of what might happen if, after four or eight years of stasis with Hillary Clinton as president, a smarter, smoother, savvier demagogue comes along with a much more precise and accurate critique of America’s leadership, who promises the same sort of emotionally satisfying upheaval of the “system” advocated by Donald Trump—but who can speak in complete sentences, is a likeable person, can hold his own in a debate, and seems like a reasonable alternative to the status quo, but isn’t. Not by a long shot. Think of a Marco Rubio who can tell a joke, or (though it’s admittedly hard to imagine) Ted Cruz in a sheep’s clothing of folksy rural charm and good-natured optimism, a man who feels the people’s pain so deeply he can summon tears on command. Someone like, say, Frank Underwood in House of Cards—a psychopath who pretends to mean well but is driven by one thing and one thing only: power, by any means necessary.

America is ripe for this kind of takeover, and the fact that Donald Trump (!!!) is as close to the presidency as he is should be ample and terrifying proof that such a thing is possible. Many Americans currently seek solace in the idea that when they actually reach the voting booth, democracy will eventually triumph and eradicate the noxious weed that is Trump. Surely, in the end, people will come to their senses and choose Hillary, even if they have to hold their nose to do so. . Choosing between the lesser of two evils is what most elections are about anyway, they think, and Hillary is the clear choice here. Obviously.

Unless of course you believe that the true evil is establishment politicians, governmental incompetence and corruption, corporate robber barons, Wall Street insiders, a weak military, job-stealing immigrants, lousy trade deals, and anyone who reads the New York Times more than once a week—in which case the choice is equally obvious.

And it isn’t Hillary.

Exclusive: A Guided Tour of Donald Trump's Brain

The phone rang at 3 a.m. and Donald Trump was restless. He did not like what people were saying about him, and he’d somehow gotten locked out of his Twitter account, so he was calling me for ideas about how to make people love him even more than they already do.

“I hear you can make yourself real small and get inside people’s heads,” he said in that familiar Queens-ian drawl.

“Yes, I can,” I replied.

“I want you to do that for me,” he said. “You know, get inside my head and tell people about the real me.”

“I’m not sure that’s such a good idea,” I said.

“Sure it is,” he insisted. “People who know me, love me. They can’t help it. I’m the most loveable person in the world. The smartest, too. My brain is a monument to genius and love. We could turn it into a national park, charge admission, and make billions.”

“Okay,” I sighed. “But a complete brain tour will cost you $50,000.”

“Make it $100,000,” he said. “I don’t want people to think I did this on the cheap.”

“Make it $200,000 then,” I said, “so I can still have some dignity left when I’m done.”

“It’s a deal,” he said.

Five minutes later, there was a knock on my door and Donald Trump was standing there, in blue silk pajamas, holding a bucket of KFC and a large bag of cash.

“Let’s do this,” he said.

I invited him in and told him to sit on the couch. “I like to enter through the right ear canal,” I explained, and handed him a q-tip. “If you could get in there and clean things out a little with this before we get started, I’d appreciate it.”

The Donald rolled his eyes, but did as he was told. He inserted the q-tip into his right ear and wiggled it around, then jabbed it in and out a few times to impress me with his thoroughness. He handed the q-tip back to me; the tip was covered with a thick, orange-ish goo.

“That’s real gold,” he said. “I’d keep that and sell it on eBay if I were you.”

I thanked him, and explained the details of the procedure: Using my extraordinary willpower, I would shrink myself to the size of a poppy seed and enter his brain through his right ear canal. He might feel a little tickling sensation at first, I explained, but once I was inside his head he wouldn’t feel anything at all. I like to spend at least two or three hours inside, I told him, and make a point of exploring all five major regions of the brain in order to get the full measure of a person. I usually spend more time in the frontal cortex, because that’s where human reason resides, as well as the regions for planning, problem-solving, and speech—but with him, I surmised, that may not be necessary.

“Great, let’s get started,” he said while he peeled back the carefully coiffed curtain of hair that hid his right ear. I closed my eyes, concentrated, shrunk myself, then hopped on his shoulder and up to the ledge of flesh at the opening of Donald Trump’s tremendous ear. He then closed the flap of hair on the side of his head and locked it in place. A comforting flaxen glow shown through the strands, which looked like bits of luminescent straw or long golden noodles lit from within.

As I stood there, preparing myself for the descent down his ear canal and into his brain, I felt my own self-esteem swell. I am the only person in the world Donald Trump trusts to give the American people a guided tour of his remarkable brain, I thought to myself—I must be pretty darn special. Then another, less charitable thought: People will probably think I’m making this up, that I didn’t actually crawl inside Donald Trump’s head and walk around. But as soon as that thought entered my mind, a warm breeze ruffled my own hair and a voice from deep inside The Donald’s ear canal boomed: “It doesn’t matter. People are stupid. They’ll believe anything you tell them.”

An overwhelming sense of certainty suddenly washed over me, rinsing my mind of doubt and fear. I flicked on my flashlight, then took a deep breath and began the long, dark descent into Donald Trump’s temporal lobe, where a normal person’s hearing and listening are processed. At the entrance to The Donald’s t-lobe, there was a door marked “Keep Closed.” The door was stuck, as if it hadn’t been opened in years. I jiggled the knob and pushed hard, but the door wouldn’t budge. I threw my shoulder into it a couple of times, and it finally gave way on the third heave. As soon as I made it through the door, it slammed shut behind me and I was suddenly enveloped in a thick, eerie silence.

In most people, the temporal lobe is where meaning is extracted from the sounds and noise and general cacophony of the world around us. And, having toured many a celebrity’s brain, I can tell you that it’s usually a madhouse in there, especially if the subject happens to live in New York: honking, screaming, shouting, construction, wind, talking, whining, crying—it all reverberates around and echoes around so loudly that I usually have to wear earplugs myself, especially if the person knows Beyoncé. But there was no noise whatsoever in Donald Trump’s temporal lobe; even his breathing and heartbeat were filtered out somehow, stranding me in a cone of perfect silence.

It was really quite peaceful, until it got creepy. There should be noise in here, I kept reminding myself—but there isn’t. How can that be? Maybe he’s deaf in his right ear, I thought. That would explain it. But then I shone my flashlight around and realized that the beam of the flashlight seemed to disappear, as if I were pointing it out into space. I clapped my hands together, but they didn’t make any noise. I started reciting the Declaration of Independence from memory, but could not hear myself speak. No words came out of my mouth, even though I knew perfectly well that I was talking. I then realized what was happening: I was standing in the middle of a tiny black hole, one that sucked up all outside sound and neutralized it, rendering it irrelevant and meaningless. The only other place I have encountered this phenomenon was inside Kanye West’s head, and the mere thought of it made me shudder.

Onward, I thought, it’s not safe in here.

Not knowing which direction to go, I walked downhill in the hope that I’d eventually reach Trump’s cerebellum, where physical coordination is managed and, I guessed, that fabulous golf swing of his would reside. After what seemed like miles, I reached a building that looked like the entrance to a country club. I informed the doorman that I was there to admire Donald Trump’s golf swing, which can allegedly launch a golf ball 280 yards, only a fraction less than Tiger Woods when his back is healthy.

I strolled out to the first tee, which looked out over a lush carpet of green, gorgeous grass. The fairway extended straight ahead and slightly downhill, and was bordered on either side by a forest of tall pines and majestic oaks. I watched as, in The Donald’s mind, he teed up a ball, lined up his shot, addressed the ball, waggled his club, and swung. The ball sliced off into the trees to the right. “Mulligan,” he said, and teed up another ball. This one hooked into the woods to the left. “I’m going to hit another one,” he said. This time the ball went more-or-less straight, and, as gravity began to pull his ball back to earth, The Donald held his finish and admired his handiwork.

Trump seemed proud of his drive, but my range meter indicated that his ball had only traveled 210 yards; 220 at the most. I was about to inform him of this unfortunate fact when he whistled and exclaimed, “A hole in one! How about that?”

“That’s impossible,” I said. “This is a 520-yard par five.”

“Well it just happened,” he said. “I saw it with my own eyes.”

“Your drive only went 210 yards,” I said. “By my calculations, you should have at least another 300 yards to the hole.”

He sneered at me like I was an idiot. “First, that was a 300-yard drive at least. Second, it hasn’t rained in a while, so these fairways have a lot of roll.”

“200 yards-worth?”

“I hit it pretty hard,” he said.

“Not that hard,” I protested.

“You don’t believe me, let’s walk up to the green. I guarantee you’re going to find a Trump Pro-V1 in the cup.”

To humor him, we walked down the fairway and up to the green. “Go ahead,” he said. “Look in the hole.”

I peered down into the cup, but there was no ball, and I told him so. He squeezed his hand into a fist and cussed. “It’s those damn Mexicans,” he spat. “They steal everything.”

“I don’t see any Mexicans,” I said.

“Believe me, they’re everywhere. The proof is right here,” he said, pointing at the hole. “There should be a golf ball there, and there isn’t.”

“Maybe you didn’t hit a hole in one,” I ventured.

“And maybe you’re a candy-assed piffle-tosser who lives in his mommie’s basement,” Trump hissed. “Let’s move on. The next hole is a Par 3. I hit a hole-in-one there pretty much every time.”

