

I get your point. You're so sharp.
The movie 'W.', directed by Oliver Stone, was not totally what I was expecting. That being: a movie portraying a devious and careless man who as president, would willfully lead the United States into the predicaments it faces today. Don’t get me wrong. The movie delivers plenty of laughs. But ‘W.’ also provides an objective look at a likable yet easily manipulated guy who unfortunately just happened to be in the position to be elected president.
Bush was his parents’ firstborn. He grew up fully aware that he was the grandson of a U.S. senator and a descendant of the 14th president Franklin Pierce (mom’s side). The young Dubya in the movie is a guy that even your grandmother would love to go binge drinking with. And in 2000, George Bush was indeed the guy that half of the country’s voters wanted to have a beer with. Regrettably, they also thought that being a fun drunk is an essential qualification for heads of state.
My point is this. I, along with the rest of my left wing, liberal, dead baby joke telling friends, and probably who ever else Keith brings to the blog, have spent more time hating on George Bush than we have spent listening to indy music or shopping at whole foods. And I figured that the disaster of his presidency and its effects on the rest of the world were calculated attacks on the have-nots for the Bushes and the like to joke about during brunches overlooking the Kennebunkport Sound. But really, George Bush is not evil. He is actually awesome. He knows he is awesome. People have been telling him that he is awesome for his entire life. Now, put an ego like that into the white house.
I don’t know what factors influenced the president’s choice for vice-president and secretary of defense. But Bush was born a crowd pleaser. And, among others, the crowd advising him is Dick Cheney and until recently, Don Rumsfeld. I don’t think that Oliver Stone is asking us to take a leap of faith when he portrays those two as having an agenda. Was Bush the originator of the major and arguably bad decisions of his presidency e.g. invading Iraq? He probably thinks that he made those decisions. Yet Oliver Stone’s theory appears to be that George Bush, never happy to be a buzz kill, is mainly concerned with keeping the other guys in the room happy. What would you do if you started a new job where you were working with a bunch of your father’s friends? Whose advice would you take?
Overall, after you see ‘W.’ you will have an increased like for George Bush. Maybe not as a president, but as an awesome and fun loving guy who can walk into a barbecue and mow down on a few hotdogs while simultaneously charming the pants off of a young Laura Bush.
Uncle Wayne and Carl were once a famous duo around town. Carl would drive the food cart drinking Busch while wearing a tank top and cut off jean shorts, while Uncle Wayne would sit in the passenger seat, smoke cigarettes and drink rum out of a canteen he won off of the Wizard (crazy bum in Bristol). They would regale each other with the tales from their glory days.
These mostly centered around the time they met the Doobie Brothers back in 1978. Michael McDonald was just a young, grey bearded, heart breaking wonder at this point. Uncle Wayne and Carl fell madly in love with Michael McDonald. Uncle Wayne even grew a beard to match Michael's (which he still has to this day, please see below). They followed Michael all around the country in Carl's brand new food cart, feeding Michael hot dogs and french fries at every tour stop. Eventually Michael fell in love with Carl and Uncle Wayne as well, but the pressures of life on the road and society's unaccepting view of their relationship put an end to the Uncle Wayne - Carl - Michael McDonald tryst. Which brings us to up to today, the date of Carl and Uncle Wayne's infamous fishing trip.
To Be Continued...
I crept out of my room one warm Sunday morning while rubbing my head. My cheap beer headache guided me to the fridge where there was cold water and food. My roommate joined me in the kitchen, and we started giggling (which is custom for the morning after we throw a party). We exchanged stories from the night before about the things that were said, the strangers that enjoyed the comfort of our living room, and the trash talking that went on during pong. It was the first weekend I was back in
However, the fun part was over, and self-induced headaches and empty beer cans were widespread throughout the apartment. We began the inevitable clean-up and filled two trash bags with our aluminum friends. The laughing continued all the way to the back of our building where the dumpsters were overflowing with pizza boxes. A man with graying hair and soiled clothes was going through the recycling bin filling bags with other people’s bottles and cans. My roommate stood frozen as she surveyed the scene while I approached the recycling bin intending to do my part as a good citizen. As I was about to dump the cans, the man said to me, “You can just put them in this bag, they are all going to go in here anyway.” He opened his bag to me and I helped him make the exchange from my bag to his. Now empty handed, my roommate and I left our can man in silence. I couldn’t help but realize that my drunken night was going to become his income. The thought then flooded my mind with questions. Where did his life go wrong so that his job title is now “can collector”? Did his mother used to tell him that if he put his mind to it, he could do anything? I wonder if the amount he resents college kids with dispensable incomes equaled the amount of guilt I felt as I left him with his newly-acquired means for nickels and pennies.
I run into him every now and then while he’s hard at work. It compels me to send a quick text to my parents thanking them for everything they have given me. However, when I tell my kids in the future that they can do anything they set their minds to, I hope they choose a more lucrative profession.