Sunday, March 14, 2010

One Last Thang

by Myrna McAdam Mills

Judgments

I find I do little thangs wrong:

I park in a handicapped space in front of the drugstore. I figure I won't be long because I only have two thangs to buy and besides, since one of them is a prescription I figure I'm handicapped enough.

I buy a couple of throw pillows and put them on the couch. Little white thangs stick out of them, the thangs that say "Do not remove under penalty of law." Whose law? I lock the door and draw the curtains to make sure nobody sees me cut them off.

I throw batteries away in the regular trash.

I go through the express checkout line in the grocery store. I have eleven thangs. The sign says "Only Nine Thangs Allowed." I hide two thangs under the other nine so the lady behind me won't sound the store alarm.

I go to the "Five and Ten Dollar" store that used to be the "Five and Dime." While examining a very fragile, pretty thang, it jumps from my hands and the sound of breaking glass echoes throughout the store. I pick it up and push it back into the box. I make a run for the next aisle and push it under the wicker baskets and walk slowly out the door. I don't want the thang now. Who would? It's broken.

I reuse postage stamps. I check my mail and sometimes I catch one of the thangs that hasn't been canceled. I peel it off and save it next to my thang of rubber cement so I can use it when I mail out my next bill.

Now I'm going to get myself a really good job. Then I can save enough money to do some big thangs wrong.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

AND IF ELECTED


I am officially throwing my hat into the ring. I have decided to run for President of the United States.

If I am elected, I promise to....

Call a national emergency and declare martial law so I don't have to deal with a shifty, self-serving congress.

I promise to institute immediately
Executive Order #1:

All Wall Street banks and investment firms who had to pay back a miniscule portion of the illegal bailout in the last administration ($68.3 billion on the $229.7 billion owned) last June will have to pay back the balance, with interest. JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, US Bancorp, and Capital One Financial will be among those responsible. The investigation will continue. The funds will be used to help homeowners pay down their current mortgages.

Executive Order #2:

There will be a cap of 5% on all credit card interest, recalculated retroactive to whenever the bearer of the card started charging. Anyone with no income or who has defaulted on their credit cards for good reason will be charged 0% interest. Chances are there are many people out there who will have their credit card principal paid off from exorbitant fees through the life of the card. Any overage will be returned to the card owner compounded at a 5% interest rate.

Executive Order #3:

The "You Can Work if You Want" program. Anyone over the age of 16 can get a job paying $10 flat rate. Employment offices will open around the country in a city or town near you. Just come in and you are guaranteed a job doing something you like: working outdoors in a garden, or indoors in an office; driving equipment or traveling. This program will be easily paid for by the existing unemployment payouts and we might as well use it now before it's all gone. These jobs will all be in the Environmental and Conservation sector and investments will be available through municipal funds and government bonds called the "Mickey Mac."

The other planks in my platform will be hammered in soon and I will be reporting them here. Anyone with suggestions on future programs, please put a comment in the appropriate area and we'll take them into advisement.

VOTE FOR ME! Gaiaharpoona

And Another Thang

Divorce

by Myrna McAdam Mills

My husband wants to "find himself" and find out "who he is." I tell him to look at his driver's license.

He moves out, taking all his thangs and some of mine.

The first thang I notice is there's only one of the matching pair of guest towels left in the bathroom. I want my towel back.

He insults me by filing for divorce before I get first shot at the thang. I get papers and go to the lawyer who was recommended by one of my bridge club friends. She doesn't tell me he's eighteen years old and I'm his first case.

"What can I do for you?" he asks.

"Grow up."

He sits with half of his mouth in a grin as I hand the sheath of papers to him.

"Divorce papers," he says as he looks at the thang.

"Bingo."

"What would you like for me to do?" he asks.

"Do you have a gun?"

He looks frightened.

I don't tell my lawyer how long it has taken to make myself unbearable to live with and all the thangs I've done: About when I told him I was horny when he was watching a football game, or how I drew a line down the middle of the bed and told my husband, "Never cross this boundary," or any of the other thangs I had done to make him move out. I tell him I've been deserted and abandoned. I want the house, the cars, and a steady income. I leave his office knowing he'll see to it that I'll get all the thangs I want.

I call his office a month later and ask for him.

The receptionist says, "He's no longer taking divorce cases."

"Well...of all the thangs!"

Friday, March 12, 2010

One Thang After Another

by Myrna McAdam Mills

It's like this: In Texas, if a woman doesn't know the term for an object, she calls it a "thang." That covers it. Or uncovers it, depending on what the thang is. And if she doesn't know, she will ask, "What is that thang?" The other person, a Texan, not knowing what the speaker is talking about, will ask, "What thang?" We understand each other. Learning the proper use of the term "thang" is essential to becoming a woman in Texas.

The Ticket

I can't see to drive at night. Well, I can see, actually, but I can't tell what thangs are.

I run a stop sign. A policeman pulls me over and I do the right thang. I cry.

He walks to my car. "Did you know you ran a stop sign?"

"I knew I ran something, but I didn't know what it was."

"Could I see your driver's license?"

I pull out my billfold and give him my MasterCard.

"This isn't your driver's license."

"Well, it looks like it." I give him my driver's license and put the MasterCard away.

"I'll have to give you a ticket."

I wait.

"You shouldn't be driving at night."

"How else am I going to get there? They only have it at night."

"What do they only have at night?"

"Driver's Ed."

The policeman shifts his weight and looks skyward.

