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By Tony Russell
“Hey, Ace!” called my buddy, Bob Spinner, as I was strolling around the Molasses Festival. “Come take a look at this
guy. He’s great!”
I pushed my way through the crowd gathered in front of a small stage set up behind the Community Building. The stage was
draped with red, white, and blue bunting, and on both sides of the stage were huge American flags, the flagpoles topped with
vicious-looking eagles with their talons clutching missiles and bombs. In the center of the stage was a man wearing cowboy
garb, standing behind a counter and making his pitch as he whipped three large shells around on the countertop.
“It’s easy,” he shouted. “Everybody’s a winner! Just keep your eye on the pea and tell me where it ended up! You there,
sir,” he said, looking right at me, “you have a confident look to you. Come on up here and give it a try. Just plunk down
30% of your income for the next ten years! It’s no gamble at all; you just have to watch this little pea. Nothing to it!”
Bob had shoved his way up behind me, puffing slightly from the exertion. “This is goofy,” I told him. “I don’t want to get
up in front of all these people and make a fool of myself. Besides, I might lose. And if I lost 30% of our income, Patty
would pitch a fit.”
Bob scoffed. “The guy’s an idiot,” he said. “It’s almost a shame to go up there and take his money. You’ve got a quick
eye, and he’s got a slow hand. Go for it!” He grabbed my arm and tugged me toward the stage. “He’ll do it,” he
yelled.
I found myself standing in front of the counter, while people in the audience hooted and shouted encouragement. The
cowboy smiled at me, but the skin around his eyes never wrinkled. I’d seen the same look on our housecat’s face as it sat
immobile, its eyes on a chickadee.
He launched into his patter, starting to slowly shift the shells around. “Just keep your eye on the pea,” he reminded me.
“We’re attacking Iraq because a bunch of Saudi Arabians headquartered in Afghanistan flew planes into buildings in the
United States.”
“Huh?” I said, bewildered. “Can you go back and make that move again? I lost sight of the pea for a minute.”
“Sorry,” he smirked. “Gotta keep moving on. Maybe you’ll see it again in a minute.” He began to move the shells a little
faster. “Saddam Hussein is a vicious dictator, cruel to his own people. He possesses weapons of mass destruction. He’s
part of an axis of evil, and good is always at war with evil.”
“Oh come on, get real,” I protested. “There are lousy dictators all over the globe, too many of them allied with and
bankrolled by the United States government. In fact, Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden were both our guys, and
we’re the people who supplied Saddam with the materials for his chemical and biological weapons! That’s how we know
what he had; we sold it to him!”
The cowboy slapped my hand aside. “Don’t touch those peas,” he warned me.
“But it’s not right to invade another country that isn’t at war with us, hasn’t attacked us, poses no real threat to us, and
hasn’t even made a threatening gesture toward us,” I argued. “How in the world can you justify that? That’s the same kind
of thing Hitler did with Poland and Czechoslovakia!”
“You just compared me with Hitler,” he said. “Big mistake. Unpatriotic. Overwrought. You’re discredited.” His hands
moved faster.
“But I wasn’t talking about you as a person,” I objected. “I just said that invading other countries without justification was
the same thing Hitler did. It’s true. How can you argue with that? You compared Saddam to Hitler, and your father
compared Noriega to Hitler. In fact, for the past twenty years, every time an administration wants to attack somebody, they
begin by demonizing the leader and comparing him with Hitler. It’s part of the public relations campaign to prepare the U.S.
public for war!”
He ignored me, continuing to shuffle the shells.
“What about international law? What about the U.N. Charter? What about religious and ethical teaching? What about
Congress and the U.S. Constitution? Invading Iraq violates everything we’re supposed to believe and stand for!”
“Glad you mentioned Congress,” he said. “Elections are coming up. I don’t think we’ll have any trouble getting a resolution
from that spineless bunch. As for a U.N. resolution, we’ll push one through. But to tell the truth, who cares? They’re
irrelevant. We’re still going to attack Iraq.” With that, he lifted one of the shells to reveal the pea; then his hands speeded
up again.
“What about the weapons inspectors? What if they don’t find any weapons of mass destruction?”
“Those don’t really matter. We KNOW he has them. If he says he doesn’t, he’s lying and the weapons inspectors are
incompetent.”
“If you know he’s lying, why don’t you give your evidence to the weapons inspectors?”
“We’d like to, but that would tip the Iraqis off to our intelligence sources. You’ll have to take our word for it.”
“Not meaning any disrespect,” I said, “but before we launch a war that will probably kill over 100,000 human beings, most
of them poor Iraqi civilians, and further burdening the U.S. economy with a war bill for over 190 billion dollars, when we say
we don’t have enough money for health care and prescription drugs, I think we need something better than your word for it
that something’s rotten in Iraq.”
Suddenly he stopped shuffling the shells. “Okay,” he said, “where’s the pea?”
He had taken me by surprise. I just stared at the shells. I didn’t have the slightest idea. Hesitating, I pointed to the one in
the middle. Lifting it slowly to stretch out the suspense, he pointed to… nothing. “Sorry,” he said, grinning triumphantly. He
lifted the shell on the right; there lay the pea. “You lose,” he said. “It’s war!”
The audience roared with laughter as I stumbled back down the steps. Bob met me at the bottom. “Boy, did he get you,”
he chortled. “All the time the pea was whether it was right to go to war, and he got you to talking about one damned thing
after another! Congressional resolutions. U.N. resolutions. Regime change. Inspection teams. He got you to where you
didn’t know whether you were coming or going!”
“It’s just hard,” I said, “when he’s the one who’s always moving the shells.”
Bob grinned at me. “It’s a carnival,” he said. “What did you expect?”
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