And
the winner is.......from Diary of a Mad
Law Professor,
by
Patricia J. Williams
The
Nation
March
4, 2004
Gaudily
festooned Hollywood liberals presented each
other with the false golden idol of a little
naked man, enlightened others quietly celebrated
the traditions of thousands of years of Western
Civilization with the first annual Pre-emptive
Theology of Bellicosity and Competitive Deficit
Spending Awards. Here's the skinny:
Best
Harangue in the Style of Father Coughlin went
to Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ, for
its unequivocal rejection of no-fault doctrine,
for its adherence to traditional family values
of the Middle Ages and for its reinvigoration
of flayed-muscular Christianity as X-treme sport.
Best
Manifestation of the Glory of God went to...
God, of course, for His all-knowing choice of
Pat Robertson as His prophetic vehicle, and
unto whom He has delivered glad tidings that
George W. Bush will be swept back into office
in 2004, despite the pesky trial-by-election
posed by unholy French-looking pretenders to
the throne of state.
The
Nearer-My-God-to-Thee Award went to Rodger Findiesen,
an American Airlines pilot who warned his passengers
that non-Christians are "crazy." "You can use
your time wisely on this flight or you can sit
back and watch the movies," he said, urging
believers to identify themselves and start converting
the heathens in their midst. Panicked infidels
rang relatives from cell phones, so great was
their fear of the Good Word.
Best
Gaffer went to Education Secretary Rod Paige
for calling the National Education Association
a "terrorist organization" because it has criticized
aspects of George W. Bush's implementation of
the No Child Left Behind Act. Although Paige
later said he didn't really mean it, delighted
prosecutors were said to be considering freezing
the association's assets, and rumors swirled
of teachers being shipped to Guantánamo Bay,
where once and for all they might learn what's
good for them.
Best
Rendition of a Combat Zone was awarded to Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger when he stated that the
rush of gay marriages in San Francisco was not
merely civil disobedience but a civil disturbance
risking bloodshed. Although Schwarzenegger later
said that gay marriage was "fine" with him,
his terminology officially fell within the purview
of the USA Patriot Act and potentially subjected
civil disturbers to secret searches of their
homes and bedrooms and closets and drawers and
all the dark, moist, sordid little places where
they might be plotting the overthrow of the
domestic order.
Best
Rendition of a Comfort Zone went to American
Airlines for kicking off a plane four Carmelite
nuns because other passengers complained of
a sulfurous smell emanating from their vicinity.
Best
Rendition of an Ethical Twilight Zone was won
hands down by Supreme Court Justice Antonin
Scalia for his acceptance of an invitation to
go duck hunting with Vice President Dick Cheney,
who is the subject of a suit recently accepted
for review by the Court; and for Scalia's acceptance
of free transportation on the vice presidential
plane, Air Force Two; and for Scalia's acceptance
speech itself, a concise yet artful performance
in the looks-like-a-duck, sounds-like-a-duck,
must-be-a-duck category: "Quack, quack."
We
are still waiting for the results to be tallied
in the category of Best Actor in an Oil Production.
In fact, we are still waiting for the release
of the names of the nominees. Our reporters
are positioned outside the offices of Vice President
Cheney, where, rumor has it, the merits are
to be weighed, right after the ducks. Still
waiting... Standing by...
Best
Musical of the Chairs went to Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan for his proposal that
funds from Social Security's cost of living
adjustments should be used to help pay for the
federal budget deficit, a plan that would have
the edifying side effect of thwarting those
godless, aging, long-haired, free-love, spend-and-tax
baby boomers in their conspiracy to live well
past their allotted time.
Best
Make-Up was shared by France and the United
States, which, having overlooked the human rights
crisis in Haiti until it reached the boiling
point, opted to "stabilize" that country by
booting out its democratically elected president,
collaborating with rebel leaders, including
former members of Duvalier's infamous death
squads, blocking the flow of desperate Haitians
fleeing toward Florida and otherwise proclaiming
their mutual interest in liberty, fraternity
and equality.
A
special American-as-Warm-Apple-Schnitzel award
went to Senator Orrin Hatch for his proposed
constitutional amendment dispensing with the
requirement that presidential candidates be
born in the USA, in favor of a twenty-year citizenship
requirement, thus ordaining his friend Arnold
Schwarzenegger as eligible for the job of leader
of the new global outsourcing.
Best
Thou-Shalt-Not-Kill Bill went to proponents
of a House proposal that assaults on pregnant
women be treated as two-person crimes, thus
granting fetuses the status of personhood in
the eyes of the law. Fetal personality would
likely be the first step toward guardianship
proceedings for fetuses, custody awards of fetuses
and complicated questions of fetal detention
under the USA Patriot Act, since even persons
deemed innocent may be held indefinitely if
the Pentagon sees risk in their release.
Best
Moment in Homeland Security was awarded to the
Senate, for its refusal to renew a ten-year
ban on assault weapons or to require background
checks on gun show customers.
The Better Than Best Moment in Homeland Security
went to the chairman of the board of Smith and
Wesson, a convicted robber who resigned from
his post while the industry continues to press
for Congressional reconsideration of a bill
that would give gunmakers immunity from most
forms of prosecution.
And
top honors in the Life Is So Unfair category
went to the Prada-clad college students who
staged a campus protest against affirmative
action in New York City, where close to half
of all black men ages 16 to 65 are unemployed.
