<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0" ><tr><td valign="top" style="font: inherit;">Great idea.... plus this is too good not to share w/ Peace-discuss. Hope you don't mind!<div> --Jenifer<br><br>--- On <b>Tue, 9/14/10, Barbara kessel <i><barkes@gmail.com></i></b> wrote:<br><blockquote style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"><div id="yiv2011999573">Hey maybe we can get this to Ariana Huffington as an illustration of her new philosophy. What do you think? Barbara<br><br><div class="yiv2011999573gmail_quote">---------- Forwarded message ----------<br>From: <b class="yiv2011999573gmail_sendername">david prochaska</b><br><br>
<div>
Thanks to Bob! -- David<br>
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<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"><br></span><br>
<b><font size="3">Whitman Sampler</font></b><br>
<font size="3"><b> <br>
</b></font>
<font size="3">I had been wondering about my friend Jimmy Bob
Hardin, so it was no surprise when his letter arrived this week.
Through no fault of his own, Jimmy Bob has gotten involved in
politics. He is a country western singer and composer, and
political campaigns love to have his songs to connect their
candidate with the common people. He started with the campaign for
governor of Texas when he wen off to help Kinky Friedman, and fell
in with Willie Nelson. After Willie recorded Jimmy Bob’s song "How
Hard Can This Job Be?," Jimmy Bob was in great demand. He went
from Huckabee to Romney to McCain. So far, he has a perfect score
of helping candidates lose, so I was hoping he might have signed
up for the Meg Whitman campaign. When I opened the letter, I
wasn’t disappointed.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">******************************</font><br>
<font size="3">Dear Bob,</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Sorry I haven’t written in awhile, but life has been
amazing. You remember that my wife had a one-woman show of her
paintings, those giant paintings of jungle birds in bright colors.
Well, she sold a bunch of them to rich people, and then she
started getting commissions from them. They wanted jungle scenes
on their livingroom walls and their children’s rooms and on the
swimming pool decks. One lady in Santa Barbara with a stable full
of polo ponies even wanted the whole inside of her barn filled
with tropical birds to calm the horses. Now, Mary Agnes doesn’t
need the money, but she loves to paint birds. So we’ve been
traveling around painting birds and just enjoying life. I think
the unemployment problem would go away if the unemployed people
would just spend more time hanging around with rich people. They
would be better off having a drink at the country club rather than
standing on the curb at Home Depot.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">So I was basically on vacation until a month ago when
I got a call from the Whitman campaign. They wanted me to write a
campaign song for them. I wasn’t too interested until they said
they would double what Romney paid me. That got my attention.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">I never told you what Romney paid me. In fact, I
should have shared some of it with you for your help, but I knew
you didn’t need it with your teacher’s pension and all. The fact
is that they offered me $8,500 for their campaign song, which was
generous considering that Romney didn’t stay in the campaign long
enough to use the song. But when I got the check, they had added a
zero to it. Right away I went to the head guy to ask him to
correct the mistake. He said it was going to create problems with
their election expenditure reporting if they changed it after they
had already submitted it. It would be too much trouble to make any
changes. He said I should just cash it as he didn’t care, and it
wasn’t their money anyway. So I cashed a check for $85,000.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Now you know why it got my attention when the Whitman
people offered me double what Romney had paid me. When I asked if
they meant double the $85,000, they said yes. So I signed on.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Let me tell you, I have never seen anything like it.
Money was flying around like chicken feathers at a pluckin’
contest. They spent nine million dollars for some consultants out
of New York City. Nine million! It makes my head hurt just
thinking about it with all those zeros bouncing around in there.
