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Topic: The Impeachment Charade and Monty Python (Read 128 times)

legendary
Activity: 3906
Merit: 1373
January 31, 2020, 08:12:43 PM
#2
The Constitution is for real people. The impeachment process is partly for politics. Impeachment means nothing in reality if there is no removal from office. The true results of a successful OR failed impeachment are simply to show the people that there are some politicians who are serious about running the government a different way.


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legendary
Activity: 3906
Merit: 1373
January 28, 2020, 10:38:41 AM
#1
The impeachment is a bunch of Pelosi.


The Impeachment Charade and Monty Python



My preferences were for, say, a Peter Sellars/Inspector Clouseau movie, or, even better, some good ole' bare-bones humor, the type you could find on that classic and long-running "country" television series, Hee Haw (e.g., Archie Campbell, Junior Sample, Roy Clark) or maybe the Carol Burnett Show (or its spin-off, Mama's Family), and earlier with Abbott & Costello or Laurel & Hardy: true classics of the genre.

But watching snippets—that is all I could stomach without retching—of Representatives Adam Schiff and Jerry Nadler lecturing the United States Senate this past week, reminded me of Monty Python at its most mad… incredibly ridiculous, almost insanely wild…but at the same time, severely and eerily serious. Serious, in the sense that those House impeachment managers take themselves so very one-dimensionally, so solemnly. They do not or cannot see or understand what others see and understand about them and their supposed "case against the president."

For them even a funny jibe or joke proffered by Donald Trump at a public rally before tens of thousands of people (e.g., "Russia, if you hear me, can you help us find the thousands of emails that Hillary Clinton 'lost'," or, "I could walk down 5th Avenue and shoot somebody, and I'd still have support") is terribly ominous. The resemblance to Monty Python comes specifically because they take such eminently silly, throwaway lines meant to be funny, and hold them up in the utmost seriousness and solemnity, in what are monumental deliberations about the very future of the American nation.

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[Imagine] Schiff intoning: “if it floats, it must be a witch,” or some such line from Monty Python and the Search for Holy Grail.

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Or, to quote Monty Python once again:  “There are a great many people in the country today, who through no fault of their own, are sane.”


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