Sunday, September 13, 2015

Son Of A Bunch


Because we are planning on feeling a bit lazy over the next week or so, we here at Paying Attention have decided to make available for one time and one time only, unless there ends up being another time... 
CHAPTER THE FIRST
OF THE NOT SO NEW
NEVER BEFORE SEEN
NOT PARTICULARLY AWAITED
FIRST BOOK FROM NOT-IN-ANY-WAY ACCLAIMED AUTHOR
I. MANGREY



The Life and Crimes of George W. Bunch

 “Facts are stupid things – stubborn things, should I say.”
Ronald Reagan, addressing Republican National Convention 1988

“His ignorance covered the whole Earth like a blanket
and there was hardly a hole in it anywhere.”
Mark Twain
 “If we don't succeed, we run the risk of failure."
George W. Bush

 

CHAPTER ONE

 He Started Out, Continued To Be, And Ended Up As A Child

 “If this were a dictatorship, it would be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator."
George W. Bush, December 18, 2000

“I want to piss away the first forty or so years of my life cashin’ in on my family name and fortune and just have everything handed onto me without havin’ to ever do any real work, maybe even become vice president or somethin’ like that, where you get to just wave and smile a lot but don’t have to do a bunch of work and stuff…that’s my dream.”  These words, attributed to the subject of this book at the mere age of nine, could have come from almost any young boy, though most nine-year-old boys want to be doctors or baseball players or firefighters or astronauts or even president... but not this one.  All those things sounded like too much work.  In his mind, such as it was, he could be so much more while doing so much less.  He believed he could see the writing on the floor, he knew which side his cheese was buttered on – he wanted to make the pie higher.  He dreamed of wanting what he believed in his tiny little heart and similarly miniscule brain was to be rightfully his, through no effort or even innate ability of his own.  He was wholly incapable of the former and entirely lacking the latter.  This young lad was determined to make the most out of the privilege handed to him on a platinum platter and reach for the stairs. 

In any event, most nine year olds are not known for their grasp of either middle age or history or even puberty for that matter.  As far as they know, the world is there for their personal pleasure first and foremost, especially those born with a silver spoon cavorting with one orifice or another.  Most of us grow out of this phase of perfectly natural self-absorption at some point and realize there are others in this vast world, perhaps thinking the same thing we are.  Most of us eventually learn it is best to temper our selfish desires with some sense of community or society or, if nothing else, the Golden Rule.  But not this guy.  He was to be nothing if not perversely consistent.  Stubborn and immovable as a two-legged mule stoned out of its mind on heroin.  Unwilling, if not unable to learn even the simplest of lessons or experience any significant degree of personal growth.  Throughout his entire life, anything outside of his own shoes was simply there for his amusement, or more often, his abusement.

Our subject was not just any nine-year-old of course.  One day this unassuming, unhinged, Oedipus-like father-hating, mother-loving little rich boy would chronologically and physically grow into a man who would manage to stumble backwards into front-page news, the History Books and Ripley’s Believe It Or Not.  Though he never heard of Oedipus, George Washington, or Pennsylvania and never quite understood who Jesus was or why he mattered, and would never manage to force open a history book, the world was his oyster if he wanted any of it.  Many would see him as little more than a pawn of more thoughtful albeit malevolent powers who tagged our boy-man as the kind of guy those ill-versed in the issues of the day or, in most cases any day, and seemingly not in possession of any means of relating causes to consequences, would like to have a beer with and for that reason alone, for clearly there was no other, elect to high office. 

These treacherous cretins, who make up a large portion of the American electorate turned out to be right about him being a guy capable of having a beer with someone, and the lad would one day be a boy in a man’s attitude who would shake the world like few others. 

As you may have noticed, history has a funny way of coloring and texturing the way people and events are ultimately seen.  Not always funny-ha-ha, more often funny like – that’s-funny-I’ve-never-actually-seen-a-cloud-appear-from-the-ground-up-and-shaped-so-much-like-a-mushroom kind of funny. 

