- a
practicing schizophrenic
- a
chronic procrastinator
- a
focus-group dufus
- an
ontological drifter
- someone
who'll go along with anything
(so long as it's within the margin of error)
- having
a nervous breakdown
- having
a nice day
(I've taken my medication)
They
say you'll know you're having a nervous breakdown
when every alternative seems reasonable. Well,
I have news for you: if you checked off any
of the above, you are participating in the national nervous
breakdown.
Let's
face it, aren't you because you
are an average American (and valued customer) having
a hard time making up your mind these days?
Don't bother trying to deny it. The polls are
very clear on this point. One day you choose
[silly product], the next day it's [other silly
thing]. You tell yourself this shilly-shallying
doesn't bother you; you've simply changed
your mind. After all, people do it all
the time. It's probably a sign of thoughtfulness
(yeah, that's it). Above all, it's not your
fault. Here, take one of these every four
years and you'll have nothing to worry about.
There
are a lot of theories about this state of affairs.
The principal explanation suggests that we
can't make up our minds about anything because
there aren't any real choices. It just seems like
there are. But not to worry, this presidential
thing is just a symptom. In my opinion, it's
the polls themselves that are the primary cause
of schizophrenia. They take the choice out
of choosing.
If
the polls say 83% of Americans feel good about
this or that, well, that's how you feel, too,
right? The other 17% are clearly made up of
bomb-throwing malcontents or the terminally
depressed, and you're not one of them, are
you? Tell me you're not.
But
if early poll results show 49% believe this
and 51% believe that admit it,
something weird begins to happen to you. You
begin yo-yoing uncontrollably. You revert to
your four-year-old want-it-don't-want-it self.
You tell yourself it's really not you who is
confused, it's the "whole darn country,
darn it." And what the hell is this "within
the margin-of-error" stuff? Turns out
it means four percentage points either way for either
candidate in other words,
44% to 40% could be 48% to 36%, or it could
be.... Oh, never mind. And you call this stuff
scientific?
Some
people say it's television that causes schizophrenia,
some say it's the fluoridation of the water
supply. I say Bill Clinton himself is the chief
cause of schizophrenia in our country. He's
the two-fer president. We've got Bad Bill and Treasury
Bill. He's a split personality (just like the
rest of us) and he ain't ashamed. We always
knew this about him, isn't that why we elected
him in the first place? The supreme schizophrenic
candidate!
Carter
almost didn't get elected because he had bad thoughts.
We knew Bill had bad thoughts because he acted
on them. Eventually, he even got on the phone
and talked about them, endlessly. But he also
knew what was wrong with the country (the economy,
stupid) and fixed it. So he ends up with a
job approval rating in the 60% range and a "personal" rating
hovering around 30%. And although nobody wants
to admit they actually like his scandalous
behavior, who would want to have skipped these
last four gossip-rich years?
To
my mind, Clinton fulfilled his role admirably,
both as chief executive and as entertainer
to the nation. I mean, Bill, you were really out
there, man (the only non-Latino ever to
be voted "Most Macho" in Brazilian
polling). That was some wild stuff. And muy
Americano, dude. The big stud being serviced
while eating pizza and saving the world. With
you in office, who needs Dynasty?
We
don't really want clear choices, do we? We want confusion
but we want it in the same person. We don't
want to have to choose between the frat boy
and the wonk. Can't we have our cake and eat
it, too? Isn't this the Land of Both-And? Aren't
we the country that gets the job done? Makes
the new! improved! planned-obsolescent product?
So why can't we create the perfect candidate?
This
is my humble suggestion (and you heard it here
first): why don't we just manufacture the sucker?
That's right, genetically engineered first
executives. Why not? We've got designer sheep
(Polly, the gene-spliced successor to Dolly),
and soon, they say, we'll have designer babies
(this is a market economy, you know).
Why not grow our presidents from the chromosomes
on up? That way, if we so wished (and we do),
we could select for the wonk gene and the
frat-boy gene. We could select for the anti-inflationary
gene, the foreign-policy gene, the compassionate
conservative gene, the locked-box gene, and
then, at the very last minute, slip in the
wild-and-crazy gene. After all, we want our
fun, too, and we can't just count on natural
selection or the current schizoid voting patterns
to make our presidents.
Come
on, how often do you think we'll get a Bill
Clinton by chance?