Reporting From Deep Inside A Crowded Wal-Mart In The Middle Of Friggin’ Nowhere, Froliche Weinachten Und Gutes Neues Jahr!

Germany's Christmas markets are magical, and fun for the whole family.

Christmas is a very special time for our family.

In early December, we start dreaming about to travelling to Germany to celebrate the holiday in style. If Christmas has a heart, it beats strongest in Deutschland, which is home to everything from the Christmas tree and the Passion Play to dazzling outdoor festival markets packed with hand-carved Bavarian treasures and sweet seasonal treats such as marzipan and lebkuchen.

Germany is an extraordinary country to visit at Christmas—so special, in fact, legend has it that on Christmas Eve,  Germany’s rivers turn to wine, animals speak to each other, tree blossoms bear fruit, mountains open up to reveal precious gems, and church bells can be heard ringing from the bottom of the sea. Of course, only the pure in heart can witness this magic. But while other families spend their Christmas break roaming America’s crowded shopping malls hunting for sales at The Sausage Shack, we find ourselves eagerly anticipating the day when the jet airplane touches down on German soil and we can start our holiday in earnest. Nothing matches the magical feeling of holding hands as we stroll the ancient cobblestone streets of charming German towns like Bamberg, harmoniously singing Oh, Tannenbaum and cheerfully shouting “Froehliche Weihnachten!” to the welcoming locals.

Truly, it’s a wonderful life.

Or would be.

Turns out, we never get to go to Germany at Christmas because our son, Gabe, plays hockey. Don’t get me wrong: I’m not complaining. We love being involved in hockey and wouldn’t trade our lifestyle for anything, not even free cable television, which costs more than a Zamboni these days. But there are always tradeoffs in life. In our case, being a hockey family means we usually have a tournament to attend at Christmas, typically in some miserable little windswept town in the middle of Buttcrack, Nowhere.

You know how people wish for a white Christmas and sleigh rides in the winter wonderland at this time of year? It’s one thing to have all that when you’re spending Christmas in Connecticut with friends and family at a cozy cottage. But it’s another thing entirely when you’re crowded into a cramped motel room with your kids, the best restaurant in town is at the I-80 truck stop, and the warmest place you’ll be during the day is an ice rink.

March of the Humans
One year, the big tournament was in Fargo, N.D. Fargo is a wonderful place, if by wonderful you mean flat, dismally gray, windy and bitterly cold. Fargo is so miserable in winter, legend has it that the Native Americans sold it to early European settlers for a dozen horses. Then they quickly packed up and moved south before the first snows arrived, laughing the whole way about the “idiot white man.” And they don’t want it back, either.

The weak and infirm should avoid Fargo in winter.

Want to know what makes Fargo exciting? It’s surviving the highly risky trip from your car to your hotel room. The unfortunate souls who lose their footing and fall are often abandoned and left to die by their loved ones. This behavior seems cruel to the uninitiated. But in Fargo’s harsh climate, the survivors must stoically march on or face death themselves. It’s basically a human version of March of the Penguins, and only the fittest live. Usually, the weak and infirm simply freeze in place where they land, remaining stuck in place in snow banks and ice flows like popsicled mannequins until Fargo finally starts thawing out in July.

So many people meet their maker this way, Fargoans have turned identifying the freeze-dried remains of the dead into a children’s game called “Ice Mice.” It’s similar to the popular game Slug Bug, in which children punch each other in the arm when they spot a Volkswagen Beetle. In Ice Mice, however, gamers are entitled to a double tap when they correctly locate a body by seeing only the tip of an appendage—a thumb, nose or foot, for example. An ear or elbow will often stick up out of the melting ice long before the rest of the body becomes visible.

Visiting Bigfoot’s Hideout
Another year, we drove to a tournament in a quaint hamlet called Trail. It’s located in the West Kootenay region of the interior of British Columbia, Canada. When I say “interior,” I mean “remote,” “isolated,” “inaccessible,” “out-of-the-way” and “distant.” It’s so secluded, I believe Trail’s the official hideout for Bigfoot.

It’s hard to describe the beauty that is Trail, British Columbia, Canada.