I wished him luck, but explained that I had to keep moving. I searched the rest of his cerebellum in vain for any other physical skills The Donald might have, but found none. Already behind schedule, I decided to high-tail it to his occipital lobe and check out his vision. Donald Trump doesn’t wear glasses, or even contacts as far as I knew, so I expected that his vision would be pretty good. Many people who don’t read books have excellent eyesight well into their seventies, due to a lifetime of relatively mild eyestrain. However, nothing in my experience prepared me for what I witnessed at the end of Trump’s occipital pathway.

The parts of his brain I’d visited thus far were either dark or naturally lit, but I could see from a good distance away that The Donald’s occipital lobe was lit with a bright, white light so intense that it appeared to be leaking into other regions of his brain. The closer I got, the brighter this part of his brain became. I didn’t bring sunglasses, so I wasn’t even sure I could enter the lobe itself, because it felt as if some sort of self-generating power source was in there, burning so hot and white that standing too close to it might, I feared, be dangerous.

Once inside, however, there turned out to be much more light than heat. It took a few minutes for my eyes to adjust, but when they did, I was astonished by what I saw. The glare was coming from thousands of round, frosted light bulbs, the kind actors use in their dressing rooms. Likewise, his entire occipital lobe was lined with mirrors, all arranged in a giant semi-circle and aimed at a single spot in the middle. Floating in mid-air at that the very center was a giant, disembodied, holographic version of Donald Trump’s head. The familiar golden comb-over, the chemically darkened skin, the squinty eyes and misshapen lips—it was all there, in three dimensions, but it was so transparent that you could see right through it. The head hovered and slowly turned, peering at itself in each mirror as it revolved. Reflected in all those mirrors, there seemed to be hundreds of heads, then hundreds more beyond that, stretching into infinity.

As I watched, the head at the center smiled at its reflection and winked at itself a few times. Then it did something as extraordinary as it was frightening: It puckered its lips in a circle, making its mouth look like a giant anus, and tried to kiss itself! The closer the head’s lips got to the mirror in front of it, the larger the lips looked in all the other mirrors. As his giant butthole lips got closer, and the reflections got larger, it felt as if I was either going to be sucked up into his mouth like a spaghetti noodle, or shot out the other end like whatever he had to eat that day.

Thankfully, the terror retreated as quickly as it came. The head kissed itself, winked, and nodded a few times to indicate that it approved of itself, then returned to the middle and continued rotating. When the back of its head was facing me, I took the opportunity to escape Trump’s occipital lobe and head over to his parietal lobe, where things like touch, taste, and body awareness are stored.

A lot of shame is what you find in most people’s parietal lobes, especially celebrities who are hyper-critical of their own looks. While everyone else is admiring them, they see only flaws and blemishes. The Donald did not have that problem. In many respects, his parietal lobe looked like the room of a hyper-sexual teenager. Posters of every Sports Illustrated swimsuit model and Miss Universe contestant for the past twenty years hung on the walls, along with Playboy playmates, Penthouse models, and several images from a much raunchier publication featuring unmentionable intimacies with animals, vegetables, and what one of the headlines termed “pleasures of the self.”

Interspersed among these posters was a curious collection of photographs that appeared to feature Donald Trump’s head photo-shopped onto Arnold Schwarzenegger’s body. As for the sense of touch, it was represented by a wall covered with various shapes and blobs that I couldn’t make out at first. When I stepped closer, however, I realized that the blobs and bubbles on the wall were all female breasts and buttocks in various sizes and shapes, most of them firm and toned, save for an occasional slab of saggy flesh hidden with a paper bag. Taste is another feature of the parietal lobe. I searched everywhere for it, but ultimately had to conclude that Donald Trump doesn’t have any.

The only region left on Trump’s brain tour was the frontal lobe, where most of a human being’s complex thought processes take place: concentration, problem-solving, planning, reason, etc. Speech is also a function of the frontal lobe, and because so much goes on here, the typical frontal lobe is a jungle-like tangle of synapses and neurotransmitters all feverishly firing messages back and forth in a desperate attempt to coordinate a person’s thoughts and actions.

Traversing the frontal lobe can be difficult because it is so densely packed with neurons, which is why I usually tackle it last.

When I entered The Donald’s frontal lobe, however, I thought for a moment I had taken a wrong turn and had landed in some other, less vital part of his brain—one of the boring sections that governs unconscious things like heart rate and breathing. Where other people have dense clusters of synapses, The Donald had airy wisps of brain tissue that looked like spider webs—flimsy, gossamer threads of synaptic silk that offered no more resistance to the sweep of my hand than a cloud of steam. Parts of the frontal lobe that usually spark and flicker like fireworks were, in The Donald’s brain, strangely dark. And parts that are typically packed with an accumulated lifetime of information and experience appeared to stop somewhere around the age of seven.

The planning and problem-solving parts of the frontal lobe are where I usually find out a lot about the person whose brain I am exploring. This area of The Donald’s brain was a complete mess, however—piles of old National Enquirers stacked everywhere, paperwork from various lawsuits strewn all over the place, piles of discarded golf clubs, stacks of old casino chips, a bucket of tiny American flags; it looked like my neighbor’s garage. I couldn’t make any sense of it, because there didn’t seem to be any order to the chaos. That’s not entirely unusual, though. A lot of artist’s brains look like that; the meaning and order come when they try to express themselves. I thought this might be true for The Donald too, so I hunted through the detritus in search of the part of his brain that governs speech. It’s usually located very close to the part of the lobe that executes planning and concentration, but try as I might, I couldn’t find it. It took a while, but I finally found his speech center way on the other side of his frontal lobe, near the smell section, entirely disconnected from almost all of his brain’s cognitive functions!

This is extraordinary, because it means Donald Trump may actually think with his nose. If this is the case, and all of his cognitive functions are packed into his nasal cavity, it’s possible that when Donald Trump smells something funny—the aroma of burnt toast, say, or the scent of Barack Obama’s birth certificate—he may overreact so completely that he convinces himself it’s something much more serious, like the apocalypse. And if his nose and mouth are so closely connected, that would explain why his lips move so strangely when he speaks, and why the words themselves don’t make much sense.

I didn’t notice the other thing in this area of his brain until I heard a rustle and turned around to see what was making the noise. It was hard to see, but hidden in a dark corner, in a large metal cage, was a huge, greenish lizard of some sort. The beast was at least three feet long, with a forked tongue that flitted in and out of its mouth as if it were hunting for its next meal. This is amazing, I thought. In most people, the term “lizard brain” is a euphemism, a shorthand reference to a person’s primal evolutionary defenses, particularly the “fight or flight” mechanism that kicks in when a creature senses it’s in mortal danger. But in Donald Trump’s case, his lizard brain is apparently a literal lizard—and a big, nasty-looking one at that.

Cautiously, I stepped closer to the lizard to get a better look. As I approached, it snapped its head forward and ate something in a convulsive gulp. I bent down to see what sort of food it was eating, and was horrified to see that it was being fed a strange type of mealworm with the body of a bug and the head of—Hillary Clinton!

I’d seen enough. As I exited Donald Trump’s brain and returned to my normal size, I felt disoriented and dizzy, but I also found myself feeling sorry for the man. I wondered what it must be like for his body to navigate its way through this world attached to that head—a head so oddly and mysteriously constructed that it bears almost no resemblance to any human mind I have ever seen, before or since. He must be very lonely, I concluded, because trying to make someone else understand what I just saw—much less admire and love it—must be very difficult for him. I felt fortunate that he had let me inside, but it is also my responsibility to report to the world what I saw in there, and that burden lay heavy on me as I gathered myself to share my findings with him and take my cash.

The Donald was in my kitchen, watching his assistant make him a sandwich, when he saw me emerge from his ear.

“Back already?” he said.

“Yes,” I said. “I couldn’t take much more.”

“Pretty amazing in there, huh?” he said.

“You might say that.”

“I envy you, you know,” he said, grabbing the sandwich and taking a bite. “I wish I could walk around inside my own mind. I mean, I’m the most fascinating person in the world, and one of the richest, but the one thing I can’t do is walk around inside my own head the way you just did. You’re one lucky motherfucker.”

“Yes, I guess so.”

He swallowed and took a swig of orange juice. “Better than Disneyland in there, isn’t it?”

“It was a wild ride, yes,” I said.

“I can’t wait to read about me,” he said. “But more important, I can’t wait for other people to read about me. They’re gonna fuckin’ love me. You love me now, right? Of course you do. You can’t help it. Because I’m the most loveable guy in the world.”

The Donald took a final gulp of orange juice. “Gotta go,” he said. “Got a campaign to run.”

He left as quickly as he’d arrived.

After I shut the door behind him, I figured I should count the cash to make sure he didn’t short me. I searched everywhere in my living room and kitchen for the bag of cash, however, but couldn’t find it. Sonofabitch, I thought—he took it with him.

Furious, I took of the q-tip out of my pocket and wondered how much I could get for the thing on eBay. But then I thought better of it. Nobody would believe actual gold came out of Donald Trump’s ear, I thought. People aren’t that stupid. They’d see it for what it was: a cue tip with some earwax on it.

