Lisa at work
The traveling
circus passed through our village this morning. I considered running away, then
remembered a few other obligations. And besides, how would the government know
where to send my Social Security check?
So instead,
we took our 10-year-old grandson to watch the circus folks raise the big top. I
think he might have preferred something a bit more digital than archaic,
however, any chance you get to see a piece of living history, I say, "Take
it! Go for the gold!" (Oh, too much television in my system …)
Anyway,
watching the elephant (Lisa, by name) in harness, pulling on the rigging that
raised the roof 39 feet above us, I had one of those what-if moments. Lisa is a
well conditioned 37 year old, tipping the scales at around 8,000 pounds—give or
take. She eats about a quarter ton of food every day and drinks about 190
liters of water.
Just think of
how many humans could be hired to do this same manual labor—and they'd eat and
drink a lot less. The humans would, of course, have other duties around the
circus, but their primary function would be the daily raising of the tent with
its 160-foot-diameter. There is huge entertainment value in this, as well as a
cost savings.
So, later in
the day when I was talking with President Obama, again, about the unemployment
situation here in the U-S-A, U-S-A, U-S-A, I outlined legislation proposing
humans, not elephants, be used as tent raisers. I told him, I know he's against
this top-down economic mess the Republicans got us into, so this would be a
top-up program.
As usual, the
Prez was a step ahead of me. He said the idea has merit. He thought the
symbolism of elephant pictures would make it easy for Congress to understand
and hard for them to object to. But in the end, he said, elephants still work for peanuts, we don't have problems with them climbing that fence in Arizona, and we don't require birth certificates. Plus, they're only about 1 percent of the work force.
What if an elephant gets sick, I asked.
Prez said, one-percenters know how to take care of their own.
What if an elephant gets sick, I asked.
Prez said, one-percenters know how to take care of their own.
1 comment:
I thought I saw you at the tent raising. I used to work at Penton and for a short time we shared a cube wall. (It was during the Prism merger and you used to tell the joke about changing the company name to Prison. I loved that joke.) I'm sure you don't remember me, we didn't talk. I was on Medical Design magazine and we were only on that floor for a short time. I found your blog from the CVNP site one day and said, "I know that guy." And I live in Northfield Village, so we're nearly neighbors.
Wow, I sound like a stalker.
Anyway, I enjoy your bird photos and am glad to see you are enjoying retirement.
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