It was in the same way Christopher Columbus, lost at sea, thinking he had finally come ashore in India, ended up discovering a New World.  Discovering seems such a subjective descriptor in this case.  Some would say it was actually the Taino who discovered Columbus lost, stupid and desperate on a beach in the Caribbean.  But Columbus of course had better PR men (not to mention an arrogant and nasty disposition and weapons unlike anything the people he acquainted them with had ever imagined) and was able to get the story told the way he wanted when all was said and done.  Instead of being heralded as one of the dumb-luckiest sailors of the time, mostly the dumb part, Columbus has come to be revered as a brilliant navigator who discovered America.  No matter that he had no idea whatsoever where he made landfall.  No matter that even though Chris described the Taino as a gentle people without guile who gave generously of themselves to the pale strangers who hadn’t the faintest clue where they were.  Columbus still found it useful to bludgeon the land and its people with murder, mayhem and disease, mostly in the name of greed and glory, with a side order of God and Country...not his country mind you, but the one that financed him.  I’m sure we all hope that history will paint such an inspirational, however disingenuous, picture of us when we are gone.  Who would not want their cowardice to be viewed as heroic?  Who would not wish their biggest mistakes would bring wealth and fame?  Who would not want their murder and mayhem to go essentially ignored, assuming one would even wish or somehow manage to commit such atrocities in the first place?

And so it may be with our current subject who upon landing the biggest job in his life, probably one of the biggest, most important in anyone’s life if not history itself, managed to bludgeon not only that same land once accidentally discovered by Columbus and its by-then-not-so-original inhabitants, but also those who placed him in his position of power as well as the very position itself, which would never be looked at with the same reverence and respect it had prior to his intrusion.  Like Columbus he found himself in his once-honored position having no idea what that position meant or called for, with little idea how he actually came to be there.  In his day he committed such murder and mayhem with no thought to the past, present or future, presenting himself for all the world as a masterful hero; for this was precisely how he saw himself when he looked deeply into his soul…such as it was…on both occasions.

He was the best of presidents; he was the worst of presidents.  Not really…he was, in fact very simply and without exception, the WORST of presidents.  The absolute, far-and-away, undisputed WORST FUCKING PRESIDENT in the history of the United States.  This is not one of them ex-ag-ger-a-tions nor is it an  opinion.  It is historical fact…by any measure you care to use.  And there is an abundance, actually an overabundance, of proof.  Videotape, audiotape.  Digital proof, analogue proof.  Verifiable quotes, still photographs.  Mental scars, emotional scars, physical scars.  There is no missing the significance unless you were one of the faithful.  Even then chances are good that the part of the personal subconscious entwined with the collective unconscious felt the stinging pain that began at the moment he seized power and ended, with any luck at the time of their own physical demise.  In addition, it turns out that almost every single presidential historian concurs: Grand W. Bunch will go down as the worst of the worst.  To be sure there have been some doozies since the birth of this nation and perhaps even one or two almost everyone agrees were really good ones.  But according to those whose business it is to study and know about these things, none of the first forty-two presidents of the United States, individually or as a group, did as much damage to as many facets of the social and political fabric, not to mention the emotional well-being and long-term health of our nation and planet, in as short a period of time and left in his wake more enduring and painful consequences than did America’s 43rd president.   In fact, the experts are convinced that it would take a concerted effort with malice of forethought to surpass the Herculean ineptitude displayed by president #43.  And all he ever asked from us was that he not be “misunderestimated.”  That, and an almost fanatical devotion to his woe begotten agenda.

Most of those who survived those surreal years have the emotional, psychological, financial, and in many cases physical scars to bear out just how painfully hideous his presidency was.  And as it turns out, according to all the computer models, the Grand W. Bunch presidency’s horrific ranking could be extrapolated to include King George III of England, who inspired the birth of our nation in response to his arrogant, corporatist, imperialist, autocratic buffoonery in the Eighteenth Century. 

Polls show that most Americans prefer root canal procedures, labor pains, kidney stones, sharp steel needles in their eyes and even vivisection sans anesthesia to even thinking about the 43rd presidency.  Nobody with even the slightest taste for truthiness honestly believes that anything even approaching mediocre occurred during or resulted from the eight-year-long Reign of Terror that began the 21st Century or the New American Century as the neoconservative benefactors of the Bunch presidency preferred to call it.  Unfortunately, a large percentage of Americans will never be honest about those soiled years and the putrid creature that made them what they were.  In fact, a fairly large percentage of Americans were at best oblivious to what was going on, as is their wont.  Truth be told, somewhere dangerously near the vicinity of fifty percent of those who took the time to vote believed, or simply decided without the slightest thought that Bunch should hold the highest office in, what at that time was still the most powerful nation on the planet and still at least to some degree, the Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave.

If there is anything to follow the attempted recovery of America’s democracy, economy, environment, military and world standing after the damage inflicted by the man known as President Moron, President Primate, President Doody, President Pinhead, President Bobblehead, President Piñata, President Peewee, President Pipsqueak, President Putz, and many descriptors much less flattering, history will have little if anything kind to say about the 43rd president of the United States.  Leaving office with a popularity rating just slightly higher than syphilis, Grand W. Bunch would claim that history, and history alone would vindicate him…what choice did he have after all.  As I commit this to paper (screen actually) history has not yet had time to take full measure of what this man has wrought.  And history will likely have to stand aside for a time while the human race attempts to lift itself by its own bootstraps out of the quagmire left behind by this Special President (think Special Education) until there is spare time and stomach enough to recapitulate, analyze and commit to collective memory all that was perpetrated during those Bunched-up years.