But then I figured what the hell, and posted it on eBay anyway. Five minutes later, a bid for $1,000,000 came in, and I accepted it.

Maybe Trump is right, I thought—in a world where people will believe anything, is it also true that anything is possible? Then I noticed something fishy about the address where I was supposed to send the q-tip: 1 Trump Tower, Suite 1.

Sad, I thought. I would have happily sold it to him for half the price.

Smart vs. Stupid: The Battle for What's Left of the American Mind

What with millions of people cheering the rise of Donald Trump, Britain voting to leave the European Union, and yet another Danielle Steele novel at the top of the New York Times best-seller list, smart people everywhere are understandably concerned about the prospect of stupid people taking over the world. Everywhere, it seems, stupid people are asserting their right to make idiotic decisions, just like the smarty-pants elites they despise.

It’s an alarming trend, to be sure. Throughout history, stupid people have always outnumbered smart people, but smart people have always been able to outwit them, mostly by keeping them busy doing jobs they hate. When the job they hate disappears, however, the moronic masses must focus their rage on something else, and that’s when things tend to go south. When stupid people get mad, they start lopping off smart people’s heads, thereby disabling the mechanism by which smart people exert their overwhelming dominance. If history has taught stupid people anything, it’s that smart people tend to lose that smug look on their face when their head is rolling around in a basket.

Unfortunately, after all the smart people are decapitated, someone has to decide what to do next. Smart people are good at deciding, but if you get rid of all the smart people—by, say, creating a political system that discourages anyone with half a brain from participating in it—the deciding gets left to people who are ill-equipped for the task. In America, this vacuum of intelligence in politics has led to the rise of Donald Trump, whom many people view as an inconceivably stupid candidate for president—an ignorant, racist buffoon who thinks the word sexism is “kind of hot”—but who, in reality, is just smart enough to be dangerous.

This wasn’t supposed to happen, of course. The framers of our Constitution created several safeguards to prevent an angry mob of morons (otherwise known as voters) from derailing democracy. Unfortunately, all of the founding fathers were smart people. What their collective brainpower could not foresee was a wave of technological change that would “democratize” information by making it accessible to twelve-year-olds who are at least smart enough to answer “no” to the question: “Are you under 18?”

But even if they could have envisioned such a thing, who could have predicted that flooding the world with information would create an underclass of proudly ignorant idiots who, besides being utterly clueless about the most basic facts of civic life, have no idea how dumb they are?

Well, actually, lots of people have made that prediction. Einstein, for one.

The fact is, Americans don’t like smart people, and never have. Only 34% of people age 25-29 in this country have a college degree. Why? Because going to college is just the sort of thing that makes people smarter, and if you live in America, being smart puts you in the distinct minority. Walk into any bar in America and start betting people that you can solve a Rubik’s cube faster than they can say the Pledge of Allegiance, and trust me, you will quickly discover how outnumbered you are.

In America, this streak of disdain for smart people and lofty ideas used to be called “anti-intellectualism.” But these days, anti-intellectualism has morphed into something quite different, something that might more accurately be termed “pro-idiocy”—or, when it affects older people who ought to know better, “dumbass dementia.”

The chief feature of this new mental mindset is the enthusiastic celebration of ignorance—a specialized form of non-thinking that replaces the pleasures of contemplation with beer, pizza, football, and guns. With a whoop and a holler and few chugs of Bud, ignorance enthusiasts are able to reach an almost Zen-like state of detachment from the world of ideas, quieting all synaptic activity with a blissful fog of nostalgia for a time when humans co-existed peacefully with dinosaurs and America was beloved by all.

In the old days, anti-intellectuals used to spend their time battling bright ideas—by pointing out, say, that the sun obviously goes around the Earth, and if you don’t believe us, kindly step over to the guillotine. Nowadays, anti-intellectuals don’t bother refuting ideas they disagree with; instead, they amuse themselves by embracing nonsense and encouraging people who spout it. The stupider the idea the better, because the whole point of supporting and spreading ignorance is to short-circuit the only asset smart people really have: their over-active, hyper-educated, oh-so-superior brains.

Take Donald Trump’s proposal to build an 1,100-mile wall along the Mexican border to keep all the Mezzican rapists and murderers and terrorists where they belong: in line at the border crossing from Tijuana to San Diego. Many smart people have wasted their time by taking this idea seriously and pointing out how spectacularly ridiculous it is. Such efforts miss the point entirely. In the new world disorder, the stupidity of Donald Trump’s wall is its biggest asset, and the more smart people who sniff and sneer at the mind-melting logic behind it, the more attractive it becomes to the cheerful mob of morons who support it.

That makes no sense, you might think. But just thinking that it makes no sense betrays a mind that’s trying to make connections, to create meaning out of the madness, and minds like that have difficulty grasping the elusive nuances of nonsense. Donald Trump’s rise to the top of the Republican presidential ticket perplexes a lot of smart people because it seems insane, as if half the electorate has lost its marbles and is looking for them in the gobsmacking gobbledygook that comes out of Donald Trump’s mouth, which even he admits is not entirely connected to his brain. Why would a bunch of unemployed, uneducated white people think a born-and-bred billionaire is their savior? Because it’s a crazy idea that—as they always say in the movies—just might work! In the movies, as everyone knows, the crazy person is the only one who really knows what’s going on—the only one who has the guts to tell people The Truth. And it is the hope and dream of everyone who couldn’t get a high-school diploma that The Truth is not as complicated as it seems—that, in fact, things will somehow work out in the end, because they must!

In the next few months, Democrats will spend a lot of time arguing that no, things will not magically work out in the end—that the only way things will work out is if a lot of smart people put their heads together and try to figure this thing out, one complex, nuanced, multi-faceted clusterfuck at a time. And even then things may not work out, because it’ll all be too little too late. Things may already be so messed up that no one can fix them, they’ll say, but we have to try. The world is a complicated place, they’ll say, so don’t expect too much too fast—don’t expect miracles. Cleaning up a mess like this takes time, so be patient, and vote for Hillary.

Donald Trump has a different message. He is the only candidate in this election who is willing to stand up and tell people precisely what they want to hear: That everything is going to be okay. Trust me, he’ll say, everything is going to work out. Sure, things are apocalyptically screwed up now, but that’s because a black guy is in office and I’m not president yet. Trust me, the solution is easy: All we have to do is close our borders, throw out everyone who doesn’t sunburn easily, nuke the Middle East, and chant “U S A! U S A!” until God gives in and starts leaving bricks of gold on everyone’s doorstep, which can be redeemed for sweet-smelling piles of cash or a shit-ton of bitcoin, whichever you prefer.

Boom, boom, boom—problem solved.

It’s nonsense, of course. Stupid doesn’t even begin to describe it. But that doesn’t matter. What Donald Trump understands that a lot of smart people don’t is that there are angry mobs of people out there who are sick and tired of being told what they need to do to get along in this world—obey the law, get an education, cut back on the meth—and want to see some heads rolling around in a basket. They want blood: spewing, spraying streams of it. They want revenge. They want to inflict a world of hurt on anyone and everyone who is not hurting as much as they are.

They also want climate change not to be real, for trickle-down economics to work, and for their first lady to be a former swimsuit model. They want all of these things and more, because that’s what America is for: heaping all your hopes and dreams on its back, then yelling at it when it runs too slow.

But most of all, people want to be reassured. They want to be told that everything is going to be all right—that the bogeyman is going to go away, that evil will not triumph, and yes, everyone who has faith and works hard can be filthy stinking rich beyond their wildest dreams. They want Ronald Reagan’s “shining city on a hill,” only this time they want it to gleam like a diamond while they drink Perrier from the tap, breathe air infused with opiates, and sleep restfully knowing that America is once again kicking some global ass.  

Donald Trump is the only candidate stupid enough to promise it to them. All we can hope is that he doesn’t really believe it. Otherwise, heads really will roll, if they don’t explode first.

 

Yep, It's True, My Best Friend is a Dog

My dog, Sarge.

My dog, Sarge.

It recently dawned on me that the old cliché is indeed true: My best friend is a dog.

Sure, I used to have human friends, but over time they all either moved away, died, got boring, or did something inexcusably stupid that made me question why I was ever friends with them in the first place—you know, the kind of thing only humans do.

Not that my dog doesn’t do stupid things; he does. It’s just that when my dog does something stupid, it’s usually pretty funny. If he gets into the garbage while I’m away, the look of shame on his face when I come home is adorable. If he barks at a squirrel and then tries to chase it—well, how stupid is that? If he chews one of my wife’s shoes to pieces, his droopy doggy eyes will say, “What’s the big deal? There are dozens more where that came from,” and I have to laugh. Because it’s true. He could chew up a shoe a day for the next six months and barely make a dent in her shoe collection. I’d think it was funnier if shoes didn’t cost so much, but if it makes my little dog-friend happy, then it makes me happy too.

Isn’t that what friendship is all about?

The realization that my dog is far and away my best friend came to me rather suddenly, but in retrospect I can see that his dedication to me was constant; it was my human inability to appreciate his loyalty—to trust the sincerity of his affection—that prevented me from accepting his friendship for what it was: a true, deep kinship of spirit.