Amazingly, about 7,500 people also live in Trail. It isn’t clear to me why they live there, but I assume most of them are hiding from the law or have insurmountable mental problems. Many of them are probably obsessed with finding Bigfoot, too. Whatever the reason, it’s also unclear to me what they do there. I do know that on Friday and Saturday nights, many Trailidians gather at Colander’s Italian restaurant for its “world-famous, all-you-can-eat spaghetti and meatballs.” It costs $12 per person, and the food’s not horrible, perhaps because almost 20 percent of Trail’s residents are of Italian descent. (That seems like an odd demographic fact until you realize that Canada, like America, also has a witness relocation program. Is there a better place to hide from the Cosa Nostra than in a dense, snow-packed forest protected by Sasquatch?)

It's hard to describe the beauty that is Trail, British Columbia, Canada.

Trailidians can also eat at Dairy Queen, KFC and the Beacon Burger Drive-In & Chop Suey House, which may be one of the world’s most unique diners. But the town’s defining feature is a large cement factory with a giant smokestack that regularly belches choking clouds of smoke. Instead of being angry about the smoke, however, Trailidians are proud of it. It even inspired the name of the local junior hockey team, the Trail Smoke Eaters.

Trailidians are rabid Smoke Eaters’ fans, and a surprising number of the team’s stars make it to the NHL. I think it’s mostly because they’re desperate to get out of Trail. These fine athletes will go anywhere to escape the boredom of living in backwoods country–except maybe the town of Iqaluit in the Canadian territory of Nunavut, which is pretty much the last place on Earth to get a cup of hot coffee before you reach the North Pole.

A Place Too Rural for the Amish
This year, our holiday hockey schedule took us 1,088 miles from our home in Denver, Colo., to the town of Culver, Ind. Actually, Culver’s more of a village, even if it does have two stop signs, a prep school/military academy, and a Subway/convenience store/bait shop. Or perhaps settlement is a better word to describe the town, which basically has four streets. Culver’s so small, I doubt it even qualifies to be a one-horse town, except perhaps when the Amish pass through looking for someplace less rural to live.

 Anyway, I know exactly how many miles away Culver is from our house because I’m newly unemployed and we couldn’t afford to fly there. Instead, we drove straight through without a rest. It took us about 18 hours, 16 rest stops, 30 sausage rolls, eight ham sandwiches, three tanks of gas, a dozen large caffeinated drinks and several arguments to complete the trip. But we knew the ordeal was worth it once we saw where we would be staying for the weekend: the Super 8 Motel in nearby Plymouth, Ind.

Even the Amish think Culver, Ind., is too rural.

I don’t know if you’ve ever stayed at a Super 8, but we nearly wept with joy when we pulled into its parking lot and witnessed firsthand what I can only describe as the stark simplicity of its perfectly rectangular architecture. Then again, we also nearly wept when we got out of the car and our faces were hit with the frigid blast of arctic air that continually blows through Indiana in winter. And we nearly wept a third time when we tried to carry our luggage inside, only to realize our joints had locked up because we’d been sitting in a cramped Hyundai Sonata for 18 hours without moving.

Look, I think it’s fair to say we were just feeling weepy after driving across America’s heartland with nothing to think about for 18 hours except endless prairie and the importance of cows to the nation’s economy.

Fortunately, the Super 8’s got rooms with showers, toilets, televisions and beds just like a real hotel, and we were grateful for it. We were also happy to learn that the motel faces a Wal-Mart and Super K-Mart. That made us feel right at home, except without the usual troublesome distractions such as entertainment and civilization.  It also allowed us to catch up on our last-minute Christmas shopping.

I have to admit that navigating the aisles of Wal-Mart with a steel shopping cart wasn’t anything like strolling Germany’s Christmas markets, and we heard more cussing than Christmas carols while we were there.

That’s Wal-Mart.

But on the positive side, I’d say being in small towns like Culver at Christmas gives us a lot of free time—physical and mental space, if you will—to hope and dream about our annual holiday trip to Deutschland. And I believe hopes and dreams are what Christmas is all about.

Froehliche Weihnachten!

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I’m Unemployed. Please Join Me In Shouting, ‘Freedom!’

I'm just like the Scottish patriot William Wallace as portrayed by Mel Gibson in "Braveheart." Except that he's dead and I'm merely unemployed.

I joined the rapidly growing ranks of unemployed journalists a week ago today.

Business is down at the publisher I worked for, as it is for almost all publishers, and my boss put me on furlough for the holidays.

