The Obama Future: The ghost of Thanksgivings to come!!

“Winston, come into the dining room, it’s time to eat,” Julia yelled to her
husband.



 “In a minute, honey, it’s a tie score,” he  answered.  Actually Winston
wasn't very  interested in the traditional holiday football game between
Detroit and Washington.  Ever since the government passed the Civility in
Sports Statute of 2017, outlawing tackle football for its “unseemly
violence” and the “bad  example it sets for the rest of the world,”  Winston
was far less of a football fan than he used to be.  Two-hand touch wasn't
nearly as  exciting..



Yet that wasn't the game that Winston was uninterested in.  It was more the
thought of eating another TofuTurkey.  Even though it was the best type of
VeggieMeat available after the government revised the American Anti-Obesity
Act of 2018, adding fowl to the list of federally-forbidden foods,
(which already included potatoes, cranberry sauce and mincemeat pie), it
wasn't anything like real  turkey.  And ever since the government officially
changed the name of “Thanksgiving Day” to “A National Day of Atonement”
in 2020 to officially acknowledge the Pilgrims’  historically brutal
treatment of Native Americans, the holiday had lost a lot of its luster.



 Eating in the dining room was also a bit daunting.  The unearthly gleam
of government-mandated fluorescent light bulbs made the TofuTurkey look even
weirder than it actually was, and the room was always cold.  Ever since
Congress passed the Power Conservation Act of 2016, mandating
all thermostats—which were monitored and controlled by the electric
company—be kept at 68 degrees, every room on the north side of th  house was
barely tolerable throughout the entire winter.



 Still, it was good getting together with family.  Or at least most of the
family. Winston missed his mother, who passed on in October, when she had
used up her legal  allotment of lifesaving medical treatment.  He  had had
many heated conversations with the  Regional Health Consortium, spawned when
the  private insurance market finally went bankrupt,  and everyone was
forced into the government health care program.  And though he demanded
she be kept on her treatment, it was a futile effort.  “The RHC’s resources
are  limited,” explained the government bureaucrat  Winston spoke with on
the phone. “Your mother  received all the benefits to which she
was  entitled.  I'm sorry for your loss.”



 Ed couldn't make it either.  He had forgotten to  plug in his electric car
last night, the only kind available after the Anti-fossil Fuel Bill of 2021
outlawed the use of the combustion engines—for everyone but
government officials.  The fifty mile round trip was about ten miles too
far, and Ed didn't want to spend a frosty night on the road somewhere
between here and there.



Thankfully, Winston’s brother, John, and his wife were flying in.  Winston
made sure that the dining room chairs had extra cushions for the occasion.
 No one complained more than John about the pain of sitting down so soon
after the government-mandated cavity searches at airports, which severely
aggravated his hemorrhoids. Ever since a terrorist successfully smuggled a
cavity  bomb onto a jetliner, the TSA told Americans the  added
“inconvenience” was an “absolute necessity” in order to stay “one step
ahead of the terrorists.” Winston’s own body had grown accustomed to such
probing ever since the government expanded their scope to just
about  anywhere a crowd gathered, via Anti-Profiling Act of 2022.  That law
made it a crime to single out any group or individual for
“unequal  scrutiny,” even when probable cause was  involved.  Thus, cavity
searches at malls, train  stations, bus depots, etc., etc., had become
almost routine.  Almost.



The Supreme Court is reviewing the statute, but most Americans expect a
Court composed of six progressives and three conservatives to leave the law
intact.  “A living Constitution is extremely flexible,” said the Court’s
eldest   member, Elena Kagan.  “Europe has had laws  like this one for
years.  We should learn from  their example,” she added.



Winston’s thoughts turned to his own children.  He got along fairly well
with his 12-year-old daughter, Brittany, mostly because she ignored him.
 Winston had long ago surrendered to the idea that she could text  anyone at
any time, even during Atonement  Dinner.  Their only real confrontation
had  occurred when he limited her to 50,000 texts a  month, explaining that
was all he could afford. She whined for a week, but got over it.



 His 16-year-old son, Jason, was another matter altogether..  Perhaps it was
the constant  bombarding he got in public school that global warming, the
bird flu, terrorism or any of a  number of other calamities were “just
around the corner,” but Jason had developed a kind of   nihilistic attitude
that ranged between   simmering surliness and outright hostility.  It didn't
help that Jason had reported his father to the police for smoking a
cigarette in the house, an act made criminal by the Smoking Control Statute
of 2018, which outlawed smoking anywhere within 500 feet of another
human  being.  Winston paid the $5000 fine, which might have been considered
excessive before the  American dollar became virtually worthless as a result
of QE13.  The latest round of quantitative easing the federal
government initiated was, once again, to “spur economic  growth.”  This time
they promised to push unemployment below its years-long rate of 18%,  but
Winston was not particularly hopeful.



Yet the family had a lot for which to be thankful, Winston thought, before
remembering it

was a Day of Atonement.  At least he had his memories.  He felt a twinge of
sadness when he realized his children would never know what life was like in
the Good Old Days, long before government promises to make life “fair
foreveryone” realized their full potential.



Winston, like so many of his fellow Americans,  never realized how much
things could change when they didn't happen all at once, but little
by  little, so people could get used to them.



 He wondered what might have happened if the public had stood up while there
was still time, maybe back around 2011 - 12, when all the real nonsense
began.  “Maybe we wouldn't be where we are today if we'd just said ‘enough
is  enough’ when we had the chance,” he thought.



  Maybe so, Winston.  Maybe so.



(author anonymous)



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