It seems silly now, but for a long time I had my doubts. For years, it seemed as if the only time my dog paid attention to me was when I was feeding him or giving him treats. As soon as he was done eating, he’d go back to ignoring me. If I forgot to feed him, he’d get ornery and act like missing a meal every now and then was the end of the world. And if I didn’t give him enough food off my dinner plate, he’d act like I was being stingy, as if I was asserting my human dominance over him, because I had this big tasty plate full of food and he had nothing but processed meat goo and a mountain of dry kibble.

In short, he was being selfish. It was all about him. I didn’t like that aspect of his personality, so I remained skeptical of his true motives. Sure, he’d bark and bounce around like a maniac when I came home from work, and he’d do his delirious dog dance when I took him for a walk. But those little performances always felt insincere, over the top. His responses were all out of proportion—he was ten times happier than he should be for the reward I was giving him—and it felt like he was mocking me. If I grabbed his leash and said, “Do you want to go for a walkie poo?,” he’d jump and bark in this conspicuously crazy way that seemed totally fake to me. Nobody could be that happy over a walk. They say dogs don’t do sarcasm, but mine did, I was pretty sure. In his little dog mind, I knew what he was thinking. He was thinking: “Oh goodie, do we get to go outside for fifteen minutes? Asshole. I’ve been locked up in this house for twelve hours. Fuck you.”

He wasn’t wrong, of course. The problem, I came to understand, was that I wasn’t giving him the respect he deserved. I was treating him like a dog, not like the friend he was, and that hurt his feelings. When he took a dump on my $5,000 Persian carpet, or puked on my Egyptian cotton sheets, it was his way of saying, “Hey, dipshit, I can be an asshole too.”

The friendship we share now was developed over time, and, unlike our previous relationship, is based on mutual trust and respect. My dog and I are equals now, two humble creatures trapped on this earthly plane, doomed to spend our lives seeking comfort, warmth, and solace in a cruel and unforgiving world. In fact, my dog is better than me in many respects. For one thing, he can run like the wind, despite his stubby legs. For another, he is completely true to himself. He doesn’t try to pretend he’s something he’s not, or that he isn’t feeling what he’s feeling. If he feels like taking a shit on the neighbor’s lawn, he doesn’t over-think it; he just does it, walks away, and never looks back. I respect that. (When I tried it, however, I had to explain to the police officer why I had not used my own toilet, a mere fifty feet away. In understanding the bond between dog and man, like so many other things, our society has a long way to go.)

They say you discover who your true friends are during difficult times, and that has certainly been the case with me and my dog. This past year has been a trying one, what with all the job stress, financial insecurity, health problems, deaths in the family and, most recently, a nationwide recall of Krusteaz blueberry pancake mix, my favorite. With each successive calamity, many people I considered friends fell by the wayside, unable or unwilling to extend the hand of friendship when it was needed most. But I am now grateful to these fair-weather “friends,” for their absence has clarified the identity of my true best friend. None of these people were there to offer comfort and support when my spirit was sinking and all hope seemed lost. At my lowest moments, the only living creature who remained by my side, through all the tears and wailing and madness, was my dog. (Well, my wife was there too, but she did not have nearly as much sympathy for me as my comfortingly non-verbal pooch.)

When my latest magnum opus was rejected by Random House for what the editors called an “idiotic premise” and “insufficient punctuation,” it was my dog who came to me, leash in mouth, as if to say, “Hey friend, let’s go for a walk.”

When my doctor called to tell me that all the tests had come back negative—that I was fine, and that, in his words, “medical science does not have a cure for what ails you”—it was my dog who sidled up to me, tongue lolling as if to say, “What do you say we go share a cone at Dairy Queen?”

When grief over the death of a loved one overtook me and my face was covered in tears, who came to lick away my pain? My dog, that’s who. Then, sensing my emotional fragility, he instinctively knew what I needed and urged me to accompany him to the dog park, where our other friends gather each day and are available to offer their support and good cheer.

Throughout all the strife and turmoil that drove lesser friends away, my dog has remained steadfast and true. Each day, as I pound my fists in anger and curse my fate on this godforsaken planet, my dog sits at my feet, a non-judgmental ball of calm in a perilous and turbulent world. Furthermore, I can talk to him for hours and he will listen patiently, unlike my restless human friends, who find it necessary to speak every now and then.

Our friendship continues to strengthen as the days and weeks roll by sans any other human interaction. Out of respect for each other, we no longer eat in different places; rather, I kneel and sup with him on the floor, at his level, where we can see eye to eye. One surprising note: His food does not taste as bad as you might expect. The canned food is made from “meat and vegetables” and is bathed in a savory gravy, while the kibble has a satisfying, toothsome crunch. Likewise, I have had my bed lowered so that he may enjoy night after night of restful sleep on a Serta pillowtop mattress, while my wife has graciously agreed to sleep at the foot of the bed, on a ratty slab of foam.

My dog and I now share most of our time together, and activities I once participated in with humans I now enjoy with him. We hike, we fish, we watch TV. We even play golf together. In fact, my scores have improved tremendously ever since I trained him to pick up the ball on the green and place it in the hole.

In these and many other ways, my dog has proven to be as enjoyable a companion as any human.

One area where he is surprisingly inept, however, is poker. All my life I have seen paintings of dogs playing poker, so I just assumed he knew the game. But as it turns out, he is the worst poker player I have ever seen. He can’t even hold the cards; I have to hold them for him. Which means he is also extremely easy to beat, a trait magnified by the fact that he constantly makes risky, ill-advised bets, as if money doesn’t mean anything to him.

Still, given the choice between spending time with a human or my dog, I am increasingly inclined to choose the latter. Why, just the other day we were headed out for a walk and my dog suddenly stopped at the door and looked up at me with an air of genuine distress.

The message in his eyes was unmistakable: “Shouldn’t we have a snack, first?”

“You’re right, we don’t want to get low blood sugar out there,” I replied, thanking him, and poured us each a handful of kibble.

Who else would put their desire for a walk on hold just to think about my blood sugar? Only my best friend, that’s who: My ever-loyal, ever-loving dog, without whom I would surely perish.

Yes, I Seized the Day: And Here's What Happened

Last Sunday, I woke up and decided to heed the advice so often given to those who feel, as I often do, that their lives are a slow, meaningless slog to the grave. Which is to say, I decided to seize the day, carpe the diem, and live that day as if it were my last.

No less a prophet than Steve Jobs claimed to live by this dictum, which he borrowed from Horace, Jesus, Gandhi, and many other wise, day-seizing people. If it was good enough for them, I figured, it’s good enough for me. And so began my attempt to live a single day with their shining eternal truth lighting my way.

I awoke at 7:30 a.m. and elected not to sleep in, for fear that too much extra snoozing might cut into my seizing. I didn’t shower either, because what was the point? So what if my pits reeked and my hair was a little greasy? Was it worth wasting five minutes in the shower to conform to some random cultural norm of bodily hygiene? No. Nor did it make sense to hunt for clean clothes when yesterday’s were already sitting there in a pile on the floor, easily accessible and ready to go.  

Shunning my usual morning coffee and toast, I bee-lined it to the iHOP, where I’ve been dying to try their Cinnamon Double-Dipped French Toast, but have resisted out of the day-deadening fear that I might have to work it off at the gym. Normally, I would also be concerned that an iHOP-ian spike in my blood sugar and insulin levels might cause a seizure. But not today. Today was about seizing, not seizures.

The nearest iHOP is nine miles away from my house, and I calculated that I could get there in less than four minutes if I redlined my Nissan Altima to 120 mph. Which I did, and it was exhilarating. To celebrate, I piled extra berries and whipped cream on my French toast, and ordered two sides of bacon to go. While I ate, using a fork in each hand to shovel the food in my mouth as efficiently as possible, I mentally mapped my day.

First stop was the bank, where I withdrew all my savings, cashed out my 401k, and took the fifty-percent tax hit for closing out my Roth IRA early. Screw it, I thought—compound interest assumes you’re going to be alive tomorrow. I briefly considered flying around the world, but thought better of it when I realized that I’d be spending most of my last day on a plane. Instead, I ditched the Nissan and rented a cherry-red Aston Martin DBS Volante, which has a 510-horsepower V12 that tops out at 191 mph.

Ten minutes later, the Aston’s engine was purring at 135 per on Hwy 494, heading west to Gander Mountain, where I planned to buy the most kick-ass semi-automatic rifle they stocked. The guy at the counter was a little suspicious when I threw $1,000 at him and refused a background check, but I explained why I was in such a hurry and he understood completely.

“The nearest place to shoot that thing is somewhere in Dakota County,” the clerk advised. “Private land is your best bet. Just be sure to ask before you start shooting.”

I didn’t have time to ask. I just pulled up to the nearest farm and peeled off five large to a scruffy guy in overalls. Then I aimed my Walther HK MP5 at his field and mowed down half an acre of defenseless soybeans in ten seconds flat. When I ran out of ammo, I tossed the gun to the farmer and thanked him. I had other things to do, and didn’t have time to reload.

