MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
3 days after the Exxon Valdez ran aground
Okay, so rules have to be broken sometimes.
George Will likes to wax about the time he accompanied Ronny
Reagan to some repub gathering during the '80 campaigns. Seems something was
amiss in the control room for the arena, so Ronny ran up there and discovered
the door was locked and nobody was present.
So Ronny just broke some window in the entryway, reached in
and opened the door and all of heaven applauded as the GOP pulled in some
needed cash; a definite case of justifiable B & E.
It was like when the Supreme Court decided that George W.
Bush would make a fine president and that there was no discernable reason to
worry about election procedures in Florida.
It is like when Curly Rand Paul could not meet the requirements of some ophthalmology association, so he just started his own certification panel
Or like when the Supreme Court of the United States of America lets lying, stealing, bribing bastards from Enron out of jail because of an "honest services" exception that seemed to arise out of thin air.
Or like when Palin set up her illegal legal defense fund. ooooooops. (I mean think
about it. How in the hell can a legal defense fund be illegal?)
Or like when this Emmer character up in these parts promises to make federal law illegal. (Think about this one. How can a law be illegal?)
Or when Beck and Rush and Bachman and Palin and Hannity and
the other repubs see all the facts as against them, so they just have to make
up their own.
Or like when I shot those officers in Yucca Flat.
Sometimes rules just must be broken for the greater good!
But few have been as good at breaking the rules for its own greater good and getting away with it as British Petroleum:
The offshore drilling moratorium that is falling apart in court already contains one major loophole -- and there's little surprise which company is threading the needle.
BP plans to begin drilling two miles under the sea just miles away from a delicate wildlife reserve in Alaska. The company will get around the deep-water moratorium by constructing an artificial island -- 31 acres of gravel -- and registering as an onshore rig.
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/bp-liberty-artificial-island-alaska-2010-6#ixzz0roHRtYOL
This all made me wax poetic even if Lyle does not really Lovett.
If I built an isle
Right out there on the ocean
And if I had a platform
I'd put it on my ait
And we could search for oil
Get it out of that damned ocean
I see me upon my platform on my ait
If we had Ronald Reagan
I'd do just what I wanted
I wouldn't worry bout no drilling regs
It'd just be me and riggers
We'd go drilling through the oceans
Nobody'd stop my riggin; on the sea we'd drill
If I built an isle
Right out there on the ocean
And if I had a platform
I'd put it on my ait
And we could search for oil
Get it out of that damned ocean
I see me upon my platform on my ait
But I am a lot like that masked man
I bought myself some Tontos
'Cause Tontos sit in Congress and let me work for fees
But Tontos get real nervous
And stop calling me kemo sabe
When my platform springs a leak
And oil gushes out to sea
If I built an isle
Right out there on the ocean
And if I had a platform
I'd put it on my ait
And we could search for oil
Get it out of that damned ocean
I see me upon my platform on my ait
Now the regs will just keep tight'ning
Unless I can hide these leakers
Can't just come and go where I please
I'll have to scare 'em with some lettin' go
I'll feign to put employees on the dole
As I just drill out in the arctic while
sittin' on my ait
If I built an isle
Right out there on the ocean
And if I had a platform
I'd put it on my ait
And we could search for oil
Get it out of that damned ocean
I see me upon my platform on my ait