But I quit instead.

I suppose I should’ve felt sad or angry. But I didn’t. I’d long expected the axe to fall at Christmas, which is traditionally a slow time for publishing, and I felt both free and oddly defiant. I was journalism’s equivalent of Scottish patriot William Wallace as portrayed by Mel Gibson in 1995’s Academy award-winning film, Braveheart.

You may remember the movie’s climactic scene. After being captured and tried for high treason by the persnickety and somewhat effeminate British leadership, Wallace is taken to a London square and hanged, racked and disemboweled. Most folks would’ve gladly given up the ghost by this point, but not Wallace, whose hatred for the imperialistic British and their overcooked vegetables was boundless. An English magistrate offers the plucky Scotsman a quick death in exchange for a plea of mercy, which the watching crowd supports. But Wallace summons the last vestiges of his strength, turns to the crowd, and defiantly shouts “Freedom!” Seconds later, his head is liberated from his body by a hooded man with an incredibly large axe.

That was me, except for the bit about rebelling against authority and then being hanged, racked, disemboweled and beheaded. I was a good and trustworthy employee who worked fairly hard and grumbled about my petty grievances rather quietly, mostly to a few of my fellow co-workers and my family. Oh, and I didn’t shout “Freedom!” as I left the office, either. I did have a little spring in my step, though. The way I figure it, I was looking for a job when I found the one I had, which means I’m no worse off now than I was then.

Now that I’ve had a few days to think about my decision, however, I realize there are some important differences between Gibson and me. I’m not as good looking or as well connected, for example. I also don’t have any racial issues with Jews, especially if they’re hiring. More to the point here, however, I’m not nearly as wealthy as he is. Gibson is said to be worth nearly $1 billion and rarely worries about money, even with one wife, one ex-wife and eight children to support. I’m said to be worth roughly nothing, unless you count the value of my extensive collection of action figures. Then I’m probably worth $300 at the most, which means I worry about money all the time. I’ll need to get a new job fairly quickly unless my family’s willing to live at one of those shelters downtown, or, worse yet, with relatives. I don’t need William Wallace to tell me that living with relatives would be as oppressive as being ruled by the British.

But I can’t worry too much about money now; No matter how broke I get, it’s time for me to make a change.

An artist's rendering of me getting furloughed last week just before I recklessly decided to quit.

I don’t see a future for myself in newspapers or magazines. It’s a dying industry, slain by the Internet and YouTube. Analysts say print revenues have been dropping by about 11 percent a year as companies pour their advertising dollars into new media like the Internet. That might not sound like much, but over time it’s devastating to profits. It also puts a serious crimp on the writers and editors who depend on the largesse of publishers to afford their mortgages, groceries and whiskey, although not necessarily in that order.

I’m not an analyst, but as an industry insider, I don’t believe advertisers are the problem. I just don’t think people read newspapers and magazines much anymore. They’re quaint relics of a bygone era. While some of the more interesting publications may survive—even thrive—most are shrinking month by month and I believe they will quietly fade away over the next decade or so. Magazines and newspapers aren’t relevant or timely enough in the Internet age. I have more readers and receive more comments on this silly blog every day than I received in a year at the magazine I worked for, and I often wrote about serious and controversial subject matter. My conclusion: People are barely willing to read free 140-character Tweets anymore, let pay for the privilege of reading entire sentences, paragraphs and articles crafted by stuffy eggheads who pompously maintain they know what they public’s interested in, or ought to be interested in.

And that’s OK. Things change, even centuries-old businesses like publishing. Oh, and decades-old writers and editors like me.

So I hope you’ll join me this Christmas in shouting, “Freedom!”

It’s a good feeling.

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I Owe An Apology to Jen At Redhead Ranting

As the headline to this post implies, I owe an apology to Jen at Redhead Ranting.

You see, I promised a couple of weeks ago to write a timely post about Jen’s balls.

Damn!

Now I owe Jen two apologies: one for not writing the post in time (I’ll explain why in another post) and another for a sloppy typing error that infers Jen has balls. I seriously doubt that Jen, the mother of two adorable children, has balls, at least not the kind most of you were thinking of. Although, let me hasten to add that it’s absolutely OK with me if she does have danglies where there shouldn’t be any. Live and let live, I say, and if Jen used to be Jay or is hoping to become Jay soon, then so be it. Lots of people elect to undergo gender reassignments these days, and I can only hope that s/he’ll be happy in the new body s/he seeks. After all, we all just want to be loved, right?