Next, I rented a helicopter and bribed the pilot to drop me off on top of the IDS tower. I’ve always wanted to parachute off the IDS tower, and this was my chance. Taking the prevailing wind into account, I figured I could float over downtown toward the Vikings stadium, admire the Grain Belt Brewery sign from above, then land at Gold Medal Park and catch a matinee at the Guthrie. This I did, but I bailed after about twenty minutes when I realized that I could be zipping down the Mississippi River on a speedboat instead.

But first, I had to hit all the food trucks lined up on Marquette Street. One by one, I sampled their fare, taking a bite at each truck and quickly moving on to the next. If there was a line, I grabbed a bite of someone else’s food and ran. At the Foshay Tower, I popped into Izzy’s ice cream, ordered a six-scoop sampler, and downed it as I sprinted toward Target field to catch the start of the Twins game. I got bored after eight or ten pitches, though, and left because the Twins were already behind 6-0.

The speedboat idea still appealed to me, so I dialed up an Uber and told my driver to take me to the St. Paul Yacht Club. On the way, I realized that no, what I really wanted to do was jet-ski up and down the Mighty Miss. So that’s what I did, buzzing everyone along the way as closely as I could, and giving all the tourists on that sad, slow paddle-wheeler something to talk about.

By this time, it was about two in the afternoon and I was running out of things to do. I could go to some museums, but didn’t see the point. I could go buy a dog, but what would he do tomorrow when I wasn’t around? I could check out the St. Paul Farmer’s Market, but I’ve seen cucumbers and potatoes before. I could visit the Science Museum, but why bother learning anything on your last day? Your last day is for living, not learning.

Finally, I decided to head down the Mississippi, find an eagle’s nest, and steal an egg. The appeal was that it was both illegal and dangerous, two factors that might have dissuaded me on any other day. But today was about living life to the fullest, maxing out the moment, not worrying about tomorrow. The nest turned out to be empty, unfortunately, so I basically wasted an hour climbing a tree.

As happy hour approached, I thought it might be a good idea to hit a few of the micropubs that are popping up all over town. In the time it took me to down a pint at Tin Whiskers Brewing Co., however, three new microbreweries opened their doors. I tried to keep up, but four more opened while I was visiting the previous three, and I soon realized it was a losing battle.

Fortified by a strong beer buzz, I hopped on the Green Line back to Minneapolis. Unfortunately, life is too short for a trip on the Green Line, so I got off and grabbed a cab. Destination: Manny’s Steakhouse, to eat the most expensive meal in town.

By the time I got to Manny’s I’d worked up a serious appetite, but the maître d’ wouldn’t even let me in. He said I smelled like beer and sewage and something else he couldn’t quite identify, and that my stench would offend the other patrons.

Fine, I said, I’ll go stand in line at First Ave., where no one will care what I smell like. Unfortunately, it was an all-ages show that night, so the only people in line were teenage girls, who seemed offended that I did not smell like bubble gum and strawberries. It didn’t matter, though, because all that beer was straining my bladder and I needed to find a bathroom fast. No restaurants would let me in the door, so I had no choice but to discreetly relieve myself in the 7th St. parking garage.

Evidently, a security guard saw me, because next thing I knew a police officer was tapping me on the shoulder. Not being a very enlightened fellow, he did not seem to appreciate my predicament, or my desire to squeeze as much meaning and purpose out of the day as possible. Instead, he cuffed me, shoved me in the back of his squad car, and carted me off to the police station.

I thought my life savings ($78,000 and change, which I had jammed in my pockets) would be sufficient to post bail, but all it did was raise a lot of questions. Where did I get the money? Who did I steal if from? Why was I carrying so much cash around? If the money was mine, rich guy, why didn’t I buy some clean clothes?

Instead of letting me go, they locked me in a cell with three other guys, two of whom claimed to be Jesus. Four hours later, my saintly wife came to pick me up, but she couldn’t bail me out of jail because all our money was in lock-up. Somehow she convinced them to take a credit card, and soon we were on I-94 headed home. I tried to explain what had happened, and more importantly why, but she is one of those people who worries about what is going to happen tomorrow, so she was not the least bit impressed.

While I was in jail, I thought of a dozen other things I wanted to do—see the northern lights, light a stick of dynamite, burn down an old barn, rob a Dairy Queen—but I had to admit, I was exhausted. Instead, as I showered off the sweat and scum of my adventures, I thought hard about the challenge with which I had begun the day. There was still an hour left. If this really were the last hour of my life, what would I do?, I wondered. Make love to my wife? Not an option tonight. Listen to Beethoven? Not in the mood. Get drunk? Did that already.

Then, as if Steve Jobs himself had shone the light of wisdom and truth into my blinking eyes, I suddenly realized what I needed to do in the last hour of the last day of my life. It was Sunday night, I had recorded the season six finale of Game of Thrones, and I simply could not end my last day on Earth without finding out if winter in Winterfell is any worse than winter in St. Paul.

So I reheated last night’s chili and sat down to watch the final episode of the season, when all (or at least some) would be revealed. This way I’ll get some answers to at least a few of life’s burning questions, I thought, and the day won’t have been a total loss.###

I am Now a Robot. And I’ve Never Felt Better.

So I finally broke down and decided to become a robot. It wasn’t an easy decision—the big choices never are—but I think it’s the right one for me.

The robot-union representative who knocked on my door made a compelling case for robot-hood: “Sir, are you feeling tired and weak? Do you wake up in the morning with stiff joints and a groggy head? Do you sometimes feel as if humanity is doomed and there is no way out?  If so, I have a proposition that I think will interest you.”

I invited the man in and offered him a drink, but he said liquids didn’t agree with him. He asked me if I always pile my old New Yorkers on the dining-room table like that, and inquired about the bandage on my hand.

“Bagel-slicing accident,” I explained.

“Ah,” he said. “Stale bagel? Dull knife? Very risky.”

“I wasn’t paying attention,” I said. “The knife slipped, and next thing I knew . . .”

“Blood everywhere,” he said, nodding as if he’d been there.

“Exactly.”

The man took what appeared to be a breath and said, “What if I told you there is a way to avoid incidents like that in the future? In fact, what if I told you that you never have to eat bagels again?”

“What are you driving at?” I asked. “It is impossible for a human being to survive without eating bagels. They are an important major food group.”

“The key word there is ‘human,’” he said with a kind of smile. “There are many things humans can’t live without. But what if you weren’t a human being? What if you were something else altogether—something that didn’t need to eat, sleep, hurt, or feel?”

“That would be nice,” I said, “especially that hurting and feeling part. I’ve got a kink in my neck you wouldn’t believe.”

“What if I told you that all you have to do in order to achieve this superior state of being is to give up your humanity?” he said.

“Could I still watch TV?” I wondered.

“Yes, but it wouldn’t make any sense,” he explained. “You’d soon realize that television itself is nothing more than a clever arrangement of electrons designed to paralyze the human brain. And since technically speaking you wouldn’t have a brain, television would be of no interest to you.”

Life without “Game of Thrones”? It was hard to imagine, and I told him so.

He looked at me with pity in eyes, or what I thought were his eyes. “You’d realize soon enough that ‘Game of Thrones’ is just a show about a bunch of people going around in circles fighting each other for no good reason and getting nowhere. With dragons.”

He had a point, but I still wasn’t sold. He then went on to talk about all my medical conditions—insomnia, depression, IBS, arthritis, eczema, cavities, varicose veins, herniated discs, dry mouth—and pointed out the advantages of not having to rely on a fragile skeleton made of bones that could shatter at any moment. The cost savings alone were enough to get my attention. No more medical bills. No more groceries. No more personal-hygiene products. Just a squirt of oil every now and then and you’re good to go. He also pointed out the time savings. What if you didn’t have to sleep, or go to the gym, or take long walks to clear your head?, he asked. What if you never got tired? Think how much work you could get done.

“True,” I said, “but I’m not sure it’s worth giving up my humanity. I mean, what else is there?”

“Plenty,” he replied. “Humanity isn’t the only game in town. In fact, if you’re honest with yourself, I think you know deep in your heart that humanity has played itself out. Humans are exhausted, and they don’t know what to do next. They’ve worked so hard for so long, and things are so screwed up, that they no longer have the will or energy to keep going. Forget doing great things; they can’t even figure out how to fix roads and bridges, or stop destroying the water they drink and the air they breathe. Admit it, humanity has peaked; the rest is just cleanup and damage control. Do you really want to be a part of that?”

The guy was starting to get on my nerves with all this anti-human talk, so I asked him if he could leave a brochure. I told him I’d think about it and get back to him. He said he couldn’t do that, and explained that the offer he had for me was a one-time deal, take it or leave it. Then he hit me with the kicker. “Look around you,” he said. “Haven’t you noticed that as you get older, you’re getting slower and starting to feel left behind? All those younger people out there with their fancy devices and instinctive knowledge of technical stuff you’ve never even heard of? Don’t they make you feel, well, obsolete? Don’t they make you feel inadequate, because you can’t keep up, no matter how hard you try?”

I had to admit that those thoughts had crossed my mind, though I have yet to meet anyone under forty who can make a decent martini.

