I’m guessing Ron is probably between 55 and 65 years old. I say this
because he can remember who orchestrated the Communist victory in
Vietnam, “Wasn’t it Jane Fonda, an ultra-liberal, who went to Vietnam
and sat on an enemy tank... ” and he’s still a working stiff, though
not a member of any union, “which are made up of Democrats and
liberals... still out there fighting for higher wages and more
benefits... ” How completely un-Conservative of them. But then, “that’s
why they’re the ‘humanist’ party. If I heard the words humanism,
humanist, humankind once, I heard them a 100 times in the Democratic
presidential campaign. Humanists put human ideals over religion. Who
knows best, humans or God?”
Well... maybe God... but She’s playing it close to the chest.
In moments of incredulity, please refer to the aforementioned study.
From what I can piece together Ron is a veteran, or at least he likes
hanging out at the American Legion hall and reading their magazine,
“According to my legion magazine... John Kerry voted against the
flag-desecration amendment four times. Could I vote for this guy? I
think not. He doesn’t sound very patriotic to me.”
Ron, on the other hand, considers himself a true yellow-ribbon patriot.
“I love my god and country and support our military even though I know
in war bad things do happen to civilians with all this powerful
artillery used in war nowadays.” You’ve got to hand it to the guy. He
knows his military hardware.
That said, advances in nuclear weaponry and the Cheney regime’s
first-strike nuclear policy are of no interest. “Robert, you went into
great detail about the atomic bomb... [and the] B61 variable-yield
bomb, etc., which doesn’t mean a whole lot to us out here. If you’re
trying to impress us with all this information, forget it.”
I should mention that facts, any facts, do not impress Ron. “ Yes . . .
sometimes I make mistakes when trying to get my facts straight, but I’m
the kind of guy who shoots from the hip and deals with it later
[presidential material?]. I just don’t seem to have much time to spend
in the library [definitely presidential material]... but I think I’m
right about most of the things I say.”
Let me interrupt here with a quote that is not the product of Ron’s
mind. It is, however, the product of the same kind of mind. “I know
what I believe and I believe what I believe is right.” Guess who?
(Hint: This guy believes whatever Dick Cheney tells him to believe.)
Ron identifies himself as “... a conservative Republican... [and] a
reasonable person.” I suppose they’re not always mutually exclusive —
at least they didn’t use to be. “Conservatives believe in smaller
government... they think you can run your own life without all of this
government control [domestic spying good... control bad].” Oh sure,
“Republicans shoot themselves in the foot once in a while... although
sometimes they get gun shy and sound a little like being politically
correct and cave in to world opinion.” Do I even need to ask when the
last time was that Cheney et al caved in to—or even considered — anyone
else’s opinion?
I do know of at least one Republican who
is gun shy. That
would be octogenarian Harry Whittington. But he didn’t get shot in the
foot. He got shot in the face and chest by Dick Cheney’s 28-gauge
shotgun. More than likely the VP was only aiming for the poor guy’s
foot. It’s the hip-shooting thing Conservatives do — never a good idea.
Let me pause to reassure you that although Ron’s quotes have sometimes
been cobbled together for narrative continuity, they have never been
taken out of context since Ron’s rants are completely devoid of any
contextual integrity in situ. (Imagine Gertrude Stein at her writing
table with an Absinthe hangover.) “Robert first claims to be an
atheist, and you can easily tell that by his view that America is to
blame for all the problems of the world... ” WHAT? Think of my cobbling
as filling an immense void.
Ron lives in a small town where Amish buggies and steamy road apples
are daily hazards. But thanks to cable TV and AM radio he has acquired
the political acuity one expects from a devotee of Fox News and Rush
Limbaugh. Ron knows, for example, that “Democrats are angry and mean .
. . [and] nasty ever since George Bush won the 2000 presidential
election. That wasn’t in their cards to happen.” He assures us that
“when the Republicans start campaigning, you won’t hear all that kind
of mean rhetoric.” And “another reason democrats hate President Bush
and the Republican Party is because they support all the conservative
issues... ” I forgot to mention that besides being a master of the non
sequitur, Ron is also an apostle of the obvious.
Ron’s radio has alerted him to the fact that “our borders between
Mexico and Canada are practically open. We have three million illegal
aliens a year crossing our borders. Nothing is being done about it
[because] Democrats want the votes.” For a hoot, imagine hordes of
Canadians sneaking across our northern frontier — possibly to escape
the tyranny of socialized health care. When you catch your breath,
consider that Democrats really do need an infusion of votes since
hundreds of thousands of Americans who may vote for a Democrat have
been “mysteriously” expunged from the roll.
