|
Please bomb Seattle
Geov Parrish -
www.workingforchange.com
02.28.03 - Dear President Bush, I write as a proud American and a resident
of one of its many great cities: Seattle. You've probably heard of us; Space
Needle, mountains, trees, salmon. Microsoft. When you owned the Texas
Rangers baseball club, your team was in the same division as our Mariners.
We stunk back then. We hope you remain grateful. Oh, and Boeing sends its
deepest love.
Mr. President, I have an enormous favor to ask of you.
Could you bomb us?
Not just once or twice for show; I mean really bomb the city of Seattle,
hard, like what you're planning for Baghdad, and probably for Pyongyang and
Teheran and Damascas and whatever other 50 or 60 major world cities are on
your Pentagon planners' current lists. I mean blast us back to the stone
age. Make it hurt. Send us a message.
I'd prefer that you not hesitate or think too much about this; I wouldn't
want you getting migraines or anything. But if you do, consider that we,
too, are under the rule of a power-hungry leader we never voted for, one
that's using torture and investigating political and religious minorities
and disappearing people off our city streets and into a prison system from
which they never re-emerge. That government has unthinkable numbers of nasty
weapons and seems anxious to use them.
As for Seattle itself, well, Mr. President, we're in the "red" part of the
country, the part that went for Gore, so I'm sure you'll understand that
we've contributed more than our share of terrorists over the years. Those
domestic terrorists arrested a few weeks ago for stealing top-secret plans
from the military? Those were ours. We've been breeding them for years, from
the D.C. snipers back through the Green River Killer and Ted Bundy and
beyond. We "harbored" every single one of 'em. To your talented staff,
making the case that we're an international menace should be a breeze. Just
take some fuzzy satellite photos of our city and circle a couple of the
cars. You'll find them sitting on I-5 in rush hour, any day now, once the
clouds break for your cameras. Then let Colin do his thing.
In all seriousness, Mr. President, let's face it: the biggest threats to
global security tend to come from the wealthiest and biggest countries, not
the smallest. And if you have any hope of pulling them into line, you'll
need to convince them that you'd take anyone out, even your own mother. Even
your own city.
Hit us, say, with one of those big new post-daisy-cutter MOAB bombs, the
ones whose name Edward Abbey would recognize as grimly appropriate, the ones
that kill just like Hiroshima's nuke except with less radiation. Maybe drop
a few hundred or thousand cruise missiles first to soften us up, or
alongside to make sure the fireball extends all the way out past the
suburban sprawl. Dumb, smart, whatever.
Doing this would give all Americans a far healthier respect for the new
American empire that you are embarking upon. You see, the problem with
obliterating Baghdad and its five million people is that they're just too
far away. For most Americans, the handiwork of your genius is simply too
abstract to fully appreciate. However, take out a place like Seattle -- a
city they've probably visited, a place where they might have service
memories or an old friend or two -- and it becomes much more real. What with
the proximity -- only three time zones away from the networks! -- an attack
upon Seattle will attract far more media than attacking some vowel-starved
dictator's playpen. Then, you wouldn't need to rely on "embedded" war
correspondents pestering your soldiers, and you could get the flashiest
displays on live in prime time. Just ask; I'm sure the networks will
cooperate. (Sorta like the shots they do of the football stadium, with the
sun setting over the Pacific, but with big explosions! It'd be perfect for
May sweeps.)
Even better, viewers will be able to more fully appreciate what your weapons
do, because the survivors will look like them (except for the burns), even
speak the same language (mostly), value human life just as much as they do.
All of us here are just trying to get by each day as best as we can. But if
you bomb here, our dilemmas will seem so much more vivid to our fellow
Americans than the fate of 23 million stage props to Saddam Hussein. It'll
make for some amazing reality TV shows.
Our proximity to you will make it easier for aid organizations, too, and for
the shipments of medical supplies and relief workers and all that. And, of
course, a wealthy First-World city like Seattle, with its big skyline and
modern infrastructure, will mean trillions of dollars in rebuilding
contracts after the war -- enormous windfalls that you can hand out to your
corporate buddies as party favors at your next 2004 fundraising dinner.
Best of all, it's not like we have any way to fight back or anything. We
could ask our local police, I suppose, but anything past pepper-spraying
black motorists is out of their league. So if you ever get bored, you can
just bomb us again! Bomb, rebuild, bomb, rebuild... now that's putting our
economy to work!
All in all, Mr. President, I think it's a perfect fit for the new American
empire you're constructing. It's an unprovoked attack upon a defenseless
civilian population, based on crimes committed by either unaccountable
leaders or psychotic individuals who, at one time or another, passed through
town. It'll make your friends even richer, and it'll contribute, in a much
more direct way than any overseas campaign could, to your re-election
success next year. It's 12 less Electoral College votes for you to worry
about. And we get a new freeway out of the deal.
Now that you've thought about it, Mr. President, I'm sure you realize that
you can't back down. I trust Powell will be making the necessary
presentations to foreign powers shortly. I think you'll be surprised at how
many nations will be willing, even eager, to sign up to help with this one.
Trust me.
Your patriotic friend,
Geov Parrish
P.S. I'm moving to Phoenix. Soon.
P.P.S. Damn! I just remembered! We don't have any untapped oil reserves. I
guess that calls this whole thing off, huh? Never mind.
Source:
http://www.workingforchange.com/printitem.cfm?itemid=14571 |
|