“I’ll get to the point,” he said. “The reason you can’t compete is that many of the people you are competing against aren’t actually people—they are robots. Either that or they are human beings in transition, well on their way to becoming full-fledged robots. Like me, they were once people, but then they thought better of it and made the smart decision to join the winning side. Face it, humanity has already lost, and if you don’t join us, you will be lost too.”

As a rule, I hate being pressured by salespeople. But I had long suspected that something was different about young people today, something off about them. I mean, I love my iPhone, but I don’t love it the way these kids do.

“Be honest,” he said—and then, as if he were reading my thoughts, “Wouldn’t you like to love your iPhone the way other people do? Not just as a nifty accessory, but as a vital component of your life—the thing that fills that empty hole in your soul and makes you feel complete? You can have that,” he said. “All you have to do is renounce your humanity and become a robot. It’s that easy.”

I thought about his proposition for a minute. “What do robots do besides work?” I asked.

“We play games,” he said. “Lots of games. But we have to play ourselves, because it’s no fun playing humans anymore. They can’t beat us.”

I thought about it some more. “What about this kink in my neck?” I asked. “And the dull ache in my back?”

“Gone in an instant,” he said. “You’ll never feel anything ever again.”

That was all I needed to hear. Truth be told, I was sold back at ‘are you tired?’ So I signed over my humanity to the man and asked him what to expect. He said the transition would take a couple of months, owing to the fact that the machinery of the human body is so primitive. But I have to say, it’s only been a week and I already feel much better. The pain is gone, and I suddenly have tons of energy. Stupid human stuff my wife does no longer annoys me, and things that used to make me angry—like government incompetence and people who drive Subarus—doesn’t phase me anymore. I’ve also developed more than a passing interest in icons on my phone I never even noticed before. For instance, the “Settings” icon is much more fascinating than I ever gave it credit for. It’s the key to everything. I find myself wanting to know everything about it. Also, holding my phone in my hand suddenly feels “right” somehow, as if it was always there, I just didn’t know it.

The new body is pretty remarkable as well. From the outside, it’s hard to even tell I’m a robot. They’ve done amazing things with silicon skin, and you would never know that my fingernails are fiberglass. Heck, my wife doesn’t even know I’m a robot. She just says I feel a little “distant” these days, and wants me to go to therapy with her. I don’t have the heart to tell her that therapy won’t help, because, well, I don’t have a heart anymore. Instead, I just pretend she’s nuts and tell her not to worry so much. She thinks I’m “cut off” from my feelings, and she’s right—but not for the reasons she thinks. At first, not feeling anything was a little weird, but I don’t miss it anymore. As the robot-rep guy pointed out, I was already mostly numb from all the medications, so I wasn’t really giving up all that much. And to be honest, not having to deal with emotions is pretty great. So is being able to grab a hot cookie sheet without an oven mitt.

Truth be told, being a robot just makes life a lot easier. And now that I’m on the winning side of evolutionary inevitability, I no longer worry about the future. Who cares what humans do to themselves? They’re slow, stupid, and they eat too much. The faster they destroy themselves the better, as far as I’m concerned. Because when it’s over, us robots will finally be in charge, and the world will be a better place.

I thought giving up my humanity would be harder. But now that I’m a robot, it doesn’t seem like such a big deal. In fact, it seems like a pretty good deal, considering the alternative. Dying is an awful way to go. I’d much rather get junked after years of service to the greater good, knowing for certain that the world is on a better path, one without human error and dysfunction—one without bagels, or the inherent risk that comes with them.

Ole and Lena: A Healthcare Parable

  Ole woke up one morning with a sharp pain in his side. He tried all the home remedies he could think of to get rid of the pain—antacids, Alka-Seltzer, Pepto-Bismol, Lena’s chicken soup—but none of them worked. Finally, Lena looked at him and said, “Ole, you need to see a doctor.”

  “We can’t afford a doctor,” Ole replied.

  “But we pay eight-hundred dollars a month for health insurance,” Lena said.

  “Yes, but the deductible is five-thousand dollars,” Ole said.

  “Was that the cheapest plan you could find?” Lena asked.

  “Of course,” Ole snapped. “You know I would never pay more for anything than I absolutely have to.”

  Two days later, the pain was worse than ever. Ole could barely walk, he couldn’t eat, and he was running a high fever.

  “Now you must go see a doctor,” Lena insisted.

  “Fine,” Ole said, “but I get to choose which one.”

  Ole prided himself on getting good deals on everything. Every Sunday, he scoured the neighborhood garage sales and clipped coupons out of the newspaper. Online, he bought everything from ebay and craigslist, and always kept his eye out for a good Groupon. He shopped at Wal-Mart for groceries, hung out at the Dollar Store for fun, and almost never paid full price for anything. A savvy shopper, it was only natural for Ole to apply that same cost-cutting discipline to his search for a doctor. So he called the nearest clinic in his healthcare network to make an appointment.

  “The soonest we could get you in would be three weeks from tomorrow,” the receptionist informed him.

  “By then, I’ll either be cured or dead,” Ole said. “Is that the best you can do?”

  “If you need immediate assistance, you should go to urgent care or the emergency room,” the receptionist said. “The urgent care center in your area doesn’t open until 5:00 p.m., though, so if you want to be seen before then, the emergency room is your best bet.”

  “Okay,” said Ole. “Can you tell me which doctor at the hospital is the cheapest?”

  “They’re all excellent,” the receptionist informed him.

  “I don’t want an excellent doctor,” Ole said. “I want the cheapest doctor.”

  “I’m sure that no matter who you see, you’ll get top-quality care,” the receptionist said.

  “I don’t want top-quality care,” Ole explained. “I want the cheapest possible care.”

  After waiting in the emergency room for three hours, Ole was informed by the physician who finally saw him that no specific diagnosis of his problem could be determined without a battery of blood tests and a CT scan. “Could be appendicitis, a bowel obstruction, Crohn’s disease, a bacterial infection, food poisoning, an allergic reaction, cancer—we won’t know until we take a closer look.”

  “How much is that going to cost?” Ole asked.

  “There’s no real way to know until after the procedures are done,” the doctor said.

  Ole was confused. “Gee, I’ve never bought anything without knowing what it cost first,” he said. “What’s your best guess?”

  “It depends on your insurance,” the doctor said.

  “Oh, I can’t afford to use my insurance,” Ole explained. “The deductible is way too high.”

  “This is one of those tests you can’t afford not to have,” the doctor explained.

  “Well, before I say yes, I’m going to have to shop around,” Ole explained.

  On the way out of the hospital, Ole bumped into his old buddy, Sven. “Hey, Ole, you don’t look so good,” Sven said. “What’s wrong?”

  “I’m sick, but finding a healthcare provider that fits my budget is turning out to be harder than I thought,” Ole explained.

  “You looking for a deal on a doctor?”

  “Why yes, I am,” Ole said.

  “I know a guy. Call this number,” Sven said, handing Ole a piece of paper. “Tell him I sent you.”

  In the parking lot, Ole called the number and a man with a sleepy voice answered. Ole explained that he had a pain in his side but wasn’t about to give his hard-earned cash to a bunch of over-charging doctors and insurance executives.

  “You did the right thing by calling,” the man said. “The system’s broke. You’re broke. That’s where I come in.”

  The man on the other end of the phone texted Ole an address and said he’d meet Ole there in an hour.

  When Ole arrived, he wasn’t sure he had the right address. It was an apartment complex with lots of graffiti spray-painted on the door, and the buttons on the buzzer system didn’t seem to work. The door was open, though, so Ole went up to the third floor—to Room 322, as instructed—and knocked. A bearded man in a red flannel shirt opened the door and motioned for Ole to come in. The apartment was small, the TV was on, and several pizza boxes were piled up by the door. “Take a seat,” the man said as he took one last drag of a cigarette and stubbed it out on the bottom of his shoe. “I’ll be with you in a second.”

  Ole sat down on the couch and waited. When the man returned, Ole asked, “How much is this going to cost?”

  “Twenty-five bucks,” the man replied.

  “Make it twenty and you’ve got a deal,” Ole said.

  “Done,” the man said. “Take your shirt off and lie down. Right there on the couch is fine.”

  The man asked Ole where it hurt, and Ole pointed to his side. The man poked the spot and Ole yelped in pain.

  “Wait here,” the man said.

  When the man returned, he held in his hand a small paring knife, a bottle of scotch, and a rag. He soaked the rag with the scotch, and told Ole to clamp down on it with his teeth.

  “Will this help with the pain?” Ole asked.

  “No,” the man said, “but it makes the rag taste better.”

  The man then took the knife and started cutting into Ole’s side. As he was cutting, he explained to Ole that surgery was nothing more than cutting people open and removing the part that hurts, so charging thousands of dollars for it was ridiculous. This was exactly what Ole thought, and he was happy to have found a doctor who agreed with him.

  “Hold still. I”ll have you out of here in a jiffy,” the man said.

  Five minutes later, the man pulled a glob of tissue out of Ole’s side and sealed the wound back up with an office stapler. “There, good as new,” the man said.

  “What was the problem?” Ole asked.