Said Bunch upon leaving office, ”I know some say I made some mistakes these last eight years.  This is a free country with numerous as-inconveniently-as-possible located Free-Speech Zones so people are free to say whatever they wants just so long as people who don’t want to hear what these Free-Speechers are saying don’t have to hear it.  It worked for me.  I never heard one discouraging word while I was in office, which I assumed meant that everyone loved me and agreed with me.  I am not going to take it personal just because some now say bad things about me.  They could be talking about anyone.  You know, they say it takes a great man to admit that some say he made a mistake.  And great man that I am I’ll admit they may be right.  I will take their word for it if that makes them feel any better because, and I’ve thought long and hard about this, I can’t think of a single mistake I made as president.  I suppose it’s possible that I may have cleared a bit too much brush, and I may live to regret never using noocular weapons while I had the chance, but those are not mistakes so much as things I may have did wrong.  As far as what may or may not have happened before I was president, I really don’t remember any of that at all and anyways that was all in the past.  I believe in turning the other chunk and I’m ready to move on and act like nothin’ ever happened.  So long’s I still got the god-given ability to pat myself on the back I’m good to go.  Besides, I was extremely impressed with the way I ran the country.  So I’ll let history be the judge, waterboarder, jury and executioner, heh, heh, heh, not all you evildoers and nay sayers.  History will make me look real good.  Now watch this drive.  MISSION ACCOMPLISHED.” 

No matter that Grand had no familiarity with the history that preceded him, much understanding of the things he himself did or caused to be done, or even a fleeting knowledge of what history actually entailed, he just liked talking about it.  And surely, after leaving office, he would pay as little attention to what would transpire as he paid to what was in the past, which was, unfathomable as it might be, actually more than the amount he paid while in office.  Once Bunch’s term expired some said to the doomsayers who claimed that Bunch had all but consummated the apocalypse, and surely with no small surprise and considerably more than a little sense of relief, that there was in fact life after Bunch.  True enough, but it was life in the ICU on life-support with multiple organ failure and a dire prognosis.  There is no evidence to the rumor that God Himself is standing by poised to deliver Last Rites.

In any event, whatever else can be said, he was the first president of the Zeros.  That’s what the first decade of the twenty-first century was ultimately called.  We had the Roaring Twenties, the Fabulous Fifties, the Psychedelic Sixties…not much of note for a while after that, but the start of the new millennium was simply: The Zeros.  The Zeros made the Civil War, the era of the Great Depression, even the Second World War seem like a gentle rain on a warm summer day.  Once this down-home, red-blooded (blue actually) American Decider-of-things-better-left-undecided-not-to-mention-undone hurled his alleged presidency at an unsuspecting, though not altogether undeserving, United States and the absolutely stunned and traumatized world at large, what else could such an era be branded?  The Bunch presidency was for America the societal equivalent of whatever put a stop to the dominance and in fact the very existence of the dinosaurs.

Though he claimed to have stopped abusing alcohol in his early forties, Bunch remained an alcoholic at heart and one made no less belligerent, self-sure for no good reason and obstinate beyond all measure even without the help of his long-time drug-of-choice (the others were mere temporary distractions, or hobbies, due to their being illegal).  He claimed to have eschewed booze for the pretense of religiosity at the age of forty-one under threat of divorce by his wife, herself an inadvertent killer who ultimately found it comforting to blame outside forces for her unfortunate happenstance, but that’s another story.  So Grand claimed to have cleaned up his act, all appearances, actions and outcomes to the contrary. 

Grand stole into office with a villainous and sadistic vice-president, mangled every aspect of the English language every time his mouth opened, appointed the most incompetent bunch of worthless albeit loyal malefactors and pinheads to every post imaginable and used the Constitution to wipe his ass…literally, and repeatedly…without ever even bothering to rinse it off between uses.  If nothing else, at least that goes to show that the old hemp document really holds up under pressure – physical or otherwise. 

Our hero oversaw the beginning of the end of the dominance of the United States of America as, if nothing else, the most economically and militarily dominant nation of the Twentieth Century.  He also oversaw the beginning of the end of the United States Constitution as a guiding force in America’s social structure, and as it turned out, he had no small hand in the rending of the social structure itself.  And even though he acted as if it were so…he wasn’t always President of the United States of America.

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