So the $170,000 they were paying me didn’t seem so outrageous. But
I work for my money, so I buckled down and wrote the campaign
song. Everybody got together in a room and I sang it to them.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"Whitman Sampler</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"Life is like a box of chocolates</font><br>
<font size="3">Is what Forrest’s mama said,</font><br>
<font size="3">So reach right in and help yourself</font><br>
<font size="3">And you’ll be glad you did.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"It’s a Whitman Sampler of Freedom.</font><br>
<font size="3">It’s chocolate </font><br>
<font size="3">And chock-a-block with Liberty.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"No taxes is that square one there.</font><br>
<font size="3">That cluster saves your gun.</font><br>
<font size="3">The round one lets us pray in school.</font><br>
<font size="3">There’s Liberty in every one.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"It’s a Whitman Sampler of Freedom.</font><br>
<font size="3">It’s chocolate </font><br>
<font size="3">And chock-a-block with Liberty.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"No need to choose</font><br>
<font size="3">Just take ‘em all.</font><br>
<font size="3">It’s the patriotic thing to do,</font><br>
<font size="3">And vote for Meg this fall.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"It’s a Whitman Sampler of Freedom.</font><br>
<font size="3">It’s chocolate </font><br>
<font size="3">And chock-a-block with Liberty.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"She’s one of us</font><br>
<font size="3">She’s just plain Meg</font><br>
<font size="3">She’s as down-to-earth as mumblety-peg.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">"It’s a Whitman Sampler of Freedom.</font><br>
<font size="3">It’s chocolate </font><br>
<font size="3">And chock-a-block with Liberty."</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Well, everybody loved it, but I did have to explain
mumblety-peg to some of the city folks. Then this New York
consultant, who is mean as a rattlesnake with a toothache, said it
wouldn’t do. It didn’t fit in with their campaign theme. He told
me to write another one that attacked Jerry Brown.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">That’s why I need your help again, old buddy. I just
can’t do mean, and besides I don’t know anything about Jerry
Brown. He was before I got interested in politics, but I know you
are very old and were probably around when he was governor.
Anything you can give me will help.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Thanks.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Yours in Bobness,</font><br>
<font size="3">Jimmy Bob</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">************************</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Dear Jimmy Bob,</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">I am always delighted to hear from you, and I am
pleased that Mary Agnes is such a big hit with the rich people. It
is nice to learn that paintings of jungle birds calm horses down.
I suspect that many I have bet on spent their mornings staring at
toucans. That explains why they were asleep on the track.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">You’ve got a free start with your Whitman assignment
in the fact that Brown rhymes with clown. You can probably get a
refrain out of that fact alone. Then he is a Catholic. The
Republicans used that criticism successfully for over a century,
right up until JFK. It probably still works with a lot of people
who won’t admit it publicly. He is also Irish. That will probably
appeal to the same group.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">There is also the fact that he dated Linda Ronstadt.
She was German and Mexican, so you might be able to work in some
hatred for those groups. Her grandfather got rich from inventing
the flexible rubber ice-cube tray. I’m not sure how you can work
that in, but you can ask that snake from New York how he would use
it.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Brown organized migrant farm workers after he
graduated from law school, so you could depict him as an enemy of
the farmers. And he was against the Vietnam War, so you could
accuse him of siding with Jane Fonda. That resonates with every
redneck in the state.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">As governor, Brown had this strange idea that the
state should save money in a bank account during flush times so
there would be a reserve to bail out the state in bad times. Crazy
idea. He had tons of money coming in when he took office in 1975
thanks to the huge tax increases imposed on Californians by the
previous governor, Ronald Reagan. That’s right, Ronald Reagan had
increased the state-wide sales tax by 50%! The sales tax is a
regressive tax that is paid disproportionately by poor people, so
when Howard Jarvis and his coalition of businessmen went after the
Brown surplus, they saw to it that it was returned to its rightful
owners, the property owners, via property tax reduction. The sales
tax increase stayed in place. So you could accuse Brown of being
anti-business. He took their taxes and kept them.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">He also thought that by driving gas-guzzlers,
motorists were making us dependent on foreign oil producers and
were seriously damaging the environment. While time may have
proven him right on those facts, his solution to trade in the
governor’s limo for a compact Plymouth and stop construction on
all new freeways was wacky. You could paint him as being against
the construction companies.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">He also had a wacky idea that the state should have a
communications satellite so all emergency services throughout the
state could communicate with each other. This idea gained him the
sobriquet "Governor Moonbeam" from Mike Royko, a Chicago
columnist. Lots of words will rhyme with moonbeam, so this should
be of help.</font><br>
<font size="3">Brown also believed that people were buying homes
bigger than they needed with mortgages they could not afford. He
was convinced that when they could no longer make their mortgage
payments, the system would crash. He moved out of the governor’s
mansion and lived in a one-bedroom apartment to set an example.
Clearly he was an enemy of developers and bankers with these crazy
ideas.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">I wish I could give you more, but my heart just isn’t
in it. In fact, I plan to vote for Brown. I offered to sell my
vote to Whitman for $500, but she hasn’t sent any money. By the
bye, the way she is spending money over there, I think you ought
to ask for a raise.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Give my best to Mary Agnes.</font><br>
<br>
<font size="3">Your very old buddy,</font><br>
<font size="3">Bob</font><br>
<br>
</div>
</div><br>
</div></blockquote></div></td></tr></table><br>