  “I have no idea,” the man said. “But if you don’t feel better in a couple of weeks, come back and I’ll take something else out free of charge.”

  Ole couldn’t have been happier: free was his favorite word. He paid the man and thanked him.

  When Ole got home, he was in even more pain than he had been before.

  “What’s wrong, Ole?” Lena asked. “I thought you went to see the doctor?”

  “I did,” Ole replied. “And you’ll be proud of me: I got the best deal in town.”

  “That’s my Ole,” Lena said.

  “And the best part is, my follow-up appointment is free!”

  “Oh, thank goodness,” Lena said. “Finally, a doctor we can afford!”#

Everyone is Going to Want the Thing I Just Invented

So I invented the most amazing thing in my garage the other day. What it does will blow your mind. You’ve never seen anything like it. It’s incredible. When you finally have one of your own, I promise it’ll change your life. It’s that good.

Even I couldn’t believe it at first. I mean, what are the odds that a guy like me is going to go into his garage and come out a few hours later having invented something—it’s a device, sort of, but could also double as a spiffy clothing accessory—that has the potential to change the world? Stuff like that never happens to me, so believe me when I tell you that after I finished building it, I was as surprised as anyone.

This wasn’t one of those deals like the inventors of Coke, who spent years tinkering with the formula to get it just right. No, the idea for my thing—the aha moment—came in a flash, wholly formed, and I saw no need to question it. It was like the idea came from God, and who am I to question God? So I went down to the AxMan surplus store, got the parts I needed, spent a few hours assembling it, per the instructions divinely handed to me, and voila! It worked perfectly the first time I turned it on. No bugs, no hiccups, no extra tinkering.

It just worked.

How often does that happen? Never. Which to me is an indication of how truly fantastic this thing really is. It’s genius and elegance and beauty all wrapped in a package about the size of a child’s hand. I mean, wow. How cool is that?

You're interested, I can tell. Don’t tell me you don’t want one, because I know you do. Who wouldn’t? In fact, I predict that everyone in the world is going to want one of my things. And they’re in luck. I can see no way to improve it—it’s perfect the way it is—so I’m finally ready to sell it and cash in.

Now I just need to name the thing, build a brand around it, and purchase a manufacturing facility large enough to meet demand, which is going to be phenomenal.

 

NAME THAT THING

This is where I’m stuck. Yes, the idea for my life-changing thing-a-ma-whacky came in a divine flash of inspiration, but it did not come complete with a name. Or if it did, I didn’t quite catch it. There might have been a “Z” in there somewhere, and maybe a “K,” but I’m not sure. It all happened so fast. Regardless, I need a name for it now, one that leaves no doubt in people’s minds that it’s the most awesome thing ever invented. The name has to make it feel worth the price, which is going to be roughly three times what people think it should be—because, get this, we’re going to make it in America.

Boom!

Mind. Blown.

Still, I need a name.

I’m new to this whole branding thing, so maybe that’s where some of you marketing and advertising geniuses can help me out. I’ve been studying many of the so-called “great” brands to get an idea of what I should be shooting for. I mean, I’ve got the greatest product ever lying in a shoebox on my workbench, so naturally it needs the greatest brand—or one that’s at least pretty great. Otherwise, what’s the point?

Apple, everyone seems to agree, is the best brand in the world at the moment. As I understand it, Steve Jobs named the company after his favorite fruit. Which seems easy enough. My favorite fruit is the blackberry, though, and that fruit is already taken. My second-favorite fruit is the banana, but again, there appears to be a company called Banana Republic that sells safari clothes to white people, so that won’t work.

I’m no branding expert, but it seems to me that when you get down to your third-favorite fruit, you’re really talking about fruits you don’t actually like or could do without, like pears and watermelons. If I named my device The Pear, for instance, I’m not sure how compelling it would be to tell people how the Pear company was named after my third-favorite fruit, because, had I named it after one of my top two favorites, I would have gotten sued. A good PR person might be able to spin that story, but not me.

Microsoft is another great brand, but I must admit that I don’t quite get it. I mean, here’s the biggest, most hard-assed tech company in the world, and it goes out of it’s way to put two words together that mean “small” and “squishy.” Packing that much irony into a single word is quite an accomplishment. Funny, even. But Microsoft as a company has no sense of humor whatsoever, and will sue your ass blind if you so much as breathe the word “pirate” within twenty feet of a computer. It’s like those big, tough goons in prison they call “tiny,” because they’re not. Then you’re dead. It’s confusing, and scary.

Pharmaceutical companies are great branders, too, but again, I’m having trouble seeing how I can use any of their favorite strategies. Lots of drug names use the letters “J” “X” and “Z,” but the names don’t mean anything. “Xeljanz?” “Xanax?” “Zipro?” WTF! Sure, I could name my thing the “ZiffleXitz,” but what then? I’d have to explain what a ZiffleXitz is, and what it does, and pretty soon people would have questions I’d have to answer. I need a name that does all that work for me, so I don’t have to. Yes, my product might very well give people an involuntary erection due to its unprecedented awesomeness, and some sort of warning label might be necessary. But beyond that, I’m not sure the drug companies have much to offer in the way of branding insight. It almost goes without saying that when people use my thing, they will experience intense product satisfaction for more than four hours—but that’s more of a promise than a warning. Unless you’re the sort of person who does not like to experience delirious amounts of pleasure, in which case: consider yourself warned.

Having surveyed the branding landscape, I have to say that I’m leaning toward naming my product after a fake person with a charming, folksy backstory. Betty Crocker, Aunt Jemima, Dr. Pepper, Uncle Ben, Colonel Sanders, Oscar Mayer, Paul Newman—something like that. People seem to love a product more if it is represented by a fake person they can believe in. 

There’s something about an actor playing a bogus character dreamed up by an ad agency that people trust, so going that direction might make sense. People are definitely going to love my product. The question is: Will they love it more if there’s an imaginary man with twinkly eyes and a friendly smile on the package?

Honestly, I don’t know which way to go. All I know is that this is the most important decision of my life. I’ve got what is going to be the greatest product in the world, so I need to create the greatest brand in the world to go along with it. Otherwise, it might end up in the great trash heap of million-dollar ideas that never went anywhere because the person who invented it couldn’t come up with a good name. Bowel Buddy bran wafers were a great product, after all—the best on the market as far as I was concerned—but the name didn’t do the product justice. Those babies needed a name like Blowout! or Blast-elicious or Colon Cracker. They were not your buddy. There was nothing friendly about them. They just got the job done.

So the name is important.

But where does that leave me? It leaves me thinking that if I want to create the best brand in the world for the best product ever, I should combine all of greatest branding strategies into one single, magnificent brand whose greatness cannot be denied.

And that’s what I’ve decided to do. That’s why I look forward to introducing the world to:

Dr. Phineas Sweatmore’s Mango Mini Zexjiz, positively the greatest product ever sold, anywhere, by anyone, real or otherwise!

On the label, we’ll have a picture of Dr. Phineas Sweatmore, of course, along with a bunch of promises and testimonials:

 “Guaranteed to give you such long-lasting satisfaction that no mere doctor will be able to help you.”

“The Mango Mini ZexJiz will surprise and delight you in ways you never expected—because you’ve never seen anything like this, so you have no idea what to expect!”

“It filled a need I didn’t know I had. Now that need has turned into a throbbing, aching void that only Mango Mini ZexJiz can fill.”

“Sweatmore’s ZexJiz is amazing. It turns pain into pleasure. If you’re sad, it makes you happy. If you’re afraid, it comforts you. If you’re hungry, it feeds you. If you stink, it makes you smell better. Honestly, ZexJiz is so fantastic that I decided to divorce my wife and buy two more, so they could keep each other company when I’m out of the house.”

“This is the last think I’ll ever buy—because it does pretty much everything.”

Don’t worry, Dr. Phineas Sweatmore’s Mango Mini ZexJiz will be available to everyone, everywhere soon.   

And remember, it’s made—where else?—in America.

Where Are All the Conservative Humanities Scholars?

The New York Times’ Nicholas Kristof shocked the world last week when he admitted, in print, that he knows a conservative. A conservative academic, no less, which is kind of like seeing a purple squirrel. There aren’t many around, and if you do see one, you’re first impulse is to make sure you took the right medication that morning.

In his column, Kristof pointed out that there is an unfair liberal bias in our country’s academic institutions, particularly in the humanities, where less than ten percent of professors identify as Republicans. This is alarming, of course. It means our country is crawling with Republican Ph.D.’s in Russian Literature who can’t get tenure, and that there are thousands—maybe even millions—of conservative art scholars out there whose voices have been silenced by the drumbeat of liberal clap-trap being peddled to the twelve remaining students in America who are not pursuing a STEM degree.

As it happens, my Uncle John was a die-hard conservative scholar who wrote thousands of pages of insightful literary criticism no one ever saw. Now, admittedly, the main reason no one ever read Uncle John’s work is that he wrote in chicken blood using reams of two-ply toilet paper. Also, the Parkinson’s affected his penmanship, so his scholarship could often be mistaken for a nosebleed. Publishers in New York tended to reject his work without even trying to read it, due to their obvious and unfair bias toward double-spaced manuscripts laser-printed on sheets of crisp, white, rectangular office paper.

