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Saturday, May 12, 2007
Phil Harris :: Townhall.com Columnist
Cut the Cheese and Blame the Other Guy - The Stench of Washington Politics
by Phil Harris
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Pompous political windbags have a distinct odor, speaking of which, reminds me of a story that you have likely heard from Uncle Dan or Grandpa Gus. There are families that avoid bathroom humor at all costs; however, if you sprouted from one of those, it is unlikely that you are reading a column that has "cut the cheese" in its title. If you have never heard, "cut the cheese" used to describe something that does not compliment the bouquet of a fine wine; then brace yourself. You are about to be utterly violated.

A minister was on his way home from the church picnic. He had gorged himself on Martha Bergstrom's pork-n-bean casserole. For some reason, he could not get enough of it, and old Martha Bergstrom could not have been more delighted.

While turning the corner at Laramie Avenue, his car began to sputter, and he realized instantly that he had forgotten to stop at the filling station. He pulled over in front of a little white house. Spring flowers were growing everywhere, and a perfectly manicured lawn set the entire scene ablaze with color.

He rang the doorbell, and asked the woman who answered if he could use her telephone. She recognized the minister and graciously invited him in. He called his son, and arranged for him to bring a can of gas. The woman invited him to sit in the living room while he waited.

As he took a seat, she reappeared, rolling an old man in a wheelchair. She parked him across the room and excused herself as the old man fixed a suspicious gaze on the intruder. A beautiful golden retriever trotted into the room, sniffed him a bit, and then sat down next to the minister's chair.

He was about to compliment the old man on his wonderful landscape, when suddenly he felt an urgent rumbling. Obviously, Martha Bergstrom's pork-n-been casserole was at work, and it came on with such a ferocity that a bit of gas slipped out before he could gain control.

There was no sound, but a foul odor was soon evident. The old man in the wheelchair looked at the dog and sternly said, "Sammy."

The minister gratefully realized that the old man thought the dog was to blame. By now, the casserole was really churning, and the pressure was too much to bear. He decided to take advantage of the dog and relieve a little more pressure.

The old man called the dog's name again, but this time louder.

By now, the minister was really struggling. The pressure was so great and painful, that tears began to come to his eyes. He simply had no choice; relieve the agony, or he would surely rupture something internally. He was startled at how much gas escaped, but again, he was grateful that the dog was there to deflect the embarrassment. Continued...

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About The Author

Phil Harris is a software engineer, author of Cry for the Shadows and blogs at Citizen Phil.

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The right choice
As I continue to get older, I find myself believing my parents statement that the right path is often the difficult path. It is generally more difficult to do the right thing than it is to simply go along with the crowd, be agreeable, don't dissent, don't voice a reasoned opinion, etc.

I agree with Phil Harris in that I can't think of more than a couple elected officials who are willing to make the right/difficult choice. Unfortunately, none on the list represent me or my district. If we did have elected officials that had a spine (or, in the vein of this article, "have a pair"), we wouldn't have half of the problems we have today.

The comment I have heard from those politicians I have spoken with, is that if they don't agree with x they won't get y. Furthermore, they complain that if they don't "work with the others" they aren't effective and if they aren't effective, they won't get re-elected.

The premise of this position is that they are better than the alternative because they sell out their constituents only part of the time. This is acceptable? I don't want my wife to be faithful "part of the time". I don't want my kids to be good students "part of the time". I don't want my employees to do their job "part of the time". Do you? Even though a vote for a third party candidate may be "a wasted vote" according to most party hacks, if we continue to vote for the people who make the hard choices, eventually we will get what we need.

Government limits, not term limits
A reading of the Federalist Papers will confirm the cure for all the career politicians and their lobbyist enablers.

The current state of affairs was not unforeseen by the founders. In fact, it was predicted as the inevitable outcome of a government not confined to it's rightful purposes.

The mechanism employed by the Congress to expand and manipulate the pig trough is, surprise... THE TAX CODE! This is the source of all evil. It permits legislators to play favorites, pick winners, generate bribes, oops! I mean "campaign contributions", interfere with lawful commerce between citizens, incarcerate those who refuse to contribute, scare the crap out of the innocent every April 15th, and a legion of other ills. STOP THE MADNESS!!! Put democracy back in the box designed by the founders, to wit, the Constitution of the United States, and the inevitable ills and temptations manifested in Congress will quickly dissipate. Of course, getting there will be no picnic, but let's make a start of it, shall we? I read somewhere that Jefferson deliberately located Congress in a malarial swamp to limit their zeal for legislation. The quote is something like, "When the legislature sits, no man's liberty is safe."

Elect a Republican president who will place Janis Rogers Brown on the supreme court and pray for a vacancy!
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