So, Jen, you go girl! Or, just to be absolutely safe, Jay, you go man!

Now, back to those balls.

You’re going to want to pop one or two of them into your mouth as soon as possible and roll them around on your warm tongue until you get a taste of the creamy goodness you’re expecting.

Oh, wait.

I forgot about the typo.

Awkward. (Note to journalism students: Mistakes often have compounding effects that lead to other mistakes, such as accidentally writing porno when you’re supposed to be helping out a friend.)

This is what I'm talking about.

This is what I'm talking about.

Look, folks, I’m terribly sorry about all this confusion. To be perfectly clear, it’s not just “balls.” It’s RUM balls. As in sugary Christmas confections.

Allow me to explain.

Jen is a single mom. She isn’t rich, and she doesn’t have a regular job because she needs to work out of her home so she can take care of her kids. So Jen makes money a lot of different ways, including ghost writing for other bloggers, writing product reviews, and selling advertising on her website.

This year, Jen also decided to try making and selling holiday treats to help pay her bills (which are probably pretty steep if she really is having that surgery we discussed earlier). So she’s whipped up batches of rum balls, fudge and sugar cookies and made them available to ordinary, baking-impaired people like you and me. You can buy these treats from her right here and, in my opinion, you should.

Why?

Well, I’m no food critic, although I’ve been paid to be one in professional magazines and newspapers for decades, but Jen’s treats are very, very tasty. I got a sample box of Jen’s treats in the mail a couple of weeks ago, and I ate the entire box—including some of the packing material–in less than 2 minutes. They were that good. I particularly enjoyed the rum balls. They were coated in powdered sugar and tasted strongly of rum. In fact, from where I laid on the floor for about 30 minutes after eating them, they reminded me of my Grandmother Whiteman’s balls.

Damn!

I definitely need to take a remedial typing class.

My Grandma Whiteman didn’t have balls, either. Not the kind you were thinking of, at least. Not that I know of, anyway. Although, if she did….oh, forget about it. Look, although it’s probably too late to get Jen’s treats for Christmas, please visit her website right now and order some for your New Year’s celebration.

And be sure to drop Jen a note of encouragement, too. Because regardless of whatever weird stuff she’s going through right now, I’m sure we’d all agree it’s not easy to be a man trapped in a woman’s body, or a woman trapped in a man’s body, or even a woman trapped in a woman’s body.

Even if you eat a lot of rum balls to help you cope with it.

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Heavy Metal Band Slipknot Releases Benefit Christmas Album

Slipknot's new album takes an alternative look at Christmas.

Slipknot's new album takes an alternative musical look at Christmas.

Des Moines, Iowa – Doom rockers Slipknot release their first Christmas album today—just in time for last-minute holiday shoppers.

Titled Adeste Infideles: All Hope Is Gone, the long-awaited CD features 13 tracks by the heavy-metal band, including imaginative but twisted re-workings of traditional holiday favorites. In early reviews, the top-secret project’s all-out frontal assault on Christmas has stunned critics and delighted fans of Slipknot’s sound, which is often described as death-metal music.

“The quality of the ruthlessness and sustained physical exertion on Slipknot’s fifth studio release is breathtaking,” Rolling Stone Magazine critic David Fricke says. “Take their re-working of the old standard White Christmas, for example. Lead singer Corey Taylor manages to insert the words ‘shit’ and ‘fuck’ into Irving Berlin’s classic ballad no less than 17 times, brilliantly transforming it from a sentimental, post-World War II reminiscence into a black tornado of bloodcurdling rage that perfectly captures post-9/11 teenage angst.”

“Our new album is gonna shock the fuck out of people,” Taylor tells Fricke in Rolling Stone’s December issue. “I’m so fucking excited about it! This song is not only about my utter disgust for America’s favorite holiday, but even more about the people who mindlessly celebrate the crass commercialism that has become the main expression of their misplaced faith in the so-called child of God.”