I ask, pointing, "I hate to bother you, but what's that thang in the middle of the street?"

"It's the curb, and it's not in the middle."

He hands me the ticket and shakes his head as he walks to his car.

I hold the ticket out the window and wave at him. "What do I do with this thang?"

He turns around. "Pay it."

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Government and The Great American Legal System



Well, the votes are in, the ballots are counted. We've looked through countless tomes, novelettes and political magazines trying to come up with enlightenment about our legal system and our government. Luckily every one of them was a virtual comedy-house of laughter, so we had plenty of material to work with.

We discovered, much to our surprise, that justice, legality, why even our government itself, are ruled by the almighty dollar. And that's as it should be, since, as Ayn Rand once pointed out, the symbol for our country is the dollar sign. Slide the S over the U and you get $. Well, the original symbol had two vertical lines. Our forefathers were plenty smart. I wonder how it would have been if our foremothers had had a say in the matter. It's never too late to start over, but since I'm totally a-political (we already have enough people trying to run this overburdened land), I'll leave that to my very learned sisters who want the job.

Aren't you thrilled there are more women in government now? There are 17 women in the Senate! Of course that's out of 100. But 17% isn't so bad, considering we finally got the vote in 1920 and that was only, uh, 90 years ago. We wouldn't want to rush into power and change too much right away. I voted for Hillary!

Personally, I'm grateful there are so many women in government. Some may be assholes, but so what? At least they're female assholes! We've certainly been saddled with enough male assholes through the years. It makes for a nice change.

While assembling this issue, we found that our confusing system of punishment is of grave concern. What works best? Corporal? Capital? Fines? Spanking? What about incarceration? We stuff all those criminals into a nice comfy building, give them three square meals a day and lots of exercise, no unduly cruel treatment, a wonderful library and education, movies, loads of time to enjoy it all, and somebody else paying for the privilege...hey, when do I move in? The only thing these people can't do is vote. I don't know...give up my right to vote versus lie around every day reading romance novels. Wait, this is punishment?

So herein we invite you to take a glance at what runs our country. Some of it is governance, some of it is justice, some of it is just plain strange. But, hey, that's Government and the Great American Legal System.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Different Opinions

by Kim Buoy

As the woman of the house, I have developed a definite routine for dealing with my spouse. This came about only after years of practice beginning immediately after the license was signed. It has become a monotonous symphony played again and again.

I really do love my husband, and I've found him much easier to live with since I put my routine into practice and began to understand him. His is really a very simple philosophy: If he can't hunt it, eat it, mechanic it, or get it into bed, it is not worth his time or consideration.

This gives me eternal hope: I fit into at least one of these categories.

I came to this understanding during one of the greatest passages of my life - the time I attempted to get my man to communicate.

Bolstering my courage, I approached my husband, who was seated as usual in his chair oblivious to all but the TV screen.

"Dear, I was hoping you could help me to better understand how you see the feminine side of marriage." I said.

"Huh?" Glazed eyes continued to stare at the football game on the screen across the room.

"Could you tell me what irritates you about women?" I asked.

His neck snapped, his head whipping toward me like a king cobra ready to strike. His eyes were wary, darting from side to side like a cornered animal.

"Why?" he asked.

"I would simply like to hear your opinion." I replied.

He sat in thoughtful silence or so I presumed. There was always the chance he had returned to his trance-like state. Slowly he began, licking his lips, his eyes flitting around the room in nervous anticipation.

"They spend too much," he announced.

"How do you mean?" I asked, fighting down the desire to whip out the checkbook and make comparisons.

His arms swept in an arc toward the living room walls as he warmed to his subject. "Like all these pictures and stuff. Wouldn't it have cost less to cut them out of magazines and frame them?"

"Certainly," I replied, repressing a snarl.

"You women see the sign, 'Sale', and you go nuts. A sale isn't a sale unless you need the stuff." He emphasized each point by jamming his finger into the arm of the chair.

To this I readily agreed. Very rarely do I go to sales. Spurred on by the belief I agreed in all areas, he continued.

"Women always have to be right. Doesn't matter what the subject is, they gotta be right." He was deeply into his subject now -- arms gesturing, eyes rolling back into his head in grotesque agony.

"Why can't women be happy with a little fried food now and then? What's with all these experiments?"

He had forgotten the dangerous lesson of fried hamburgers morning, noon, and night, for three days.

He slammed down the footrest on the recliner, leaned forward, elbows propped on knees, hands gesturing frantically.

"So what if a few magazines lay around for awhile? This is my house, too! I should have some rights, shouldn't I?"

I nodded, glancing at the cobweb-coated, dusty, three-foot stack of Fur, Fish, and Game crammed into the corner by his chair. Biting my tongue, I did not remind him who scrubbed his floors, washed his clothes, dusted his furniture, and cooked his meals.

Something had happened I never dreamed I would witness in a million years. My husband -- the couch potato, TV addict, the blob -- was talking to me. Just as if I were one of his buddies.

He had gotten out of his chair, hands on hips, eyes vivid with excitement. I felt a smile creep across my face.

"Well, am I right?" he finished.

I rose to my feet, arms encircling his torso. He was more alive and exciting than I had seen him in a very long time. He'd said everything I knew he would. I'd heard it all before but that seemed unimportant at that moment. I had witnessed my fantasy come to life.

"You're absolutely right, Dear. I'll try to do better," I said, pulling his lips nearer to mine.

It was, after all, just a man's opinion.