Dear Mr. Plunkitt—
The last few months were surreal. When PBS funding became a
political issue, it felt too close to home. Then when Mitt Romney
called me out by name during a nationally televised debate, I
almost fell out of my nest!
That said, events also forced much introspection. As the debate
wore on, I began to question everything I had ever been told. I
learned that PBS receives millions from taxpayers each year, while
the federal debt climbs ever higher. My life’s work is to teach
children, and now I worry for their futures more than ever!
Coming to these conclusions was unsettling, to say the least.
I’ve lived all my life in a cloistered public television studio.
Now I feel like I need a rumspringa. I need to spread my wings and
fly (although that analogy is probably lost, as my species is
flightless—as you might have imagined given my excessive height,
rotund backside, and small wingspan). How do you suggest I begin to
understand these strange, new feelings?
Big Bird
Number 4
Sesame Street
Dear Big (may I call you Big?)—
Proceed with extreme caution.
To prove my point: Have you ever heard of Fluzzo the Meerkat?
No? Fluzzo was one of the great puppets of the 1950s. He starred in
several blockbuster movies, and basked in all the trappings of his
celebrity: money, scantily clad meerkittens, cover treatment on the
New York Times Magazine. But slowly, his political
leanings leaked out. On trumped-up charges, he was hauled before a
PBS kangaroo court (a puppet kangaroo presided, appropriately
enough), and he was disappeared. Summarily executed, some suspect.
Public television apparatchiks went to work shortly thereafter and
painstakingly painted him out of every frame of every movie in
which he had ever appeared. Today, it’s as if he never existed.
Proceed with extreme caution. You will never be safe expressing
such feelings as you have described so long as the world remains
divided by the Felt Curtain.
—GWP
Dear Mr. Plunkitt—
I would like to propose a modest constitutional amendment. Our
country is politically polarized. Elections are decided by
razor-thin percentages. My recent bid for the presidency is a good
example. A total of 62 million people voted against me. But 59
million people voted for me.
From a businessman’s perspective, the problem is clear: After
any given presidential election, half of the customers are
dissatisfied. We need market segmentation. We need to bifurcate the
presidency.
Here’s how it would work: President Obama would govern the blue
states, and I would govern the red ones. On matters in which the
United States can have only one policy, we would make a joint
decision. On other matters, we could craft separate policies for
our respective territories.
By early next year, I will have red America humming along at 4
percent unemployment. California and Massachusetts can raise taxes
to put a chicken in every pot and a Planned Parenthood office on
every corner. Can I count on your support for my proposal?
Sincerely,
W. Mitt Romney
Dear Mr. Romney—
Psychologists have identified stages of grief in people
suffering a tremendous loss, and you are clearly still in stage
three: bargaining. But, alas, your proposal simply won’t go. First,
there’s the practical matter of passing such an amendment through
the Democratic Senate, controlled by Harry Reid. Second—how can I
put this gently?—the proposal seems awful on its merits. What if,
while planning troop movements in the middle of war, the two
presidents are unable to come to a joint decision? Do they simply
play rock-paper-scissors to break the tie?
Call me when you reach the fourth stage of grief, depression,
and I shall take you out for a drink. (Well, I’ll have a drink. You
can have a Shirley Temple.)
—GWP
Dear Dr. Plunkitt—
I am a paleontologist of some note, and have recently discovered
a new species of dinosaur. Per scientific custom, it is my
prerogative to christen the beast, and, being politically
conservative, I had hoped to name it after our 45th president.
Mittasaurus.
Researchers have already named a lichen after Barack Obama. The
memory of George W. Bush will live on whenever future generations
think of A. bushi, one of the great slime-mold beetles of
the world.
It is excruciating to me how far left the academy tilts. My new
find is a ferocious predator, larger even than T. Rex. I
would have very much enjoyed watching my colleagues squirm as they
described Mittasaurus, the largest carnivore ever to
live.
But November’s disastrous results have stymied my plan. What am
I to do?
Perplexedly,
Dr. Archibald J. McKenzie
Brookwater College
Dear Dr. McKenzie—
Frankly, i’ve never understood why scientific nomenclature is so
enamored with Latin. Why not buck convention and use a more
interesting dead language, maybe Zarphatic or Khwarezmian or one of
the Apabhramśa dialects? Or why not use an obscure living language?
I’ve been told !Xóõ is nice. Plus it would be entertaining to hear
scientists attempt to make all those clicking sounds.
—GWP