The new Slipknot CD features an unusually dramatic cover for a Christmas release. Produced by Roadrunner Records, the same company behind Nickelback and Killswitch Engage, the cover is jet black except for the title, which is emblazoned in bright red in Old English type near the top. The center of the cover features an image of a withered poinsettia set inside a silvery, inverted Satanic star eerily lit by orange and yellow flames. The ghoulish imagery is rivaled only by the album’s outrageous interpretations of holiday favorites, including:

1. Jangle Balls

2. O Cum, All Ye Faithless

3. Rudolph, the Neo-Nazi Reindeer

4. I Saw Manny Mounting Santa Claus

5. Adeste Infideles (title track)

6. It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Gehenna

7. Silent Fucking Night

8. Christmas Cannon

9. Fuckin’ Around the Christmas Tree

10. It’s the Most Sickening Time of the Year

11. Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let’s Do Blow!

12. God Unrest Ye Deadly Gentlemen

13. Shit White Fucking Christmas

Bob Dylan's new Christmas album is not at all like Slipknot's new Christmas album.

Bob Dylan's new Christmas album is not at all like Slipknot's new Christmas album.

Taylor said a portion of the album’s proceeds will benefit the Church of Satan, which was founded by satanist Anton Levay in 1966 on the pagan holiday Walpurgisnacht. Levay, the controversial author of The Satanic Bible, officially died on Halloween day in 1997 at the age of 67. His children—Satan Xerxes Carnacki LaVey, Karla LaVey and Zeena Galatea Schreck—are said to be huge fans of Slipknot, as well as other musical acts that promote the black arts, ranging from Ozzy Osbourne and Rammstein to Judas Priest and Barry Manilow.

Rumors about Slipknot’s mysterious Christmas album had circulated among the band’s loyal fans for several years. Snippets of some tracks reportedly were overheard backstage last summer when the band was on tour, though nothing ever got leaked onto a bootleg recording or the Internet.

But according to reports that surfaced last year in Billboard Magazine, the band’s twisted Christmas album was a pet project forSlipknot and its marketers. It had no official title, and was simply referred to by industry insiders as the Black & Red album, in what was believed to be a sly nod to the Beatles’ infamous White Album and Prince’s Black Album.

Slipknot isn’t the first band to surprise its fans with an unexpected Christmas album this year. This fall, for example, folk rocker Bob Dylan released his much-anticipated take on Christmas, Christmas in the Heart. Proceeds from his somewhat more traditional album benefit the World Food Programme.

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Oranges Are Quite Tasty, And They’re Not Very Dangerous

Cute picture, huh?

Cute picture, huh?

Orange.

No, this isn’t a post about fruit, although I enjoy fruit, especially nectarines, raspberries and plums.

I just figured that after four straight days and 3,467 words mocking America’s obsession with guns and its Second Amendment rights, maybe the dozen or so people who regularly read this blog might appreciate a topical break. As in, “orange you glad I didn’t say guns?”

I don’t know how your minds work, but my mind is a little like a pit bull. Sometimes it latches onto ideas with its jaws—I’d say “powerful” jaws, but in my case I’m not sure that’s entirely accurate—and won’t let go until somebody offers it a bowl of tasty Kibbles ‘n Bits.

Or shoots it.

Damn.

Orange.

Oh, forget it.

You see, even now, despite my better instincts, my brain wants to gravitate back to guns. I think of it as an undiagnosed and untreated form of obsessive-compulsive disorder, except that instead of washing my hands repeatedly, I perseverate on certain concepts, which roll around in my empty skull like marbles until they eventually fall out of my ears and disappear.

These thoughts are often insignificant or trivial, like, “Ooh, I really like that new song by the Red Hot Chili Peppers! I think I’ll listen to it 50 times in a row!” Or, they can be more erudite, as I’d like to believe was the case with guns.

Damn! There it is again.

Orange.

No, it just isn’t working.

Look, I need to get this off my mind, so here’s the thing: I believe guns are bad for America.

I tried to communicate that idea over the last four days in what I thought was a clever, backhanded way by creating a conservative, letter-writing character named Max Payne. Payne is named for a gun-happy character in a popular series of video games, and except for being passionate, he’s nothing like me. He’s an NRA gun nut of the worst sort. I thought that would be obvious, especially in context of what I normally write. I thought the series of posts was so bombastic—elementary school kids should be allowed to take guns to school?— that everybody would get the joke. I thought they were so riddled with factual errors—the national anthem is America the Beautiful and President George Washington fought the Nazis with Winchester rifles at the Battle of Trentlott?—that everybody would get the joke. I thought they were so over-the-top nutty—Jesus is coming back armed with AK-47s to battle the Devil?—that everybody would get the joke.

