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The Declaration of Pathetic Bob
By Emmuttmax
05 July 2008
Yesterday, July 4th, American's celebrated Independence Day, and Pathetic Bob was curious about its origins.

The Declaration of Pathetic Bob

This morning, after vacuuming and mopping in preparation for the horde known as “Mrs. Mike’s Family” descending upon our house and swimming pool, Linda said I could take a break, so I came into may office to make my daily rounds on the Internet. My executive dog, Pathetic Bob, followed me.

“Hey Mike,” he said once the door was closed, “What’s with all this July 4th hoopla? Why do Americans get so worked up and eat hot dogs and hamburgers and blow stuff up on this day?”

“It’s Independence Day Bob,” I answered. “It’s the day we celebrate our independence.”

“Independence from what?

“Independence from the yoke of tyranny that was placed upon us by King George of England. Way back in 1776, Americans got tired of being yoked, so Thomas Jefferson wrote a document called the Declaration of Independence, and the American politicians signed it. Basically it said, ‘We’re mad as hell, and we’re not gonna take it anymore.’”

“So, that’s where Paddy Chayefsky got that line,” mused Bob “Is that when Americans started drinking coffee?”

“Excuse me?”

“Well,” said Bob, “I heard people were upset because the English were making the Americans buy English tea, and they were putting a very hefty tax on it. With tea around $5 a spoonful and lemons $12 each, didn’t all the Americans—well, except the real Americans, you know, the Native Americans—go to Boston and dump on the tea?”

“No Bob, I think you’re a little mixed up. I’m not sure what tea cost back then, but it was more than the people wanted to pay, so some people in Boston threw all the tea from English merchant ships into Boston harbor. They dumped in the ocean, they didn’t dump on the tea.”

“Oh, I see. Ok, when did we develop our dependence on coffee, and did we write a document about it?”

“Bob, I think you’re getting a little off track.”

“What about oil,” Bob went on. “How come we don’t celebrate our dependence on oil? And entertainment, what about that?” And, don’t forget fast-food restaurants and computers and toaster ovens and tanning salons and those pills that make men get an erection? It seems to me Mike, you are much more dependent on all kinds of crap now than people were in 1776. And Jesus, what about taxes? If the people were upset about paying taxes a couple hundred years ago, just think how angry they’d be today.”

“Well, you do have a point Bob,” I agreed. “But back then, the people didn’t have hot dogs and hamburgers and really cool fireworks.”

“Hey, now you’re talking. Let’s go eat.”

(c) 2008

Reviews

Written by Mr_E_Writer (187 comments posted) 5th July 2008
I might be wrong, but I can’t help thinking that you maybe need an extra comma here and there, for instance in the line: And Jesus Mike,  
 
Isn’t ‘ham burger’ one word? Hamburger.  
 
Couple of typos: This morning, after vacuuming and mopping in preparation for the horde known as “Mrs. Mike’s Family” descended (descending?) upon our house and swimming pool, Linda said I could take a break so I came into may (my?) office to… 
 
Cheers, 
Eric. 

Written by Emmuttmax (173 comments posted) 5th July 2008
Eric, 
 
You're absolutely right. I wrote this piece in a hurry and didn't go back over it. I've had a lousy couple of days, and I can't seem to concentrate very well. I appreciate you catching the mistakes.

Written by SplatterpunkShelbs (37 comments posted) 5th July 2008
I wish my dog wasn't so scared of fireworks, maybe she could make a point like that!  
 
Anyway, I love this piece. It made me think, why should we celebrate our independence when we are still dependent on so many things? If we literally had a day of independence, where we only used things made in America, people probably wouldn't think of it as a holiday...hm, now I have to go ponder this, thanks a lot :p

Written by TwistedTales (548 comments posted) 5th July 2008
Hehe, funny read. Enjoyed it. I have a bit of problem with the last line. If Bob is questioning Mike about coffee, and pills and oil, then suddenly how does he become party to the idea of eating hamburgers etc.? Plus Bob already mentions the hamburgers and fireworks in the beginning. If he's not excited then, how come he gets excited by the end. I expected something a bit more sarcastic.I expect a certain tone from Bob (that's his own), but this seems like he's just mirroring the narrator's personal ideas. Could be only me. Better than the last one though.  
 
Regards, 
TT 

Written by TallulahBelle (13 comments posted) 23rd July 2008
A nice little piece, very well written, I was hearing the voices of the characters, rather than that of the writer.  
 
I'm not sure what an 'executive dog' is, but I liked his style!  
 
Perhaps a bit in-yer-face PC with all the mentions of oil and so on, but it makes its point. 
 
All in all, an enjoyable read. 
 
Thanks for sharing, 
Omma

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