As a fundamentalist Christian, Ron fears that “our Christian way of
life, the church, and the Bible are out of the mainstream in America.
Democrats or liberal Republicans [never] show any support for
Christians. [I wouldn’t say he’s
completely
lost touch with reality.] It’s clear we’re distorting our
constitution’s First Amendment, Ten Commandments, and the Bible’s
scriptures and replacing them with rewritten man-made laws. It’s
atheistic and godless people forcing their issues on us through liberal
courts trying to achieve their liberal Socialist agenda.”
Referring to the aforementioned study would be a good thing right about now.
Ron mentions Sandy only occasionally — mostly whenever he needs an
accomplice. And he once passed along a message from his 90-year-old
mother who lives with him and Sandy. “By the way Robert... what she
[mom] suggested is if you don’t like America, why don’t you look for a
country you like better.” Okay, we now know Ron is a good son and that
the crab apple didn’t fall far from the tree.
I have no idea if he is a good husband to Sandy or if their union has
been blessed by the pitter-patter of little feet. If I had to guess,
based on his opinions on traditional marriage and abortion (and just
about everything else), there’s been a stampede and he’s been the trail
boss.
Ron believes “that a traditional marriage is between a man and a woman,
not between two people of the same sex. Not even animals act in that
fashion.” He’s got a point, though not the one he intended. Of the
millions of species of animals that have ever existed, there is only
one that feels the need to pledge their troth before getting down to
the business evolution set before them. So why is it that folks like
Ron think marriage, which fails 50 percent of the time (more so in the
Bible Belt), is so darned sacred?
The only thing Ron loathes more than the ACLU is a woman’s right to
make decisions about her own body and her own health. “You see, the . .
. Satanic, unrestricted... abortion program is a government–supported
industry at present for liberal democrats... Roughly 1.5 babies [sic] a
year are aborted. How do you feel about this?”
How
do I feel about this? I feel down to my aching arches that it would
have to be a Cheney/Bush initiative to be so damned unsuccessful, right
up there with the “democratization” of Iraq, Katrina recovery, “No
Child Left Behind,” faith-based abstinence-only sex education, (
add your pet dozen here).
Being a family man (I’m guessing here), Ron found himself wondering in
the run-up to the 2004 election just “... what the family values were
that these Democratic candidates were speaking of. Well, John Kerry
told me, in a speech today. It’s health care, jobs, fighting poverty
and investing money in our public schools. Ron doesn’t think much of
John Kerry’s family values (You’ll have to trust me on this.). He’s a
James Dobson’s Focus on the Family values man. And as such, has bigger
phantoms to skewer.
“I read a book review by Dave Wester. The name of the book is
Stuck In Neutral.
It’s a story written by a 14-year-old boy’s father, Terry Truman. The
boy has cerebral palsy, can’t move, talk or do anything by himself.
Dave Wester, in his report mentioned a couple of questionable parts in
the book, but in his words,
‘Readers of any age cannot help but
gain an increased understanding and compassion for people like Shawn
and families who care for them.’ Now Dave must be a liberal. I’d
like you all to read this book. You’d better read it first yourself
because here are some of the words, and some are used quite often:
hell, damn, friggin’ a****les and a** [asterisks in original]. I’d
strongly suggest you read the book before your kids do. It is in large
print. There’s really no story line, just a lot of liberal, filthy
garbage there to put in the hands of school children.”
Other than maybe a wisecrack about the “large print” thing, I can’t
find any humor in something so pathetic. The best I can do is to
encourage you to reference the aforementioned study one last time.
In a more reflective mood, Ron once lamented, “I’ve had conversations
with many people, and from my experience, boy, are they afraid to give
me their opinion or take a stand.” For the life of me, I can’t imagine
a bigger waste of a person’s limited time on Earth than trying to
convince Ron of anything. Sadly, I’m a slow study — or just a naive
liberal — and have spent an unwarranted amount of my ration trying. I
gave up a month ago when Ron said, “As an afterthought, have you even
seen America fight a war in a country that we didn’t leave in a better
democratic shape than it was when we went in?” How does one begin to
answer such an afterthought?
The trouble with the entire world is that Ron (
Reason
On
Nebutal) can have ten thousand names.
Robert Weitzel is a freelance writer whose essays appear in The Capital
Times in Madison, WI. He has been published in the Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel, Skeptic Magazine, and Freethought Today.