Bull and Scones An American Story
by
Richard Cummings
by Richard Cummings
Once,
there was a college named Stale University. And at Stale University,
there was a secret society. It was so secret that no one could even
talk about it. It was called Bull and Scones because, it was rumored,
its members sat around without any clothes on, eating steak and
quick bread sandwiches while they guzzled pitchers of beer.
Bull
and Scones had, at one time, two mascots called, respectively, Pompous
John and Gorgeous George. Pompous John, who had been in a terrible
scrape years before, said to everyone who would listen, that he
would never fight again for anything. But Gorgeous George, who had
managed to avoid getting into any scrapes except for minor traffic
violations, told anyone who would listen that he would get into
a fight with anybody, any time, over anything.
"Bow
Wow!" went Pompous John, signaling that although he would not
fight again, he was, nevertheless, very brave. "Yap Yap!"
countered Gorgeous George, indicating that, although he looked and
sounded like a wimp, he could bite you on the ankles and make your
life pretty miserable, so you had better watch out for him. He attended
stock car races and yap yapped to sound very tough and regular,
while Pompous John liked going to fancy dinner parties, at which
he would bow-wow until everyone was bored to tears.
One
day, the members of Bull and Scones decided they could afford to
have only one mascot, so they held a contest to see if it should
be Pompous John or Gorgeous George. So they let Pompous John and
Gorgeous George loose to run around the whole country bow wowing
and yap yapping, so the people could decide which would win.
Pompous
John bow wowed everywhere that although he was totally against fighting,
he had been the bravest and fiercest of them all in the old days
when lots of others, like Gorgeous George, had run away from the
fight and didn’t even turn up for mascot duty. Gorgeous George produced
lots of pages of records to show he had turned up and attacked Pompous
John for palling around with Hanoi Jane, who had consorted not only
with the enemy, but also with everyone else.
So
the people could better make up their minds, they put Pompous John
and Gorgeous George on television to participate in something called
a "debate," in which a bunch of media types with fancy
haircuts would ask them questions they had to answer in ten second
sound bites.
"The
first question is for Pompous John," announced the moderator,
Dan Dither, who looked like an embalmed corpse in a snazzy suit.
"What
is your favorite color and why?"
Pompous
John took a deep breath and threw his shoulders back.
"Thanks
for asking that Dan. It’s a really important question and everyone
is entitled to know where I stand on that. There are lots of really
nice colors, blue and green for example. White and yellow are good,
also. I know a whole bunch of people who really like purple and
sepia. Now, if you could say that plaid was a color, I might go
for that, but I think there could be problems with that if you look
at the side-bars describing how to make plaid out of which colors.
I mean, this gets you into the entire question of the plural of
color, which is colors. Black watch plaid for example, has a nice
look to it. "
"Gorgeous
George, you have ten seconds to respond."
"I
appreciate the opportunity. Just look at the straightforward way
Pompous John has dodged that question. My answer is clear as mud.
Brown. It’s a color that everyone can relate to. No one who is not
prejudiced in anyway cannot relate to brown. Brown covers all bases,
if you know what I mean. If you stick to brown, you can avoid a
lot of mistakes, like misjudging the color of your enemy’s socks.
Say "brown" and you’re bound to be at least partially
right."
"May
I respond to that?" Pompous George, bow wowed. "Brown
is an evasive answer, unworthy of anyone who could possibly be a
mascot. It is exclusionary and unilateral. Before you select your
favorite color, you should consult with your friends and get their
input."
"Let’s
move on," Dan Dither pressed. " Let’s get some questions
from the panel. I’ll ask Jeter Pennings if he has a question.
"I
do have a question," Pennings sneered. "This is for Gorgeous
George. If you are selected mascot, what will be your first priority?"
"Excellent
question, Jeter," Gorgeous George yapped toothsomely. "My
first priority would be to bite everyone in the room and then, go
out of the room and bite everyone there. That way, there will be
no one who can bite me first. And I will bite them until they bleed."
Pompous
John became agitated. He turned his large head towards Gorgeous
George and bow wowed: "That
would be one dangerous mascot. How would you know whom he would
bite next? It could go on forever."
There
was thunderous applause to this, and while no one was noticing,
Pompous John got down on all fours, crawled over to Gorgeous George
and bit him in the leg. And while Gorgeous George was yapping and
limping around, Pompous John took a bite out of Dan Dither and Jeter
Pennings. The entire audience fled out of fear of Pompous John,
who was bow wowing at the top of his lungs, and Gorgeous George,
who had bitten him back and was yapping around, looking for someone
else to bite.
Back
at Bull and Scones, the members were all watching this spectacle
and decided that maybe they would be better off entirely without
a mascot. They caught both Pompous John and Gorgeous George and
put them in cages. They threw bones to them from time to time to
shut them up and went about their business. And having decided,
once and for all, that business was their business; they never again
held a competition to see which nasty beast should be mascot.
February
18, 2004
Richard
Cummings [send
him mail] taught international law at the Haile Selassie
I University and before that, was Attorney-Advisor with the Office
of General Counsel of the Near East South Asia region of U.S.A.I.D,
where he was responsible for the legal work pertaining to the aid
program in Israel, Jordan, Pakistan and Afghanistan. He is the author
of a new novel, The
Immortalists, as well as
The Pied Piper Allard K. Lowenstein and the Liberal Dream,
and the comedy, Soccer Moms From Hell. He
holds a Ph.D. in Social and Political Sciences from Cambridge University
and is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers.
He is writing a new book, The
Road To Baghdad The Money Trail Behind The War In Iraq.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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