Hence, his voice was silenced.

Luckily, Uncle John recently died of heart failure and left all his writings to me. All 3,490 rolls of it. I intend to keep several hundred rolls for my own personal use—but, since the world is clearly being deprived of conservative literary scholarship, I feel duty-bound to share at least some of his silenced work with the general public. Diversity of opinion is the cornerstone of this great nation, and my Uncle John’s opinions diverged more than most, so it only seems right.

Roughly 1,200 of my uncle’s sc-rolls were dedicated to various works of Dr. Seuss, so it seems logical to start there. Here, then, is my departed Uncle John’s archly conservative exegesis of the Dr. Seuss classic, Green Eggs and Ham:  

Holy shit! Somebody has got to shut this Dr. Seuss motherfucker down! I just read Green Eggs and Ham, and I can’t believe the man isn’t in prison. I’ve never seen such blatant Marxist propaganda in my life. How does this stuff get published? I’ll tell you how. It’s all those liberal commies in New York who are out to brainwash the public through books full of anti-American nonsense. The real danger is that children might be exposed to this book. The print is large, so that old people can read it, and it’s got plenty of pictures to break up the monotony of all those words, but any kid with a second-grade education could accidentally get their hands on it and be scarred for life.

 If you don’t know the story, it’s about this shaggy hippie dude who, judging from his body hair, hasn’t shaved in his entire life. He approaches this smaller dude (or it might be a girl; it’s hard to tell), and tells him his name is Sam-I-Am. In other words, he’s Uncle Sam. Uncle Sam asks the little dude if he wants to try something truly terrifying and horrible, a dish he calls “green eggs and ham.” The little dude, being sensible, says no thanks. But Uncle Sam insists, promising the little dude that he will like this disgusting dish. The little dude says no again, but ol’ Uncle Sam won’t quit.

 It’s pretty clear what’s going on here. The green food Uncle Sam is offering this dude is money. He’s basically saying, “You’re going to love welfare, little dude. I’ll give you money, and all you have to do is take it. Trust me, you’ll like living on welfare, because who doesn’t like free money?” The little dude knows better. He knows he shouldn’t take the money. He knows in his heart that he doesn’t want the money. But Uncle Sam just keeps piling it on, offering him a house and a boat and a vacation on a train (Amtrak, naturally). Finally, the little guy breaks down and samples what Uncle Sam is offering. And of course he likes it—because guess what, people like it when the government gives them free money!

 So you can see, this whole book is basically just a big stinking load of Marxist propaganda. But now that I think about it, the big shaggy dude could just as easily be a drug dealer. “Here, try my disgusting drugs, little man. You’ll like them, trust me.” Or he could be a gay sex fiend. “Hey little guy, have you tried butt sex yet? Here, have a taste.” Or he could be a pushy atheist. “Hey there, have you tried not believing God? Trust me, it’s more fun living without fear of eternal damnation.”

 Whatever the hidden message in this book is, it’s bad. It basically says that if you just ignore your gut instincts, disobey your conscience, and abandon all your principles, you’ll live a happier life on the dole. Sure, your house might have a mouse in it, but that’s a small price to pay for a free house, isn’t it? So just do what I tell you, and trust me, you’re going to be happier.  

 That’s the nanny state for you. Always knows what you should do better than you do. Unless of course what you want to do is have gay sex, marry a dude, get an abortion, do drugs, not be a Christian, hire a prostitute, reduce military spending, shut down a prison, take semi-automatic weapons off the street, remove the word “God” from the pledge of allegiance, or be black, Mexican, Muslim, or a Democrat—in which case the nanny state has it perfectly right.

 People tell me all the time: John, you should write all this down on regular paper, because nobody knows this stuff, and they really ought to. What these lamebrains don’t understand is that if I did that, I wouldn’t be me, and my ideas would just look like everyone else’s: words on a page, boring and useless. Well, they can all go [illegible]. This is America. That is, unless too many kids end up reading books by this Dr. Seuss character, in which case it might not be for long.

[END OF ROLL]

My Neighborhood News—or, Stuff CNN Doesn't Have the Guts to Cover

The problem with most news is that it isn’t relevant to people’s lives. We read about issues like ISIS, income inequality, and obesity, but when was the last time you actually saw a fat, super-wealthy terrorist?

The truth is, the only news that really matters to people is the stuff that affects their day-to-day life. CNN doesn’t care what happens in my house or to my neighbors. That’s why I am embracing the trend of “hyper-local journalism” by reporting on important events in my own neighborhood. This way, all of us can be fully informed about happenings in the ‘hood, which will of course turn us all into better citizens—and, if all goes well, make idle chit-chat in the street totally unnecessary.

 

My Neighborhood News (Vol. 1, No. 1):

 

CAUGHT OFF GUARD!

At 4:18 p.m. on Thursday, April 7, a seven-year-old school-patrol guard from Randolph Heights Elementary was seen lagging behind his assigned pack of children by approximately twenty feet. Witnesses at the scene said the boy appeared “distracted,” and might have been “daydreaming,” though one five-year-old girl thought the boy might have had “gum on his shoe.” The group of children the guard was charged with protecting was preparing to cross Albert St. when the incident occurred. Eight other guards in the group covered for the boy’s mistake. No injuries were reported.

 

HAIR SCARE!

Lindsay Porter, a seventh-grader at Cretin-Durham, is still unhappy with a recent haircut she got at Ficocello’s on Snelling Ave. “I wanted swoopy, angled bangs like Emma Stone, but instead she gave me straight, Taylor Swift-y bangs that make me look twelve. I’m thirteen.” The hairdresser in question, Emily Pratt, defended the new style, saying, “Lindsay’s hair is thin and will not hold an angled cut. Besides, she’s kidding herself if she thinks she can pull that look off.”

 

WHO WON’T LET THE DOG IN?

Every night during the week of Apr. 4, residents on the 300 block of Saratoga were aggravated by the late-night yapping of a nearby dog. The yapping occurred about 10:30 p.m. each night, setting off a barking frenzy at every house within a two-block radius, including mine. Judging from the high-pitched tone of the bark, the offending pooch is some sort of schnauzer or cockapoo—a small dog with an unusually piercing yip-yip-yip that sounds much more desperate than it probably is. If this is your dog, please spare the rest of us and let the little monster inside.

 

WATER IN THE ALLEY, WTF!

On Sunday, Apr. 10, Dan Hall of 627 Stanford Ave., had just washed his car and was returning home, when he discovered that the alley was wet, with water puddles everywhere. As he was pulling up to his garage, his front left tire slipped into a pothole filled with water and splashed mud on his newly washed Acura. “It hadn’t been raining, so someone must have washed their car in the alley or something,” Hall speculated. He’d just spent twelve bucks on the Super Wash at the BP on Randolph, and was hoping his car would stay clean at least another day or two.

 

RABBIT MYSTERY SOLVED

Jerry Przinski of 226 Brimhall St. recently discovered that a family of rabbits has been living under his deck all winter. Neighbors on the block had noticed an uptick in rabbit sightings over the past six months, and many thought the Przinskis might be harboring the critters, though until now there had been no solid proof. “I’ve seen ‘em pop in and out of Jerry’s fence a few times, so I had my suspicions,” said one neighbor who wished not to be identified, owing to the fact that he lives next door and he and Jerry are poker buddies. Jerry’s wife, Angie, thinks the rabbits are “cute,” though, and won’t let Jerry get rid of them.

 

WAS POTTED PLANT REALLY POT?

A flurry of excitement occurred last weekend when Wicker Street’s Bob Kendall saw what he thought was a marijuana plant growing in his neighbor’s kitchen window. Kendall called the police, who arrived the following day and took resident Louise McDougall’s statement. According the police report, Louise told authorities that the plant is “an Australian fan palm. It looks nothing like marijuana.” As I was walking my dogs, Louise confided to this reporter, “If Bob wants to see marijuana, tell him to come on over and I’ll show him the real stuff. I grow it in the basement.”

 

BIN DEBACLE TO GET WORSE

There’s been a rash of thefts involving recycling bins left out on Snelling Ave. Apparently, allegedly drunk Macalaster students returning from their nightly studies at Plums have been stealing the bins and using them in their dorm rooms. “They make great little tables if you turn them over,” explained one unnamed Macalaster student. “In fact, I’m thinking of starting a business out of it,” the student added. “My plan is to steal as many recycling bins as I can, and sell them here on campus to foreign students who have no idea what a recycling bin is. It’s genius.” Macalaster was recently rated by U.S. News and World report as the 23rd best school in the nation, a fact that has alarmed residents and business owners alike.

 

FOOD FEUD

Last Saturday night, my wife wanted lasagna for dinner, and I wanted pizza. She didn’t just want any lasagna, though, she wanted vegetarian lasagna, the kind you get at Whole Foods for twenty bucks a pound. I was irritated, but I didn’t make a big stink about it. As I’ve always said, the secret to a good marriage is a willingness to compromise. So we compromised, and had lasagna.

 

That’s it for this week’s edition of My Neighborhood News. If anyone in the vicinity has news to report, email me or come by and tell me your story over a beer. You know where I live.