What is this place, coming, to?
Op-Ed by Robert o'Bobo
I remember one Holy Man Bob's Day several years ago when revelation struck the shit out of me, right smack on the friggin' forehead and gave me an H-Bomb of a headache for weeks afterwards. It had gotten to the point where there just was no point to it at all, and that pissed me off big time. I mean, remember when we were kids, how much fun we used to have on HMB Day? We used to sing Bobbers day and night, those popular, familiar ditties like "We Hope Yours Is A Happy Bob's Day," "Flush The Coins," and "Here Comes Ché Guevara," you know, and sat around burning money, destroying each others' presents, having a blast. Most people did that then. I never heard anybody complaining about it. Even newcomers who were unfamiliar with ol' Bob picked it up with ease, back then. You didn't have to do it, it was just a social thing, but it was great fun and essentially harmless. Now it seems I'm due to be relegated to the "cranky old man" bin, because all that has virtually vanished, and Holy Man Bob's Day is quickly becoming a thing of the past. I'm ashamed to be called an inmate of this place. I mean, this is ridiculous. Come on. Because of the social, economic, and political pull of the unbelievers, who have deftly whored their way to the rafters of power, secretly, defiantly... suddenly the old traditions are disappearing. First they changed the lyrics. "We Hope Yours Is A Pleasant Day Off." Come on! I mean, "Flush The Prejudice"? "Here Comes Another Mythical Figure"? They claimed that the values the old lyrics represented were no longer valid, because they did not represent "all" of the people. And in a perfect place you cannot, should not, "exclude" anyone. Imagine how bad they feel when you're out there cavorting around burning bobber bills in their faces! For HMBob's sake! Do we complain when they're cavorting around at their One Place festivals, their One People parades? Do we ask them to call their own holidays Whatever You Want day or the Anything Goes festival? Do we ask them to change their lyrics? Their message? Do we put up posters of HMBob during their sexAll weekend extravaganza? But they want their symbols up during Bob's Day. They demand it. They will not accept no for an answer. They are ready to enforce a disproportionate positive reaction. You don't want to give the impression that you are in favor of "excluding" anyone. And we put up with it, because we don't want to be perceived as "impediments," we don't want to become marginalized. The fact that we celebrate Bob's Day burns them up, because there should be no festivities but theirs. Ours are old and dandruffy. Well excuuuuse me! And now, freedom of all freedoms in a democratic wonderland, they have decided to uphold the ban on deliberate mutilation of consumer goods and currency, and are prepared to vigorously prosecute offenders. Now it's practically criminal to celebrate Holy Man Bob's Day at all. They have imposed sanctions upon those sectors that appear unwilling to comply. I'm sorry. It's time to call a spade a spade. It's about to get ugly. Their One People/One Place idea is beginning to sound more and more and more like a final solution to the problem of Many Places/Many People. They do not seem to be able to attain the light of reason on their own. They need help focusing. It pleases me to remind them that during Holy Man Bob's Day we celebrate precisely our diversity and our liberation from all that "inclusivist" bullshit. I don't want to be like them. I want my children to be like me, not like them. It's time for this wanton elimination of culture, diversity and tradition to be stopped. You celebrate diversity with diversity, not with oneness, for chrissake. I, for one, am putting my foot down. I will not budge. I will not become an automaton. I will put up posters of Holy Man Bob on his day, and sing Bobbers at the top of my lungs, and throw open the windows so the whole place can hear me, because it comes out of my ass to do so. I will burn all the bills in my house, and flush all the coins down the eliminator, and my friends and family will join me in exchanging extravagant presents and share the joy of destroying the ones we receive. It doesn't matter to me that Holy Man Bob, or Ché Guevara, are mythical legends. You can't kill the message. That's where you're dead wrong. I'm sure somebody out there agrees with me. The more profound meaning of this holy day has to do with emancipation, with freeing one's soul, if only symbolically, and for only one day, from the servitude of the daily grind. Bob's message is a message of hope and glory. I don't care if there's never been any proof that he actually existed four thousand years ago. It's the message, you fools. If you eliminate that message, and leave us with just a plain old Order... I cannot allow it. You should pay attention to what Bob had to say. He wanted people to stop sucking up to the consumer game and stop wanting to be someone else and to free their souls from the material quagmire. He believed that one day people would become intelligent enough to free themselves once and for all from the inclusivity crap. I'm glad he never said one day soon. He believed in diversity and in tolerance through separate development. He died with that glorious glimmer of hope in his heart. You know what that means, don't you? Can you still think in images? I don't care if he didn't really die a martyr, that he was not a proper prophet, and that all his apocryphal writings have been declared anathema. I believe in Holy Man Bob. I know I'm not the only one.
These amusing ramblings are strictly the opinion of the writer. We, being censor-free publishers, have decided to let it run. Everyone's entitled to their own opinion, even raving idiots. Robert o'Bobo is a ex-government official, he had a portfolio, but he left it behind somewhere.