But almost nobody got the joke. Maybe nobody at all, which tells me that I failed. Miserably. What I have here is a failure to communicate.

So I apologize for doing a poor job of communicating, and for misleading you.

And now I’m going to say what I intended to say, but I’m going to say it straight: Frankly, I’m sick and tired of picking up the newspaper and reading headlines like “Four Cops Shot, Suspect Dead,” “Army Confirms 12 Dead at Fort Hood,” “13 Killed at Columbine High School,” and “Virginia Tech Shooting Leaves 33 Dead.” And I don’t believe the solution to those shootings—and many others that go unreported—is for Americans to buy more guns. No, I sincerely believe America needs to impose severe restrictions on guns, especially handguns and assault rifles. And by severe restrictions, I mean shit-can the Second Amendment and start confiscating guns and melting them into scrap.

America, land of the orange.

America, land of the orange.

I know that’s an extremely controversial idea because the American identity is so wrapped up in gun ownership. Historically, Americans equate guns with freedom, as people also do in impoverished, war-torn countries like Afghanistan, Nigeria, Serbia, Bosnia, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan and Somalia. That’s one reason why we buy millions of them every year and now own an estimated 270 million guns, enough to arm almost every man, woman and children in the country.

But we’re not war-torn or impoverished. We’re way past the days when we were a loose-knit group of patriotic revolutionaries at war with England. America simply doesn’t need 270 million guns, not anymore than it needs a stockpile of nuclear weapons large enough to blow the world into oblivion a couple of dozen times over. And that’s why I believe it’s time for America to set aside the paranoia and fear that seems to underlie gun ownership, grow up and join the rest of the civilized world, where gun ownership is severely restricted.

I realize that many, if not most, Americans strongly believe that if the government takes away our right to own guns, we’ll lose our other freedoms (whatever those are), too. But it’s simply not the case in England, France, Germany, Canada, Australia and countless other countries where guns are rarely used by anybody who’s not employed by the police or the military. I’ve lived in Europe, and people there don’t seem any less free or less happy than Americans. In fact, they often seem happier and more carefree than us, possibly because they’re always on vacation or getting free medical care. Or perhaps it’s because they rarely have to worry about getting their heads blown off while they’re out in public.

By contrast, here in the U.S., the National Rifle Association says more than 1 million Americans have died in firearm suicides, homicides, and unintentional injuries since 1960. Others believe the number’s actually much higher. Regardless, it’s high enough. It’s about as many battlefield deaths as we suffered in World War I, or in the Civil War and World War II combined. And it’s disturbing to me that we hold solemn ceremonies and erect grand monuments honoring the brave soldiers who defend our country fighting on foreign shores, but practically ignore the wanton slaughter that takes place daily within our own borders.

Did you notice that guns killed more than 30,000 Americans in 2006 alone?

I didn’t, and I think that’s sad. It’s even sadder when you realize that in that same year, less than 1,000 people were killed by guns in England, Wales, Australia, Canada, Austria, Germany and Spain combined.

Well, have you?

Well, have you?

I understand that many Americans like guns. Mechanically, they’re fascinating tools. Psychologically, they’re fun and empowering. I’m an NRA marksman myself, and I once killed so many squirrels in row with a pistol, my friends dubbed me “Murderous Mike,” not only because I’m an excellent shot, but because as the furry body count rose and I marched on unfazed, I seemed increasingly cold-blooded and callous even to my experienced hunting buddies.

So I get guns.

But I also get that guns do us far more harm than good. And that’s why I can’t get this thought out of my head: We need to work together to rid this country of guns.

It will take time to see the benefits of such drastic action, of course.

If we ban handguns and assault rifles, for example, then for a time—perhaps a decade or two—the only people who will have them will be cops, soldiers and criminals. And that will be frightening because we’ll have to trust the good guys to take care of the bad guys for us, as they almost always do. But after a while, gun violence will begin to fade away and become a problem of the past.

And then we’ll finally all be free to think about other things beside mayhem and violence.

Like oranges.

Oranges are good.

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