Columns                   Blog       













Home

© All columns copyrighted

Columns must not be reprinted in any form without the author's express permission.

An Atom/RSS-compatible feed for your news reader is available here


 

Melvin's blog

Nshima & Curry

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Melvin's  Blog

Nshima & Curry

 


HISTORY WILL SHOW BUSH'S GREATNESS

"History will judge, but I know enough to know -- myself as
an historian -- that today's headlines are rarely the same
as history's judgment and I think that's going to be the
case here as well."
-- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,
in an interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos.

---

It's the year 2102 and tenth-grade students at George W.
Bush High School in Bush City, Missouri, (formerly Jefferson
City) are in history class, learning about the early 21st
century, a period that has come to be known as the Golden
Age of American Politics.

"Can anyone name the greatest president in American
history?" teacher Juanita Lopez asks the class.

A boy in the front row named Ranjit raises his hand and
shouts, "Me, me, me. Ask me!"

The girl behind him, Chantal, giggles and whispers to her
friend Selena, "Does he have to answer EVERY question? Isn't
it enough that he won the Spelling Bee?"

"Stop whispering, Chantal," Lopez says. "Do you know the
answer to my question?"

"Doesn't everyone? It's George W. Bush. Everything in this
city is named after him: the school, the stadium, the stem
cell lab."

"If you knew the answer, why didn't you raise your hand?"

"Uh ... well ... I've got a reputation."

"Speaking of reputations, what is Bush remembered for?"

"Me, me, me. Ask me!" Ranjit shouts.

"Mark, do you know?" Lopez asks, calling on the half-asleep
boy in the corner.

"He was a true conservationist."

"Conservative, Mark, the word is 'conservative.' Yes, Bush
believed strongly in conservative values. He was opposed to
abortion, same-sex marriage, and anything on TV after 9 p.m.
What else is he remembered for, Mark?"

"Uh ... he was the most vacuous president."

"Virtuous, Mark, the word is 'virtuous.' Yes, a couple of
decades after Bush left office, some historians gave him the
nickname 'Honest George.' Others dubbed him 'Decent Dubya.'
Does anyone know what historians believe 'Dubya' stands
for?"

"Me, me, me. Ask me!" Ranjit shouts.

"What about you, Selena?"

"D-U-B-Y-A," Selena says, scratching her head. "I think it
stands for 'Democracy Under Bush Yielded Amusement.'"

"Pretty close," Lopez says, smiling. "It stands for
'Democracy Under Bush Yielded Affluence.' America was a land
of great prosperity under Bush. What else is Bush remembered
for?"

"Me, me, me. Ask me!" Ranjit shouts.

"Gilbert, you haven't answered any questions," Lopez says,
looking to the side of the classroom, where a curly haired
boy is skimming a section in the history textbook entitled
'Three Great Leaders of the Past: Gandhi, Mandela and Bush.'

"He saved the world from Saddam bin Laden."

"Yes, just as Franklin D. Roosevelt helped save the world
from Adolf Hitler, Bush saved the world from Saddam. He sent
troops to Iraq to remove the WMD: Wicked, Mean Dictator.
Because of the Iraq War, millions of lives were saved. What
else did he do, Gilbert?"

"He brought democracy to the Middle East."

"Not just the Middle East, but the whole world. It took a
little while for Democracy to catch on -- all the natives
had to be killed or tortured first -- but once it did, it
spread like a computer virus. It started in Iraq, then made
its way to Iran, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan,
North Korea, and eventually to Florida. What else is Bush
remembered for?"

"Me, me, me. Ask me!" Ranjit shouts.

"Mark, do you know?"

"He was a very divisive leader."

"Decisive, Mark, the word is 'decisive.' He was strong
and firm. He didn't waver on the Iraq War, even though
casualties were mounting. He believed in the
mission, believed that the war would eventually be won, and
he was proven right in the fall of 2032. Does anyone know
why Bush wasn't still in office then?"

"Me, me, me. Ask me!" Ranjit shouts.

"Chantal, do you know?"

"Uh ... he died?"

"No, they had term limits back then. Two years after Bush
left office, Congress voted to eliminate term limits for the
presidency, realizing that America and the rest of the world
had been deprived of many more years of Bush's wise
leadership. Ranjit, it looks like you're dying to answer a
question."

"Yes, yes. Please!"

"Can you name the president who preceded Bush?"

Ranjit closes his eyes and drops his head in shame.
"No, I can't," he says. "There's not a word about him
in my textbook."

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

                                                        

                                             Don't forget to visit Melvin's funny blog!

                                                         Email address:

                                                        

                                             Don't forget to visit Melvin's funny blog!

                                                         Email address: